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Knitting: The New Yoga
They may not be ditching the lotus position, but women -
from hip urbanites to cancer survivors - are discovering the calming benefits
of needle work.
Every Friday, a group of women who work at Oxford University
Press in New York City slip away from their computers, blow off their
lunch breaks, and take over an empty office. Lissy Blomster, a 25-year-old
art buyer and the motivating spirit behind this group, pushes aside an
abandoned stack of papers to perch on a desk, swinging her black-stockinged
feet. The other women fan around her in a circle of hastily assembled
chairs, spilling soft, luminous balls of yarn around their ankles: loopy
mauve, canary yellow, forest green, blood red.
The clamor of knitting needles sets in, and slowly, the
knots of the week unravel. The women lean over to gossip about 24-year-old
Phebe Szatmari's boyfriend, swap stitching suggestions, or fondle works-in-progress:
scarves, sweaters, socks. "I can tell when I'm stressed because my stitches
are always tighter," says photo researcher Donatella Accardi, 34. "But
by the time I get back to my desk, I'm totally relaxed."
Once considered an activity for seniors or back-to-the-earth
types, knitting has become, in America, what some folks are calling "the
new yoga": the latest way to relax. Professional women say it burns off
anxiety and makes them more clear-headed at work; cancer patients and
others grappling with serious illnesses find that it helps them to cope
with their situations. Even Hollywood stars such as Julia Roberts and
Cameron Diaz are getting into the stitch, picking up needles to pass downtime
on movie sets. And perhaps most importantly, according to those who are
caught up in the craze, knitting threads together women of all backgrounds
and generations in groups that provide the kind of support they just can't
get on their daily social rounds.
Like the Oxford gals, the new generation of knitters is
young, urban, and sophisticated. According to Research Incorporated, a
marketing research firm in Atlanta, the number of knitters younger than
35 doubled between 1998 and 2000 (the most recent data available) to an
estimated 4 million. Approximately 38 million American women - one in
four - know how to knit or crochet.
For many, knitting is the comfort food or craft. The art's
calming effects come from the repetitive rhythms of needles, yarn, and
hands, explains Bernadette Murphy, a California based author who has researched
knitting for her book Zen and the Art of Knitting. She says it induces
the classic "relaxation response," marked by a lowered heart rate and
blood pressure. This response was identified in the mid-1980s by Herbert
Benson, M.D., president of the Harvard Mind/Body Medical Institute.
While Benson has not studied knitting specifically, he agrees
that it could evoke a powerful physical effect. "Any kind of repetitive
activity, whether it's reciting the rosary or knitting, can induce a meditative
state in the brain," Benson says. Unlike ordinary rest, meditation increases
mental alertness and relaxation, increasing mental well-being.
"When I knit, I lose all track of time," says Accardi, echoing
the sentiments of many other women who report a kind of knitter's high.
The same kind of mental buzz might happen when you're reading a good book,
Szatmari adds. "But when you're knitting, your thoughts are your book,"
she says. "Your mind meanders along and brings you to whatever you need
to be thinking about." Blomster agrees: "Knitting helps me shift gears,
clear my head, and start fresh."
This ability to lose oneself - as well as find oneself -
in the knit-one-purl-two rhythm helps explain why this craft has such
appeal for people with serious illnesses. "I have always been a passionate
knitter, but the more my life unraveled, the more I knitted," says Tanya
Parieaux, 55, a breast-cancer survivor. "I felt like I was dying inside,
but every time I picked up my knitting needles, I was moving forward and
creating life. It brought me hope." Parieaux's belief in the healing power
of knitting inspired her to form Threads of Life, a volunteer group that
teaches knitting to patients in several Seattle area hospitals.
"It's pretty wonderful to see people who are so very ill
suddenly forget themselves and just break out laughing," Parieaux says.
For cancer patients in particular, knitting can be a healing art. The
repetitive action of knitting helps to relieve emotional stress, which
can reduce the body's ability to tolerate chemotherapy and magnify unpleasant
side effects, such as nausea, says Julie Gralow, M.D., a breast-cancer
specialist at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle and
sponsor of Parieaux's knitting programme.
Knitting as a social activity confers benefits that go beyond
mental and physical relaxation. Traditionally, knitters stitched alone,
but the new trend seems to be going toward knitting in groups, according
to the Knitting Guild of America, an Ohio-based out-fit that organizes
knitting circles across the United States. These circles have become kind
of casual group-therapy sessions, replacing the typical tangle of modern
communication - unwieldy masses of telephone, fax, and personal-computer
cords - with skeins of yarn. Therefore, knitters are looping into the
proven power of support groups to relieve anxiety and depression and create
positive medical outcomes, Gralow says.
Crafting in groups allows even people reluctant to spill
their guts in a traditional therapeutic setting a safe circle in which
to share their woes and listen to advice. "It's easier to be revealing
when you have something to do with your hands," Murphy says.
For the Oxford circle members, knitting together is equal
parts stitch-and-bitch and back-to-the future, enabling them to connect
not just to each other, but to generations of knitters past. "In the `70s,
a lot of people considered the domestic arts anti-feminist, and you wouldn't
be caught dead knitting," says 43-year-old art buyer Andrea Suffredini,
a mother of four and one of the oldest members of the Oxford circle. "But
as my mother gets older, I'm feeling sentimental about passing along these
family traditions to my kids, including the boys," she says.
These days, she finds herself knitting quietly with her
mother during family gatherings. "Even when we're not getting along, knitting
in silence helps us bridge that generation gap," Suffredini says. Finding
comfort in stressful times, renewing ties with friends and family, creating
handmade treasures to pass on to loved ones - these are the threads that
weave together knitting's past, present, and future.
Cast on: knitting 101
You don't have to learn fancy handiwork or invest in expensive
needles to get started. Here's how you can get into the stitch. Visit
your local yarn shop. Employees can guide you to what you need. Beginners
are recommended wool or acrylic yarns and size-8 needles.
Start with the basics. Anyone who knows how to knit can
teach you the basic knit-and-purl technique. Hone your skills on the easiest
project - a scarf.
Join a knitting circle. In local trains in Mumbai, groups
of women huddle together to exchange notes and knit. These sessions help
melt away the tedium of commuting and the stresses of the day, even as
they make productive use of the hours spent in travelling. If the commuting
scene doesn't work for you, gather like-minded women in your office/neighbourhood
and start your own group.
Get inspired. For intermediate knitters, books with lush
illustrations can inspire ideas.
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permission text from HealthNutrition.co.in
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