CW: discussion of cancer, loss of fertility and depression

Liz O’Riordan is a breast surgeon who has herself experienced cancer, twice. She now works as a speaker, author and podcaster providing high quality and accessible information about cancer from her expertise as both a doctor and a patient.

Liz is also a lifelong knitter and more recently a sewer. Although Liz said that she often thinks that knitting is ‘just something I do’, throughout our conversation it becomes clear that knitting has accompanied Liz through some difficult times in her life and provided her with a sense of achievement, of comfort and a way of showing affection to her loved ones.

You can find out more about Liz’s work at her website

Follow Liz on Twitter or Instagram

Find out more about the podcast and therapeutic knitting at the website where you can also sign up to the newsletter.

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Transcript
Mia Hobbs:

Hello and welcome to the last episode of series two

Mia Hobbs:

of the Why I Knit podcast. My name is Dr. Mia Hobbs and I'm a

Mia Hobbs:

clinical psychologist who's passionate about knitting and

Mia Hobbs:

its benefits for our mental wellbeing. Each episode I

Mia Hobbs:

interview a different knitter about why they knit and how it

Mia Hobbs:

benefits their mental health. Thank you so much to everybody

Mia Hobbs:

who's listened to season two, and especially to the people

Mia Hobbs:

who've got in touch by email or on Instagram to let me know

Mia Hobbs:

they've enjoyed the podcast, or that knitting has been important

Mia Hobbs:

to their mental health, or about projects they've been involved

Mia Hobbs:

in to use knitting therapeutically. It's been such

Mia Hobbs:

a pleasure to hear from everybody who's got in touch and

Mia Hobbs:

to know that other people also believe strongly in the

Mia Hobbs:

therapeutic potential of knitting and have been seeing it

Mia Hobbs:

in action, either in their own lives or to help other people.

Mia Hobbs:

I'm already booking guests and starting to record series three,

Mia Hobbs:

which I hope to be releasing in the summer but if you've got a

Mia Hobbs:

suggestion of a great guest then please do email me at

Mia Hobbs:

mia@therapeuticknitting.org. This week on the podcast I'm

Mia Hobbs:

joined by Liz O'Riordan. Liz is a breast surgeon who's also

Mia Hobbs:

experienced cancer herself. She is now an author, podcaster,

Mia Hobbs:

speaker and also a knitter. Please note that during our

Mia Hobbs:

conversation, we do talk about cancer, infertility and

Mia Hobbs:

depression, but mostly about knitting.

Mia Hobbs:

Hi Liz, welcome to the podcast.

Liz O'Riordan:

Thank you, Mia.

Mia Hobbs:

So I always start the conversation with asking how you

Mia Hobbs:

learnt to knit!

Liz O'Riordan:

Crikey. So I think I first learnt to knit on

Liz O'Riordan:

one of those wooden French dollies.

Mia Hobbs:

Oh yes.

Liz O'Riordan:

My dad's mum and my own mum would do a lot of

Liz O'Riordan:

knitting and I was desperate to fiddle with it, so they got me

Liz O'Riordan:

one of those. It's like a wooden tube with four spiky nails and

Liz O'Riordan:

you kind of knit and get this long, long tube and I'd be at

Liz O'Riordan:

school with my little thing with this growing strand of wool.

Liz O'Riordan:

What are you going to do with it?

Mia Hobbs:

That's what I've always wondered! What do you do

Mia Hobbs:

with it? [Laughs]

Liz O'Riordan:

I love the making but I hate the joining together

Liz O'Riordan:

and sewing up and cutting off the ends. You're meant to roll

Liz O'Riordan:

it up into a big long rug in a big circle, but life is just too

Liz O'Riordan:

short. So I just had rounds of long knitted ribbons. And that

Liz O'Riordan:

was how I started.

Mia Hobbs:

Okay, so you were what kind of age?

Liz O'Riordan:

I must have been about six or seven, I think.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. And when did you graduate to needles?

Liz O'Riordan:

I think that was about 8/9/10-ish with some very

Liz O'Riordan:

basic needles doing a scarf. My mum knitted amazing things like

Liz O'Riordan:

Kaffe Fassett patterns but, you know, we'll start simple. And I

Liz O'Riordan:

just loved the fact that I could produce something, and I would

Liz O'Riordan:

knit clothes for my Barbie dolls because they were really simple

Liz O'Riordan:

to do, and then in my teenage years I started knitting cuddly

Liz O'Riordan:

toys. Some for me and some to give to people as presents. And

Liz O'Riordan:

some of my friends at school were doing it. It was like the

Liz O'Riordan:

GCSE revision break and we'd be there knitting kind of Christmas

Liz O'Riordan:

trees and farmers and we'd get the whole set. And it was just

Liz O'Riordan:

really nice to produce something positive when you're trying to

Liz O'Riordan:

cram your head full of stuff.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah! And actually, I've ended up interviewing a few

Mia Hobbs:

doctors who (and certainly for me) found that it was a really

Mia Hobbs:

good antidote to academic learning along the way!

