Friday, February 5, 2016

A return to weaving



So. It turns out that if you (and by you I mean I) spend a year ramping up and weaving at a frantic pace to try to make a living with your hand work, and if you don't pay attention to the height of your weaving bench and hunch up your shoulders, you can end up wiggling your right shoulder joint out of place. Yup. I was deranged. That was the technical term. Ow.

I started having issues in November of 2014, and in the beginning of 2015 I started looking for solutions. I hurt. And I was scared that I wasn't going to be well again. Physical therapy wasn't working, and the doctors didn't have much idea as to what was going on yet.

In August of 2015 I finally saw a specialist, got an MRI, and was referred to a new physical therapist. And wow, the difference between the experiences was night and day. This guy was good. He could tell me what the MRI was going to say without looking at it, just by watching my shoulder move. I got to work. He had me doing exercises on my own every two waking hours, and I went in for an hour long session twice a week. It has taken me months of work, but I can move now without fear of pain. And I can even sleep on my right side again, at least for small stretches at a time. And, he slowly had me weaving again. I took videos of the motions, so he could target exercises specifically to my movement.

And now? These blue napkins are my first finished project since I returned to weaving. My shoulder isn't 100%, and I need to be careful still, but I'm cleared to work again. With the proper height on the bench this time, so my shoulders aren't strained. And with more breaks. And I'm not going to weave at such a marathon level slog again, which means I'm probably not going to be going back into the custom baby wrap biz, at least not at that level. I loved making dreams for people, but I paid for it in my health.

So, here is my return triumph. I brought these napkins upstairs, and have been using them for dinners this past week. Each meal is a celebration, and a reminder to take better care of myself.

4 comments:

  1. I'm glad you're able to get back to weaving. You're work is stunning.

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    1. Thank you!! It has been a heck of a road, but it feels really good to be throwing a shuttle again. :) And wow, I wasn't sure anyone would be reading the blog any more. Thanks for the comment!!

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  2. I just found your blog today and started at the beginning looking at each page and then suddenly it jumped years to the MRI unit! Wow! What an adventure. I'm impressed with your skills across a variety of handwork. Glad you are able to get back to it!

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    1. I'm so tickled you stopped by, and let me know you're here. :) It means a lot to me. Yes, I stopped blogging for a couple of years. Part of that was the physical problems I was having. Part of it was I went into production baby wrap weaving...and stopped trying new things to be a production weaver. Most of what I'm doing here on the blog is documenting my poking at new ideas. When I was doing the same thing over and over, writing about it wasn't as much fun. But I'm back to experimentation again. And so, back to writing. That reminds me...time for a new blog entry. :)

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