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Hi, I'm Misty, Christian life coach for busy and ambitious moms. I help women discover and develop their own unique rhythms that allow them to stop dwelling and start dancing to a beautiful and abundant life.
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She sat in the same chair every time.
My grandmother, needlepoint in her lap, quilting frame stretched wide across the living room, fingers moving with the kind of quiet confidence that only comes from decades of practice. I was eight, maybe nine — young enough that the world still felt enormous and full of things I hadn’t yet learned to want.
But I wanted that.
I didn’t have words for it then. I just knew that watching her work — the careful placement of each needle, the way the pattern emerged slowly from what looked like chaos — stirred something in me that felt important. Like I was watching someone leave proof that they had been here.
I would snuggle up beside her and try. My small fingers would fumble with the needle, lose the thread, pull too tight. Grandma would lean over and show me again — patient, unhurried. She taught me that the back of the quilt should match the front. That attending to the knots and tangles underneath was not optional. That what lies beneath matters just as much as what everyone else sees.
My eight-year-old attention span would eventually give out, and I’d run off to the next adventure. But something of hers stayed with me.
My grandmother was a skilled artisan of food and family — knitting, crocheting, needlepoint, quilting. She crafted beauty out of thread and time and patience, and she did it as naturally as breathing.
My Aunt Shirley inherited the quilting frame when Grandma passed. And with it, she inherited the legacy — investing the same time, the same emotion, the same unhurried dedication into her own masterpieces.
Aunt Shirley is one of my favorite people on this earth. Over the years, her hospitality toward my sister and me has known no limits. When my mom — a single parent — needed support, Aunt Shirley stepped in without being asked. She provided childcare, nourishment, safety, joy. Her home was a place where I could breathe. Her life gave me a vision of the woman I one day hoped to become.
Every time I visited and found the quilting frame set up in her living room, I felt the pull of that childhood longing again. The frame was enormous. The project always seemed impossibly large. And I would think — someday. Someday I’ll do that.
Read more about BECOMING the woman we dream of being in Who Am I Becoming? One Word to Clarify Your Identity.
This past week, Aunt Shirley extended the invitation I had been quietly dreaming about since I was a little girl.
She asked me to join her quilting circle.
I sat down at that frame — finally, after all these years — and she guided me through each stitch with the same patience Grandma had once shown me. My hands are not the steady hands of an eight-year-old anymore. The stitches were imperfect. Crooked in places. Not what I imagined they would be.
I hesitated. Started to pull back.
And Aunt Shirley said something that stopped me completely:
“Oh, we don’t rip out anything.”
She said it so matter-of-factly. As if the idea of discarding a stitch — any stitch, even a crooked one — was simply not something that happened here.
Nothing is wasted.
In that moment, something settled in me with the weight of a truth I had heard many times but never quite felt until right then.
He uses ALL things for good. (Romans 8:28)
Every stitch — the careful ones and the crooked ones — goes into the making of the masterpiece. There is no such thing as a stitch that doesn’t count. No season wasted. No mistake too tangled to be woven into something beautiful. No imperfection disqualifying.
Grandma taught me that what lies beneath matters. That attending to the knots and tangles is how a true masterpiece is made.
And here is what I am learning — slowly, stitch by imperfect stitch — about my own life:
The hard seasons are not interruptions to the masterpiece. They are part of it.
The years of fumbling, of pulling too tight, of losing the thread entirely — they are all on the back of the quilt. And the back matters. It is part of what makes the front hold together.
Maybe you feel like your hands are too shaky for the work in front of you. Perhaps you look at the women around you and wonder how their stitches came out so straight and clean when yours feel like a tangle. Maybe you have spent years convinced that some part of your story — the crooked parts, the undone parts, the parts you’re ashamed of — disqualifies you from becoming the woman you were made to be.
But here is what Aunt Shirley’s quilting circle reminded me:
We don’t rip out anything.
Your imperfections are not evidence that you don’t belong at the frame. They are evidence that you showed up and tried. And every single stitch — even the ones that make you wince — is being woven by a Father who wastes nothing and discards no one.
“I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” (Psalm 139:14)
You are not a project He is frustrated with. You are a masterpiece He is still making.
Say “YES” to those brave desires of your heart and watch God work all things together for good. Read more in the blog, “Saying Yes To Your Brave Desires.”
My grandmother left a legacy not in grand gestures but in patient, faithful, ordinary work. Stitch by stitch. Season by season. A quilting frame passed from her hands to her daughter’s — and now, finally, to mine.
That is how legacy actually works. Not in the dramatic moments. In the quiet ones. In the things we model when no one is particularly watching. In the patience we show when someone’s stitches are crooked. In the homes we make safe. In the truth we speak over the women who come after us.
Thank you, Aunt Shirley. For always inspiring, always embracing, always teaching. For leaving a legacy of love simply by living your beautiful life.
And thank you, Grandma — for showing an eight-year-old girl that what lies beneath matters, and that a masterpiece takes time.
What legacy are the women in your life stitching into you — and what are you stitching into the ones who come after?
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Hi, I'm Misty, Christian life coach for busy and ambitious moms. I help women discover and develop their own unique rhythms that allow them to stop dwelling and start dancing to a beautiful and abundant life.
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