Liz O'Riordan:

And, I guess, being physical. Doing something

Liz O'Riordan:

with my hands rather than just sitting at a book writing. Using

Liz O'Riordan:

different muscles in the hands as well.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. And I felt like it uses different muscles in my

Mia Hobbs:

brain or uses a different part of my brain. So it kind of

Mia Hobbs:

allows the learning to percolate a bit when my hands are busy, I

Mia Hobbs:

I'm interested that you had peers who were knitting,

Mia Hobbs:

feel.

Liz O'Riordan:

And the rhythm. Just getting into that rhythm of

Liz O'Riordan:

knitting. It's kind of calming in a way. You don't need to

Liz O'Riordan:

because I think a lot of us grew up as the only knitter in the

Liz O'Riordan:

think; you're just moving the needles and the wool.

Liz O'Riordan:

classroom.

Liz O'Riordan:

My mum knitted. She knitted most of her life and

Liz O'Riordan:

she's given me clothes that she knitted, maternity tops that she

Liz O'Riordan:

wore when she was pregnant with me.

Mia Hobbs:

Oh, wow! That's amazing.

Liz O'Riordan:

She's always been knitting, sewing, cross stitch,

Liz O'Riordan:

crochet. We had to move house because there weren't enough

Liz O'Riordan:

wall space to put all our cross stitches on. It was always a

Liz O'Riordan:

very crafty kind of... It's autumn, the nights are getting

Liz O'Riordan:

darker, let's get all the wool and the threads out.

Mia Hobbs:

And have you knitted or crafted the whole way

Mia Hobbs:

through? Were there ever times where you had significant gaps

Mia Hobbs:

where you didn't do any?

Liz O'Riordan:

I didn't knit during university. I think it

Liz O'Riordan:

felt... It would almost take too long to do a project and I was

Liz O'Riordan:

so, so busy as a doctor, but I did do cross stitches. I think I

Liz O'Riordan:

found that a bit more technically challenging as well

Liz O'Riordan:

when I needed to concentrate on something else. But as a junior

Liz O'Riordan:

doctor, I started knitting again. I did a PhD and taught

Liz O'Riordan:

half the girls there to knit. We were making scarves on really

Liz O'Riordan:

big size 20 needles. "Look, you can make scarves for all your

Liz O'Riordan:

friends!" And especially when those fluffy wools came out with

Liz O'Riordan:

all the bits in the threads. They were special, like, mesh

Liz O'Riordan:

wools. I got everyone knitting scarves. I've always been very

Liz O'Riordan:

good at making things that don't fit me. Life is too short to

Liz O'Riordan:

make a gauge or make a swatch because of course my tension

Liz O'Riordan:

will be fine! When The Killing came out about 10 years ago,

Liz O'Riordan:

because we watched it on a flight on my honeymoon, I

Liz O'Riordan:

thought "I'm going to make the jumper!" I bought the book and I

Liz O'Riordan:

did The Killing jumper, and it would fit a tiny 12 year old

Liz O'Riordan:

with no bust. Because the minute I did the colour work, the

Liz O'Riordan:

tension was really small. I was like, "I can't get this over my

Liz O'Riordan:

head! My beautiful sweater." So I've had to learn.

Mia Hobbs:

it. But I hadn't knitted anything all-over

Mia Hobbs:

colourwork, so I was used to having a yoke, which was

Mia Hobbs:

probably usually a bit tight, but then a bit of a more

Mia Hobbs:

forgiving body. I am knitting myself a new version of it as

Mia Hobbs:

kind of a Christmas jumper, and giving that to my nine year old.

Mia Hobbs:

[Laughs] I think it will fit her better.

Liz O'Riordan:

Its so depressing. I need to knit like

I operate:

practice and prepare and make sure. I think, "No, I

I operate:

just want to start! I'm too impatient."

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. Because you can save that for operating, can't

Mia Hobbs:

you, and break the rules a bit in knitting.

Liz O'Riordan:

Exactly! Yeah.

Mia Hobbs:

Okay, so you had a bit of a break. So you were kind

Mia Hobbs:

of a multicrafter really. Do you still do multiple different

Liz O'Riordan:

I do. I think I get bored. I like to have

Liz O'Riordan:

crafts?

Liz O'Riordan:

several projects on the go. I must have five or six cross

Liz O'Riordan:

stitches that I haven't finished from a while ago. I'm a bad

Liz O'Riordan:

finisher. And I've got three jumpers that still need sewing

Liz O'Riordan:

together, which is I what I intend to do.

Liz O'Riordan:

They're knitted. I tend to do jumpers in the

Mia Hobbs:

Are they knitted?

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. Do you think the gardening also occupies that

Mia Hobbs:

round that you knit down without the seams. And I started making

Mia Hobbs:

my own clothes three or four years ago. I thought, "I have

Mia Hobbs:

too many clothes and I buy things I don't like and there's

Mia Hobbs:

so much landfill. So I'm going to make things I actually like."

Mia Hobbs:

And that's been fun. Again, fabric is free and wool is free.

