Your unique talents

To each of us is given a gift or talent or two. What comes easily for you to do is one of your talents. What comes easily to another is their talent.

I was scrolling on my Facebook page this morning and came across decorated cookies. They’re beautiful, all peachy and purple, delectable too. I admired the talent it took to make individual food masterpieces like that. I also know this isn’t a talent of mine.

I crochet from time to time, doing something to keep my hands busy. Turning some yarn or thread into a masterpiece is a beautiful thing. I know this isn’t everyone’s talent.

When we use our talents, God given if you so believe, then we shine in a way that warms our soul. When we share the talents with others, it’s an honor system of a sort. I am honoring the talent I have for you to enjoy the results of, which in turn makes both of us happy. I love win-wins.

Sometimes our talents are teachable, sometimes they are giftable. If your talent is to make great fudge, gift that to someone. If your talent is to sew beautiful clothing, gift that to someone. If you can teach your talent and enjoy doing so, teach someone and pass along the knowledge you’ve got.

If your talent is simply listening or having a decent conversation, please realize this talent is just as important as another talent that seems more tangible. It is tangible, just not in a way that shows “things”, It shows “feelings”.

Think about yourself today, give yourself the credit of being unique in some way, and shine that. What you can’t do isn’t nearly as important as what you can do.

I hope you’ve gained from today’s message. 🙂

Feel free to donate: http://paypal.me/aprildaisy

Learning something new, redoing a project

I feel led to write about something that may seem ordinary, it’s the blanket I am currently crocheting. That blanket is a great analogy for several things in life though and here’s how I view it.

A friend commissioned me to crochet a blanket. We discussed what she wanted. In particular, she wanted a design with lots of squares and a certain background color.

I started with the squares and was super excited with how they were turning out. That was a project within itself…squares. I had several piles going. After making each square, I then bordered the squares with the background color. The project still looked like it was going well.

After making most of the squares, I started combining them into the final blanket. I chose the only join I knew how to do. I didn’t care very much for the join, but I had not found another join I liked or felt confident about trying.

Yesterday I looked at that blanket and was just completely unsatisfied with the joining of the squares. It was annoying me that the blanket wouldn’t be laying flat because the join I chose was a ridge type join.

So, I stopped joining and started taking the blanket apart. I thought I would have to take the blanket apart in a way that would have given me more of a project to recreate, but then, thank God after prayers, I remembered I’d crocheted the blanket only in rows one way and it was nothing much to take the blanket apart that way. This was a huge improvement as I only lost a couple of finished squares in that effort and not the huge backward slide I felt I would be doing.

I then went to Youtube and looked up crochet joining squares. One of the videos actually listed the join I was doing. I was glad to find it’s a valid join, but it wasn’t a neat join. In other news, I did come across a project where that join fit nicely and complimented the blanket. That helped me see the join I was doing had value, just not with the project I was doing.

I came across a video that showed a join I figured I could try. I watched the video twice, saw that it would be the perfect join for the square design I had made, and attempted it.

Let me tell you, I was SO happy to see that the new join was bringing the blanket up to a better level of beauty than the first one and my feeling about completing that blanket as an exceptional bit of work was much better than before.

What did that involve? It involved trying what I knew, not being satisfied, ripping out some of the work and time I put into it, and seeking out a solution that simply had to be better for this particular blanket.

I am going to tell you, ripping out a crochet project really isn’t for the faint of heart. Crochet projects take time more than anything. To rip means some of your time is like double gone. However, I just couldn’t look at the blanket and see where it would be extra lovely when finished. Now, because I backtracked some and found a new join technique, I am definitely creating a blanket I know will be extra lovely when finished.

Maybe you are in the same situation with something in your life…maybe a crochet project, maybe a different kind of project, maybe even a relationship. Saying to yourself, “I’ve invested time, money, and feelings into this (especially a relationship), I must not rip it apart,” is just setting yourself up to keep that uneasy feeling within. It’s not thinking of how the unraveling, while upsetting, will help you to find a different way to create or live and make something marvelously lovely in your life.

I want to encourage you with this post. I want to encourage you to rip apart what isn’t really giving you that awesomely good vibe. I want you to seek something else and try it, no matter how different and new it is. I want you to be bold for yourself. I know somewhere in your life you were bold about something. I sometimes remember times when I was bold and it amazes me today that I did those things. Somewhere in your vibe is that boldness. Wear it with all the awesomeness you can hold.

 

 

Tisket Tasket Basket and Flower

A few weeks ago I posted about a crocheted flower I created after seeing several other patterns and working them. I love what I created and made quite a few.

Fast forward to about a week ago, I, for whatever reason, ended up making a little basket. The basket works great to hold the flower! They become a trinket box set together. I LOVE how it turned out and have made several of these also!

I love when I make something that will bring a smile to my face every time I create it! This set of patterns does just that!

You can order a trinket box set (of what I have on hand) or you can order the crochet pattern set. If you are looking for a specific color for a theme/party, we can discuss colors in your favor then. The trinket set is about 3″ square, not very big, but just enough for small objects and is perfect for gift giving.

The actual crocheted set is $12 for the first one (in the US only, ask about other countries) and $8 for each thereafter. This is a great way to order multiples for bridesmaids, little girl parties, a lightweight gift for someone with less grip, or any other great gifting idea. The crochet pattern set is $6 and will be sent to you via the email you give me.

You can email me directly to discuss your order: aprildaisy4@yahoo.com

Basket and Flower

Making Friends, sharing what you have in common

I’ve made some new friends online today. One was through a crochet/thread post and one was a post at a spiritual gifted group I’m in. I spoke to each of them in private messages and enjoyed their company. Each friend was for a different area of my life.

I don’t necessarily think any friend has to be interested in all of the sides of you. It’s like, if a friend is a rose, well, you work on tending to that rose. If a friend is a morning glory, you approach tending to that climber in a different way. It is as such with people. Friendships need tending to, preferably both ways, you tend to them, they tend to you, etc. Yet, keep in mind a friendship isn’t like a relationship with a partner, you only need to share what parts of you that will allow you both to enjoy the company of each other.

Like crochet. My new crochet friend and I can talk crochet all day long. There is no need to say, “What are your religious beliefs? Can I share mine?” That’s not the topic we connected on. Maybe once we’d been friends for a time or maybe not. Friendships are for growing…each other…in one or more areas of one’s life…but not necessarily in all areas of one’s life.

Maybe this is a thought to bring value to your life in some way? Maybe this can help you with your own friendships…current and future? Maybe you can see how best to bring your own growing goodness to the friendship?