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On the subject of frogging

ribbit?
Well, there's no other way to say it, so I'll just come out with it:  I lost my velocity on the oscilloscope shawl. Once I hit the halfway point - which is actually where things get easier, since you begin decreasing - I lost interest. It's a rare day indeed when I contemplate frogging a project when it's halfway done, but I have my reasons:

1. It became apparent that I wouldn't finish it in time for the wedding I wanted to wear it to.
2. The weather report for that particular weekend said it would be far too warm for anything woolen....which ended up being the complete opposite, and I ended up having to buy jeans at Forever 21 because I was freezing to death in the summer skirts that I'd packed.
3. I messed up the first few rows of the decrease chart.
4. Though I could fix those mistakes fairly easily, I am too lazy to do so.

It's a big decision to abandon ship halfway through the ride, but I'm not really enjoying the ride, so why spend the time working on something I'm no longer psyched about? I used to finish every book I started reading, no matter how much I hated it.  There are so many terrible books I finished reading, and I still don't know why I felt compelled to finish them. As my free time (see also: knitting time) keeps getting whittled away, it becomes more important to me to finish things I like rather than finishing for the sake of finishing. 

Comments

  1. Frog it! Frog it! I frogged a sweater that ws half done when I couldn't understand the pattern, so liberating!!!! Do eeeeeetttt!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hee hee - I did indeed end up frogging it - and with the reclaimed yarn, started a different shawl that is nearly done! I do feel so very liberated.

    ReplyDelete

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