Mia Hobbs:

[Laughs] Good job my husband has no idea just how big my stash

Mia Hobbs:

is! I think it's always been a wintry thing. In the summer, I'm

Mia Hobbs:

out in the garden. But in autumn/winter, I'll start

Mia Hobbs:

getting the needles out and just knitting, and it's something to

Mia Hobbs:

do in front of the telly. And I'd miss it if I wasn't doing

Mia Hobbs:

something with my hands. And I think when I had to stop

Mia Hobbs:

operating because of side effects of breast cancer

Mia Hobbs:

treatment, it was that I need to use my hands. Knitting was a

Mia Hobbs:

great way of using both of them and just, I guess, calming me

Mia Hobbs:

down and getting into that rhythm again.

Mia Hobbs:

same space in the summer, in terms of doing something with

Mia Hobbs:

your hands? Is it a similar feeling?

Liz O'Riordan:

I think so. I think it's... I want to feel

Liz O'Riordan:

useful. And it's producing something. So you plant a seed

Liz O'Riordan:

and you see it grow. This is a question though. Why do jumpers

Liz O'Riordan:

weigh more than the balls of wool? Because they do!

Mia Hobbs:

[Laughs] Do they? What makes you think they weigh

Mia Hobbs:

more than the balls of wool? Do they actually?

Liz O'Riordan:

I've not done it, but I was just thinking... I've

Liz O'Riordan:

just knitted a small summer vest and I thought, "I've got the

Liz O'Riordan:

four or five balls of wool, which feel quite light, and then

Liz O'Riordan:

the jumper itself just feels heavy." Am I just going mad?

Liz O'Riordan:

Anyway, I digress.

Mia Hobbs:

It's all the effort and the love and the therapy

Mia Hobbs:

that you've knitted into it. It must be that, mustnt it?

Liz O'Riordan:

I think so.

Mia Hobbs:

Either that or it's dog hair. [Laughs]

Liz O'Riordan:

A lot of dog hair.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. Okay, so you've knitted fairly steadily. It

Mia Hobbs:

sounds like you started knitting some quite complicated things

Mia Hobbs:

quite early on, because I think toys are quite fiddly and

Mia Hobbs:

involve quite a lot of shaping. So you were knitting properly

Mia Hobbs:

from patterns even at that stage as a teenager.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. And that doesn't at all sound like

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes. And I think it's me... I'm one of those

Liz O'Riordan:

annoying people who can see something once and pick it up

Liz O'Riordan:

someone who's a surgeon! [Laughs]

Liz O'Riordan:

really, really quickly, and I like a challenge. And I don't

Liz O'Riordan:

want to knit a boring stocking stitch scarf. I want to knit a

Liz O'Riordan:

scarf with all the bells and whistles. I think my mum had got

Liz O'Riordan:

a Reader's Digest book of knitting and crafts, and I would

Liz O'Riordan:

knit swatches of all the different cable patterns and

Liz O'Riordan:

things. And I think it's that challenge. I want to do

Liz O'Riordan:

something that's interesting and difficult.

Liz O'Riordan:

Not at all! [Laughs] When I was having

Liz O'Riordan:

chemotherapy I started knitting, and I'd seen entrelac knitting.

Mia Hobbs:

Oh yeah, that rings a bell but I don't actually know

Mia Hobbs:

what it is.

Liz O'Riordan:

You knit left and right on the needle, and you

Liz O'Riordan:

kind of knit triangles going one way and then triangles going the

Liz O'Riordan:

other way, so it all joins together. People knit in

Liz O'Riordan:

different ways, and I physically move the wool over the needle,

Liz O'Riordan:

whereas my mother-in-law will just keep it and use the

Liz O'Riordan:

fingers. I can't do that. I had to learn to do continental

Liz O'Riordan:

knitting, so rather than turning the work, I could knit left and

Liz O'Riordan:

then knit right, which did blow my mind. I was high as a kite on

Mia Hobbs:

And it all worked? You didn't look back at it and

Mia Hobbs:

morphine after my mastectomy, so I knitted an entrelac scarf. In

Mia Hobbs:

12 hours. I was wide awake the next morning, a bit high but,

Mia Hobbs:

"Look, I've made a scarf!"

Mia Hobbs:

think...

Liz O'Riordan:

No, because again, once I get into the

Liz O'Riordan:

rhythm of the pattern, you know what you're doing. It's very

Liz O'Riordan:

simple. It was just learning that technique. And then when it

Liz O'Riordan:

came back again, I started doing brioche knitting, and instead of

Liz O'Riordan:

doing brioche knitting with a nice thick, sensible wool, I

Liz O'Riordan:

thought, "No, I'm going to do it with two mohair strands of wool

Liz O'Riordan:

knitting this cobweb scarf."

Mia Hobbs:

Wow! And how did that go?

Liz O'Riordan:

There was a bit of swearing and a lot of

Liz O'Riordan:

unpicking, but it's beautiful. And I've tried to do another

Liz O'Riordan:

one, but I just don't have the heart to go through the effort

Liz O'Riordan:

to make it again.

Mia Hobbs:

I'm sure the unpicking bit, when that

Mia Hobbs:

happens, must be...

Liz O'Riordan:

Because it's so lacy, you can't...

