All winter, my needle’s been going in and out, stitching my life, moving forward my autobiographical embroidery project. But now the snows are gone—I hope. Daffodils are poking through. Under grow lights in our basement, microgreens are coming alive. And spring rains have begun. So yesterday I rolled up my timeline, stored my needles in a pin cushion, and closed my embroidery box.

I’m almost caught up with myself. I’ve now embroidered the adult years of heavy lifting—teaching and running programs and making high-stake decisions. And I wondered as I stitched—how did I manage it all?
I embroidered the house where we hosted large groups for retreats and planning sessions. And where, one by one (and once two at a time), we welcomed our eight grandchildren.

I stitched my grandmother’s name on her grave. She died the year our first grandchild was born, the child who would have made her a great-great grandma. She knew he was coming. When I visited her deathbed, she held the blanket I was crocheting for him. She ran her gnarled hands over its yellowness.
“I hope I meet him,” she said.
She didn’t.

I embroidered the exhilarating and exhausting summers I ran a music camp for kids on a college campus. For my last year with the camp, I showed lots of color with a solfège symbol and a giant rest sign at the end.

But not all was joyful in those years. Especially the recession in 2008. I didn’t lose my home, as many did. But my school district lost its gifted program. And I lost a job I loved.

I pivoted to sixth grade for a few years. And then I retired, transferring my love of teaching to the Columbus Museum of Art, where I lead tours as a docent.

I embroidered the coronavirus, reliving my deep empathy for the teachers I left behind—teachers who scrambled to switch between in-person and remote teaching and back again, who dealt with the great fog of students and their parents, and who struggled with chronic absenteeism and apathy.

And where was I? Safe at home, writing a book and starting a blog and applying for Medicare.

And here’s where I’m closing up my third winter of embroidery. When I started, I wondered—will I catch up to myself before I die? At three images per year for more than seventy years?
I’m getting close.
But the question is still real.



