Category Archives: creativity

Just being bad at a thing: Re-learning how to knit

Recently I decided to learn how to crochet (blog post coming) but somehow in learning how to crochet I was motivated to pick up my knitting needles and re-learn how to knit again.

I learnt how to knit when I was in my late teens, my grandmother taught me, and I picked it up a few years ago but it never quite stuck. I’ve discovered that this is due to two reasons;

  1. Since my late grandmother taught me this skill I was so incredibly scared of being bad at it and
  2. When I picked up knitting a few years ago I decided to run before I crawled.

This time around I am interrogating these two reasons and pushing myself to just do the thing.

Learning how to knit in the round – take 1

Let’s start with reason number two since this the most superficial of the two reasons.

Running before crawling:

When I picked up my knitting needles again a few years ago I did the thing I always do when I’m excited, I bit off more than I could possibly chew. I decided to learn how to every single stitch and make myself a non-beginner friendly cardigan (that popular Harry Styles one from a few years ago). I got so in my head that my first project had to be this grandiose thing that I never quite really finished anything. So this time around I did what all knitters are advised to do, I started with a beanie! This allowed me to revisit the fundamentals (knitting and purling) and focus on something small that did not require me to be a skilled knitter, this somehow worked and I finished the beanie.

A beanie in progress

Reason number two: my finished work cannot be bad!

I think there’s a part of me that was holding onto knitting as something my grandmother taught me that I didn’t want to ruin by being bad at it as though being bad at it would mean she was a bad teacher. I didn’t want to suck at knitting because that would somehow let down my grandmother typing this out now I realise how preposterous that notion is. In raising me my grandmother taught me so many things, all of those things have varying levels of importance however I am pretty sure that knitting would be very low on the importance scale.

Finally getting to this understanding has somehow unshackled me from the need to be good at knitting. Now I can be bad at it, as long as I do it!

My completed beanie!

I am excited and happy for myself and I look forward to all my future badly finished projects.

Quite pleased with myself

My 2025 Fiction Reading List – Part 1

In 2025 I vowed to be a more intentional reader. I’ve realised that this doesn’t mean taking myself too seriously but rather that it means knowing why each book is being read and taking myself too seriously time to dissect the topics addressed no matter how simple or complicated they are.

As such I’ve created a numerical goal of 35 books with 10 of these being non-fiction in the hopes that this will get me reading even when life gets a bit too busy. Thirty five is my number!

I have curated some books that, should something happens that makes it hard for me to read these are the books I will love to read.

These are fiction books that have peaked my interest for a wide range of reasons; be it popularity, suspected difficulty and even just finishing of a series.

I thought I should share these books with you just in case you need some inspiration.

Book 1: East of Eden by John Steinbeck

Described as Steinbeck’s “magnum opus” – I was really itching to get into this one as an introduction to the author. I should be done with this book soon and it has been a terrific read and I can’t wait to talk about it when I’m done.

Book 2: Those Who Leave Those Who Stay by Elena Ferrante

The third in the Neapolitan Quartet series. This book I actually finished reading in January and will be reviewing it together with the first and second book. This is by far my favourite series, I fell in love with the story of Lenu and Lila when they were ten years old and I have not stopped being blown away by the story.

Hot take: I prefer these covers to the UK ones.

Book 3: Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

A book that is seen as an epic love story by some and a tragedy by others. This is my second attempt at finishing this book and I am very confident that I can get it done in 2025 (hopefully by the end of February).

Book 4: Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison

A book by one of my favourite writers! This is Toni Morrison’s third published book and my forth encounter with her work (sort of, I’m yet to finish Beloved). I don’t know much about this book and I intend to find out when I start reading it, however I have never been disappointed by Toni Morrison and I know I will enjoy this one.

Book 5: The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky

This is a story about three brothers, their father and a murder and Fyodor Dostoevsky’s last novel. This book I expect to be my most challenging read, as I attempted to read this behemoth of a book in 2024 with no success! I am hopeful that 2025 is the year for me and Dostoevsky, I can feel it!

Book 6: Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison

Another book I’ve taken a stab at before, this one I believe I tried reading in 2023 and it was so beautifully and lyrically written, I could tell just by the first few pages that Ralph Ellison did not hold his punches. I’m diving back into his words in 2025 and just like The Brothers Karamazov, I have a good feeling about this one.

These are just five of the ten books that I desperately need to finish in 2025, I will share the other five later on this week.

I am really looking forward to being an intentional consumer of literature in 2025, I hope you are considering becoming more intentional about what you read as well.

See you in the next one.

35 Lessons at 35

My birthday has passed and I am officially 35! Looking over my shoulder over the past year and the past five years have brought about a lot of change not just for myself but for the world in general. The year I turned 30 is the same year that the world was hit by a global pandemic and the year I moved to London. Since then I’ve started a new job in a new industry and had a baby while the world seems to be having one unprecedented time after another.

At my birthday dinner; having a mocktail, eating my greens and feeding my son.

I’ve learnt a few lessons since then and so I’ve put together a list of 35 lessons I’ve learnt in 35 years. Hopefully a lot of these lessons will be the same lessons I learnt at 30, I’ve decided not to read those prior to posting this just in case it sways me.