Mia Hobbs:

Well, mohair's tricky anyway. I'm knitting with mohair

Mia Hobbs:

at the moment. And in terms of the types of projects you

Mia Hobbs:

gravitate towards, is it always the more complicated unchartered

Mia Hobbs:

territory you're kind of mountain climbing in your

Mia Hobbs:

knitting projects? Or are there times where you think actually,

Mia Hobbs:

at the moment, what I need for my mental health or wellbeing is

Mia Hobbs:

some really simple something.

Liz O'Riordan:

It's exactly like that. So I do knit a lot of

Liz O'Riordan:

scarves and hats and shawls, where I can just sit and watch

Liz O'Riordan:

TV and knit and not have to think, because they're the

Liz O'Riordan:

things that I wear most often. So I knitted just a very boring

Liz O'Riordan:

cream and navy striped Breton jumper, but I've worn it so much

Liz O'Riordan:

and it was so simple to knit. And then challenging projects

Liz O'Riordan:

are often gifts for other people. I knitted a load of tiny

Liz O'Riordan:

little white hearts to give to people at Christmas, and I'll

Liz O'Riordan:

knit little elephants and things, but they are quite

Liz O'Riordan:

finicky. And often it's the joy of something that's easy, that

Liz O'Riordan:

knits up quite quickly, rather than taking months and months

Liz O'Riordan:

and months.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. And how much, for you, is it about the process

Mia Hobbs:

of the knitting (which it sounds like there is something kind of

Mia Hobbs:

soothing for you, the repetitive movements) versus the finishing

Mia Hobbs:

a thing and it having a life as an object, like being given to

Mia Hobbs:

someone or you wearing it?

Liz O'Riordan:

It's the making.

Mia Hobbs:

It's the making. So more process than product.

Liz O'Riordan:

Definitely. I knit a load of things because I

Liz O'Riordan:

want to knit. I don't need another 50 scarves and I don't

Liz O'Riordan:

need another jumper, but I'm going to knit a jumper. And I've

Liz O'Riordan:

enjoyed making it, and then I try it on and say, "Yeah, it's

Liz O'Riordan:

nice, but actually..." Yeah, it's the making. That's really interesting.

Mia Hobbs:

So you would do that even if you were on a desert

Mia Hobbs:

island and had one ball of yarn?

Liz O'Riordan:

I think so. I'd still be knitting.

Mia Hobbs:

You would unravel it and re-knit it.

Liz O'Riordan:

So it's funny, as a consultant surgeon operating,

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, I think so.

Mia Hobbs:

So would I.

Mia Hobbs:

when you've done the magic, the juniors come in and sew up the

Mia Hobbs:

scar and make it look pretty and put the dressing on. And I

Mia Hobbs:

almost need that for my knitting. "Here you are, here it

Mia Hobbs:

is. Can you now sew the ends in and finish the seams and stretch

Mia Hobbs:

and block it, please? Because I've done the fun bit!" How do

Mia Hobbs:

you get used to loving that bit? I don't know.

Mia Hobbs:

I think I've become more tolerant of all of the

Mia Hobbs:

fiddly bits of knitting over time, actually. I used to

Mia Hobbs:

sometimes leave things with just ends in a knitting basket for

Mia Hobbs:

ages! But now I do that less, I think.

Liz O'Riordan:

I've learnt to do the ends as I go along, which

Liz O'Riordan:

makes a big difference.

Mia Hobbs:

That helps. And I think sometimes I, to be honest,

Mia Hobbs:

depending on what I'm knitting, can get a bit of RSI, so I think

Mia Hobbs:

sometimes to change the task, it's quite helpful to have some

Mia Hobbs:

ends to do. Or you can do it while you're doing multitasking,

Mia Hobbs:

perhaps, because you don't have to really use your brain. For

Mia Hobbs:

example, if you were following a pattern, you could do it while

Mia Hobbs:

you were on a bus or something and it might feel less painful.

Liz O'Riordan:

I was knitting on a train and there was an old guy

Liz O'Riordan:

next to me who knitted as well, and we just spent the next hour

Liz O'Riordan:

talking about his knitting projects. It's amazing how

Liz O'Riordan:

people come out of the woodwork. And this is the thing... Another

Liz O'Riordan:

knitter I follow, she's an Australian breast surgeon called

Liz O'Riordan:

Rhea Liang. She was knitting at a conference, and loads of men

Liz O'Riordan:

around her said, "You can't pay attention, you're knitting."

Liz O'Riordan:

"Sorry, I'm paying far more attention than you are on your

Liz O'Riordan:

phone. I can multitask." Another friend of mine was knitting

Liz O'Riordan:

things for a craft stall in an MDT meeting, and everyone thinks

Liz O'Riordan:

she's crazy. But actually, it almost makes you concentrate

Liz O'Riordan:

more on what you're hearing.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. Do you find that? I would always, in a

Mia Hobbs:

business meeting or that kind of discussion or training, I would

Mia Hobbs:

struggle to sit still for six hours and learn about something

Mia Hobbs:

without having knitting. And I think the older I've got, the

Mia Hobbs:

more confident I've got. And I think also the more awareness

Mia Hobbs:

there is that actually humans are not really designed to sit

Mia Hobbs:

still for six hours and just listen. And if I have a very

Mia Hobbs:

simple basic sock where I'm just knitting in circles, stocking

Mia Hobbs:

stitch, that would 100% improve my concentration, like you said,

Mia Hobbs:

stop my brain looking for distractions that would be more

Mia Hobbs:

distracting, like looking on my phone.

Liz O'Riordan:

Which is what everyone else is doing, aren't

Liz O'Riordan:

they?

Mia Hobbs:

Yes! And would you do that too?

Liz O'Riordan:

I would. I never did it at work. I think I'm

Liz O'Riordan:

always so busy writing in meetings, it was really hard to

Liz O'Riordan:

do that. But especially on Zoom calls and things, I'll often

Liz O'Riordan:

have the knitting there. And it's just a way of focusing.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. So you would use it for that reason as well.

Mia Hobbs:

In terms of what you think knitting brings your life, in

Mia Hobbs:

terms of your wellbeing generally, how do you think it

Mia Hobbs:

helps?

Liz O'Riordan:

That's a really interesting question. I've never

Liz O'Riordan:

thought about what it brings, because it's just part of me. I

Liz O'Riordan:

think it's being able to make something and be proud of it and

Liz O'Riordan:

feel I've accomplished something. Because now I've

Liz O'Riordan:

retired, I don't do anything and it's quite nice just to see I've

Liz O'Riordan:

made something. But it calms me down. I guess it's the

Liz O'Riordan:

mindfulness. Kind of the buzzword. It's just a way of

Liz O'Riordan:

relaxing and switching off. But it's that challenging. It's

Liz O'Riordan:

getting my brain, "Let's just tackle something really big" and

Liz O'Riordan:

keeping me thinking. And I like that. I like learning new

Liz O'Riordan:

things. What can I do next? What's different? And god, it's

Liz O'Riordan:

amazing how you can just get lost scrolling down knitting

Liz O'Riordan:

patterns. It's another way of getting bored and kind of

Liz O'Riordan:

doom-scrolling, but knitting patterns and knitting bloggers.

Liz O'Riordan:

But I love that whole... It's a really safe, friendly world.

Liz O'Riordan:

Knitters are great people. It's like a whole other community of

Liz O'Riordan:

friends that I didn't know existed, now,it's kind of opened

Liz O'Riordan:

up online, if that makes sense.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah, definitely. I don't know whether that's part

Mia Hobbs:

of the process that you enjoy, like the planning of the project

Mia Hobbs:

and the picking of the colours, or whether it's more the actual

Mia Hobbs:

action, or both.

Liz O'Riordan:

I am technical but I don't think I'm creative.

Liz O'Riordan:

I find it very hard to imagine a jumper in another colour,

Liz O'Riordan:

because I see what's on the pattern. I find it very, very

Liz O'Riordan:

hard. If you asked me to draw something, I'd say, "Give me

Liz O'Riordan:

something to copy." But I couldn't draw from my brain. So

Liz O'Riordan:

it's often me looking at a pattern with a colour. I like

Liz O'Riordan:

that I need it. And then once I've knitted it, I may think,

Liz O'Riordan:

"Oh, I can change that because it'll look better." But for me,

Liz O'Riordan:

it's the doing. It's the getting stuck in and using my hands and

Liz O'Riordan:

telling my husband to stop talking to me when I'm casting

Liz O'Riordan:

on.

Mia Hobbs:

[Laughs] When you're counting stitches.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah, that's frustrating.

Liz O'Riordan:

He knows! "When I'm counting, don't come near

Liz O'Riordan:

me!" And he'll start shouting out numbers. "No! This is the

Liz O'Riordan:

fifth time!" And it's always when it's like 300 stitches. "Go

Liz O'Riordan:

He doesn't understand it. It's really funny

Liz O'Riordan:

away!"

Liz O'Riordan:

because he's a surgeon. I'm trying to show him, "Look, you

Liz O'Riordan:

could knit. It's just knots. It's just knots and needles."

Liz O'Riordan:

"No, I don't understand."

Mia Hobbs:

I was interested that you said you've started making

Mia Hobbs:

your own clothes. Is that over and above knitting, or sewing?

Liz O'Riordan:

As well. I think, again, knitting is more a winter

Liz O'Riordan:

thing. I don't really like knitted summer jumpers and it

Liz O'Riordan:

feels weird knitting a big heavy jumper or scarf in the summer

Liz O'Riordan:

because I'm not going to wear it then. And I like just knitting a

Liz O'Riordan:

load of simple jersey tops that fit me. Just a really nice

Liz O'Riordan:

jersey. And I like, again, that process with the sewing machine,

Liz O'Riordan:

of the knitting and the planning and the making. Although it's

Liz O'Riordan:

hard because I live in Suffolk. Where I live, there aren't many

Liz O'Riordan:

fabric shops so you buy fabric online. Same with wool, really:

Liz O'Riordan:

you order it online and think, "Oh wait, this is soft." Or,

Liz O'Riordan:

"It's scratchy, it's not what I thought it would be." It's a

Liz O'Riordan:

couple of hours of me-time as well. It's guilt-free, selfish,

Liz O'Riordan:

this is just me in my room with my machine and my needles, just

Liz O'Riordan:

doing something for me.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. And how does it affect your wellbeing once

Mia Hobbs:

you're wearing the finished product?