To spare me and you from any further waffling let us get into my 35 lessons:

  1. Be kind. 
  2. Mind your business. This doesn’t mean ignore people but rather that some things aren’t your business. You’ll know when this applies.
  3. Eat fruit and vegetables.
  4. Eat other types of food too.
  5. Let people know you love them. This is different from person to person.
  6. Drink water.
  7. The only constant in life is truly change, get as comfortable with change as you can as soon as possible.
  8. Get some rest when you can and if you can’t don’t wreck yourself worried about not getting enough rest.
  9. Pets are great but also a lot of work.
  10. Take a vitamin D supplement.
  11. Read what you want to read.
  12. Watch what you want to watch. 
  13. Listen to what you want to listen to. 
  14. If people from marginalised groups explain why what you read, watch and listen to is a problem because of the ideas it supports that are against that group – have an open mind. Don’t get offended, it’s not really about you in that moment.
  15. Leave a little more room for greyness because most things are not black and white.
  16. Making your own money is still undefeated. 
  17. Work hard. Hard is relative to you. No one else can define that for you.
  18. Understand that just as no one can define hard for you, you can’t define hard for anyone else.
  19. Aging is the only way to stay alive. Honestly it’s not that complicated. 
  20. The world is big. If you can experience different joys from different places do it.
  21. Number 20 doesn’t always mean you have to travel.
  22. No one knows where the other sock goes. Just hope it’s happy and wear mismatched socks at this point!
  23. Baby socks are a whole new ball game, they both disappear… at different times. 
  24. You only live once… like for real for real. Depending on how you look at it this is either great news or not so much. But keep in mind there’s no do-over for life. 
  25. Just because there’s no do-over for life doesn’t mean there’s no do-over for life events. If you need to start over do it. If you need to pick something up again do it. If you need to mend a relationship do it. There are infinite chances as long as you’re alive.
  26. Grief comes in waves. Sit in it. Sometimes you’ll be overwhelmed as though the loss is an open wound and on these days it’s perfectly okay to feel wounded and retreat if that’s what soothes you.
  27. Move your body in ways that bring you some form of joy. But also accept that sometimes it won’t always bring you joy. Do with this knowledge what you will. And allow others to do the same.
  28. Friendships are important and require regular nurturing. Try not to keep score.
  29. Romantic relationships are friendships with a little extra. See above. 
  30. Being partnered isn’t nearly as important as who you are partnered to. 
  31. Wear sunscreen. 
  32. Keep learning. New things. Old things. Just keep learning.
  33. Do a load of laundry every two days, you’ll never get to the bottom of the pile but it’s nice to try. 
  34. Show yourself grace. This will be the hardest thing to do sometimes but you have to try. 
  35. Hug your loved ones as often as you can. 

That’s it, those are my lessons. I’ve also found in writing these out that I am less likely to over-explain what they mean. These lessons just are, plain and simple.

Here’s to aging, be it gracefully or otherwise.

Thank you for reading.

Returning to the page: why my writing reads more like a journal entry

This is going to be a short post. It’s a post for myself and anyone else who stumbles upon this blog and wonders why the musings of an almost 35 year old which should be confined to a journal are somehow on the internet!

The next few weeks of writing will not be perfect. They will not be polished. They will not be nuanced. They will not even make sense sometimes. They will simply be posted!

I have struggled a lot with sitting down to write. Either because I didn’t have time or because any time I had I was handing over to Zuckerberg. Or because I thought if I were to write I would have to show up perfect or not show up at all.

For the next few weeks or months or however long I feel like it, I will not be writing to contribute anything useful to the world. I will be writing to simply write.

It will read like a journal as I document my very mundane thoughts while taking care of my baby.

If you’re here and you’re reading thank you for joining me… however I have now laid down intention of my blog posts into the near future and I feel good about that.

I hope you’ll stay.

Happy New Year Vision 2025

Happy new year!!! 🥳🥳🥳

I have stepped into 2025 a bit more upbeat and excited! I’ll be honest and say the past few years I have dreaded the beginnings of each year. In 2022 and 2023 both years started off with anxiety as my resolution and goal for each of those years was to have a baby (a very silly resolution in hindsight). And in 2024 I was completely exhausted by the trying to conceive journey having suffered a pregnancy loss in October 2023. And so I wasn’t hopeful and had no desire to think about what else I’d like out of the year.

2025 however is starting off on a different note; I am typing this on the 19th of January with my snoozing son in my left arm suckling at my left breast. Life is good. I also have the added benefit of skipping my works busy season this year. In any normal year I would be laying out my work uniform to eliminate any issues getting dressed in the morning and planning meals to avoid any decision fatigue which inevitably ends in eating takeout!

And so taking advantage of my good fortune and good mood, I have created a vision board for the first time in my life.

I’ve categorised my goals into the following categories:

  • Motherhood
  • Love
  • Body
  • Reading
  • Creativity
  • Work

Within these categories I have goals that are both tangible and measurable; for example do yoga at least twice a week and write a blog post at least three times a week. And those that are less rigid such as finding my groove as a mother and then later on as a working mother when I am back at work in October.

I will be sharing on this blog my progress with these goals as a way to keep myself accountable and also meet that blog three days a week quota 😉.

I am really excited for 2025 and hope you are too!

I hope we are all able to hold onto our resolutions and goals over the next 346 days!!!

Happy new year! Or as they say in South Africa, COMPLIMENTS OF THE SEASON 🥳🥳🥳