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, it's a really nice feeling and when

Liz O'Riordan:

someone says, "Oh, I like your top!" you think, "I made it."

Liz O'Riordan:

It's a bit of "Hey, look at me, I'm amazing!" but it's really

Liz O'Riordan:

nice to think I've got something that nobody else has that fits

Liz O'Riordan:

me perfectly. Like a jumper, when you know you can add three

Liz O'Riordan:

inches onto the sleeves because they're never long enough. I

Liz O'Riordan:

love that you can customise the clothes to make them fit you.

Mia Hobbs:

Because I feel like that was something that

Mia Hobbs:

surprised me when I started knitting garments, because for a

Mia Hobbs:

long time, I wasn't really knitting... it might have been

Mia Hobbs:

shawls or scarves or hats, but it wasn't really like... you

Mia Hobbs:

know, now I wear things I've made every day. And like you

Mia Hobbs:

said, I had then a barren point in the summer where I thought,

Mia Hobbs:

"I'm not wearing anything I've made!" and then turned to

Mia Hobbs:

sewing. But I feel like it's had a very transformative

Mia Hobbs:

relationship in my... is it body image or I suppose my

Mia Hobbs:

relationship to clothing, for sure. But also, if someone gives

Mia Hobbs:

me a compliment, it's not so much about how I look. I can

Mia Hobbs:

transform it into a compliment that means something more to me.

Mia Hobbs:

It's like, "Look, you're clever!" or "You're creative!"

Mia Hobbs:

because I made it myself.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes, exactly. And they're like, "Wow, you made

Liz O'Riordan:

that? I could never do that." And you think, "Oh, actually,

Liz O'Riordan:

it's not just knitting! This is actually something that is quite

Liz O'Riordan:

impressive for a lot of people." But then you want them to know

Liz O'Riordan:

how simple it is. But I think I am more aware of what my body is

Liz O'Riordan:

like, now I'm having to fit it and accept that this is my

Liz O'Riordan:

shape, learn what works for me and what doesn't. And actually

Liz O'Riordan:

appreciate jumpers and scarves and clothes in shops, and

Liz O'Riordan:

realise what's gone in, and is this made well? And I'll look at

Liz O'Riordan:

the seams and think, "Actually, this isn't. I could do better

Mia Hobbs:

And is it easier... you know you said about that

Mia Hobbs:

than this."

Mia Hobbs:

kind of coming to terms with how your body is now? Has that been

Mia Hobbs:

more challenging if you're making it yourself? Or is that

Mia Hobbs:

easier than if you were buying in a shop, where you might have

Mia Hobbs:

an idea about what size or what shape? You know, can you

Mia Hobbs:

customise it more, and does that feel better, or not

Mia Hobbs:

particularly?

Liz O'Riordan:

I think the problem for me is that I don't

Liz O'Riordan:

have a left breast, and I don't wear a prosthetic or a bra

Liz O'Riordan:

because of pain, so I am lopsided. My other side isn't

Liz O'Riordan:

particularly big, but it is very noticeable. And especially in a

Liz O'Riordan:

big jumper, when you've got one breast sticking out. And it's

Liz O'Riordan:

kind of patterns or things to distract it. Or when you're

Liz O'Riordan:

sewing clothes, it's how you have to tweak the neckline so it

Liz O'Riordan:

doesn't gape, or I can't wear that. And that was really

Liz O'Riordan:

challenging, seeing beautiful patterns and making them up

Liz O'Riordan:

thinking, "No, this doesn't work. And I don't know how to

Liz O'Riordan:

change it for my shape." And it's kind of working out pattern

Liz O'Riordan:

placement on jumpers so it's not very obvious where I don't want

Liz O'Riordan:

it to be seen. I think that's been really challenging. And

Liz O'Riordan:

learning how to measure yourself properly. And actually

Liz O'Riordan:

forgetting that small could be a large in a different size, and

Liz O'Riordan:

that's just how it's made, and it's just a number. Rather than

Liz O'Riordan:

being, "Oh, I'm always a size 10" or "I'm always a size..."

Liz O'Riordan:

Well, it depends which shop you're in. And that's the same

Liz O'Riordan:

with dressmaking patterns, especially the Vogue ones from

Liz O'Riordan:the:Liz O'Riordan:

12 now, and you just have to forget all of that.

Mia Hobbs:

Yes. But I think you're right. I haven't got to

Mia Hobbs:

the level of adapting patterns for sewing. That's quite

Mia Hobbs:

challenging, I think.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, a lot of YouTube videos. And it takes

Liz O'Riordan:

time, because you have to trace out the pattern, then put it

Liz O'Riordan:

onto paper, and then cut it, and then get out the muslin, then

Liz O'Riordan:

make a thing, and does it fit, and then do it again. Whereas

Liz O'Riordan:

you just want to go straight to the cutting. Like making a

Liz O'Riordan:

swatch in knitting. You know you should. [Laughs]

Mia Hobbs:

But you just don't. [Laughs]

Liz O'Riordan:

But you don't. And actually I've learned to do

Liz O'Riordan:

that now. It's not worth spending all that time on this

Liz O'Riordan:

beautiful wool, if I'm not going to do a swatch and make sure it

Liz O'Riordan:

fits me. So I have finally learnt that.

Mia Hobbs:

I'd like to say I have, but there are certain... I

Liz O'Riordan:

Oh no! [Laughs]

Liz O'Riordan:

have just recently made a hat that I now need to find someone

Liz O'Riordan:

with a very big head who'd like to appreciate it! [Laughs]

Mia Hobbs:

Would you say knitting is your main craft now,

Mia Hobbs:

or do you still do... are you crocheting as well?

Liz O'Riordan:

I've done a bit of crocheting. I made a yellow

Liz O'Riordan:

elephant to go with my podcast, and I was going to make them for

Liz O'Riordan:

all the guests. But I find crochet really painful on my

Liz O'Riordan:

hands because I don't do it very... and when you flip

Liz O'Riordan:

between the two, it's almost like getting your hand muscles

Liz O'Riordan:

going again. I think it's knitting in the winter and

Liz O'Riordan:

sewing in the summer. But I will always knit. I just love that

Liz O'Riordan:

feel of the needles and seeing something grow and the challenge

Liz O'Riordan:

of reading a pattern. And I think I'm really glad I did it

Liz O'Riordan:

at a such young age. It's always been part of my life, and it's

Liz O'Riordan:

something I can hopefully pass on to my own grandchildren.

Mia Hobbs:

Do you think you used it for its mental health

Mia Hobbs:

benefits when you were younger?

Liz O'Riordan:

Definitely.

Mia Hobbs:

Because I think I probably did, but I don't think

Mia Hobbs:

I actually realised I was doing it at the time. I think it

Mia Hobbs:

actually was very late to dawn on me how I was actually using

Mia Hobbs:

it. But I definitely really was.

Liz O'Riordan:

I've never thought of that, but I think

Liz O'Riordan:

you're right. So I've had serious depression twice in my

Liz O'Riordan:

life, and knitting was something I did. I may just be in the

Liz O'Riordan:

house with my cats or my dog, but I would knit and I could

Liz O'Riordan:

make something and it kind of made me feel that I'm still...

Liz O'Riordan:

useful is the wrong word, but I think it is... It's a really

Liz O'Riordan:

good way of helping your mental health and just centring you

Liz O'Riordan:

again, and helping you... Sometimes it's good thinking

Liz O'Riordan:

time, and that can be bad because you're alone with your

Liz O'Riordan:

needles thinking, "Oh my goodness..." I just tend to have

Liz O'Riordan:

Friends repeats on so I don't need to concentrate. Just

Liz O'Riordan:

background noise, because it can be really... Finding the right

Liz O'Riordan:

thing to do as well. But yeah, I think it's been really important

Liz O'Riordan:

for my own peace of mind and sanity throughout all of my

Liz O'Riordan:

life. And I can almost look at a jumper and say, "Oh, I did that

Liz O'Riordan:

when I was feeling that. And I made that scarf when I was

Liz O'Riordan:

feeling that."

Mia Hobbs:

And how does it feel to have those kind of reminders

Mia Hobbs:

in physical form?

Liz O'Riordan:

It's weird. In some ways it's a bit sad, being

Liz O'Riordan:

reminded of how you felt at that time. But then you look at the

Liz O'Riordan:

scarf and think, "No, that came out of that. There are positives

Liz O'Riordan:

to come out of it." And I think that it's really nice to see the

Liz O'Riordan:

good when you are in the middle of something difficult.

Mia Hobbs:

Because I think it can be a complicated

Mia Hobbs:

relationship, can't it? I've spoken to quite a few people

Mia Hobbs:

who've used knitting during periods of grief, for example.

Mia Hobbs:

And then you could have very mixed associations with that

Mia Hobbs:

item.

Liz O'Riordan:

So when I found out I couldn't have children

Liz O'Riordan:

because chemo made me infertile, I suddenly started grieving for

Liz O'Riordan:

the loss of the baby I now knew I really wanted and could never

Liz O'Riordan:

have. My brother had had a son and I'd knitted all the baby

Liz O'Riordan:

clothes, and I couldn't wait to knit them for my own baby,

Liz O'Riordan:

because they're so cute. And I couldn't. And so what I then did

Liz O'Riordan:

was start knitting clothes for premature babies. And you can

Liz O'Riordan:

almost knit... this sounds really awful... either knit

Liz O'Riordan:

clothes for them when they're very, very small, or clothes to

Liz O'Riordan:

be buried in. And they give you the size for a baby hat that

Liz O'Riordan:

fits on an egg. And they were teeny teeny tiny, and I was

Liz O'Riordan:

knitting all of them and I just thought, "No, this is not good

Liz O'Riordan:

for me. It was a nice idea, but doing it is just bringing it

Liz O'Riordan:

back home." So I had to stop. And I think it's okay to stop a

Liz O'Riordan:

project. I can't not finish a book if I don't like it. And if

Liz O'Riordan:

I'm knitting a jumper and I'm just not enjoying it, I have to

learn:

it's okay to stop.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. I allow myself to stop with a book too.

Liz O'Riordan:

I've never thought of that: why do you

Liz O'Riordan:

[Laughs] If I don't care if the characters live or die, I think,

Liz O'Riordan:

"Well, I don't need to find out." When I do my therapeutic

Liz O'Riordan:

knitting groups, like in schools, I talk a lot about how

Liz O'Riordan:

it's really important for you to think about what you need the

Liz O'Riordan:

project to give you right now. And if it's not giving you that,

Liz O'Riordan:

it's not the right thing for right now. And it might not be

Liz O'Riordan:

knit? I thought I just knit because it's what I do. But

Liz O'Riordan:

the wrong thing forever. You know, maybe that jumper needs to

Liz O'Riordan:

go and sit and hibernate somewhere. But if what you need

Liz O'Riordan:

for your life is a sense of achievement, maybe you need

Liz O'Riordan:

something a lot smaller that you're going to finish, and get

Liz O'Riordan:

the sense of achievement, and then tackle that jumper another

Liz O'Riordan:

time, or unravel it.

Liz O'Riordan:

again, is it distraction or is it comfort? Or is it the

Liz O'Riordan:

challenge?

Mia Hobbs:

I think it's probably helpful for our mental health

Mia Hobbs:

because it's all of those things, or it can be all of

Mia Hobbs:

those things at different points. And sometimes it could

Mia Hobbs:

be something soothing and simple and repetitive that's literally

Mia Hobbs:

just your hands, where your brain is doing a Zoom training

Mia Hobbs:

or doing something else, or where you're completely wiped

Mia Hobbs:

and you don't have any bandwidth left for thinking. And sometimes

Mia Hobbs:

you think, "Actually, I need an escape from the news, or

Mia Hobbs:

everything, and I need to absorb myself completely in a really

Mia Hobbs:

complicated pattern so I just can't think about anything

Mia Hobbs:

else." It can be all of those things, can't it?

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, you pick the right project for what you

Liz O'Riordan:

need at the time.

Mia Hobbs:

And does, for example, the materials make a

Mia Hobbs:

difference, or the colour? Does that make any difference?

Liz O'Riordan:

I'm always drawn to yellows and blues. And I love

Liz O'Riordan:

kind of the Norwegian... like the intarsia kind of colourwork

Liz O'Riordan:

that they do. I love that. But often the patterns recommend

Liz O'Riordan:

really itchy wools. I've made that mistake before: you buy the

Liz O'Riordan:

wool that comes with a pattern and you think, "No, I don't like

Liz O'Riordan:

this." I don't like bright colours. Kind of soft, pale,

Liz O'Riordan:

pastelly neutrals. And I always want the perfect black jumper

Liz O'Riordan:

but I hate knitting with black, because it's so hard to see what

Liz O'Riordan:

you're doing. I think it's an interesting design, either

Liz O'Riordan:

interesting colourwork or an interesting stripe, that catches

Liz O'Riordan:

my eye, rather than the colours.

Mia Hobbs:

And is it more about the process for you? Like the

Mia Hobbs:

design? Or is it more about, "Oh, I like the look of that. I

Mia Hobbs:

want to make it"? Or is it more about, "I want to be doing that

Mia Hobbs:

thing with my hands" like cables or colourwork?

Liz O'Riordan:

I think it's "I like the look of that pattern.

Liz O'Riordan:

It looks interesting." That's what I'm drawn to. And sometimes

Liz O'Riordan:

I'm looking for a really cabley Aran network jumper for my

Liz O'Riordan:

husband, or sometimes I just want something light. Something

Liz O'Riordan:

will just catch my eye because I've always got projects on the

Liz O'Riordan:

go. I can always knit another scarf. I think, "Ooh, that just

Liz O'Riordan:

really excites me, what I want to knit next." And it could be

Liz O'Riordan:

anything. God, it's so haphazard, isn't it? How do you

Liz O'Riordan:

plan what to knit next?

Mia Hobbs:

I think I think much more about process than about

Mia Hobbs:

the end result. I wouldn't knit something I didn't want, but,

Mia Hobbs:

for example, I have a jumper that is a very, very plain

Mia Hobbs:

raglan stockinette jumper with three large stripes, basically,

Mia Hobbs:

of colour. I love it. It's slightly the worse for wear

Mia Hobbs:

having had an interaction with some moths. I don't think I

Mia Hobbs:

could re-knit that for myself. It wouldn't be enough going on.

Mia Hobbs:

I like to have a plain project on the go that I don't need to

Mia Hobbs:

think about, for example, doing a Zoom training. So plain socks,

Mia Hobbs:

for example, are quite good because I can carry them around.

Mia Hobbs:

And in the summer, you know, if you happen to end up sitting in

Mia Hobbs:

the park or you're waiting for a bus or something, they're quite

Mia Hobbs:

good because they're easy and you can stick them in your bag.

Mia Hobbs:

But I didn't think I would do a whole jumper like that. I'd be

Mia Hobbs:

more attracted... Like this one has got some kind of detail,

Mia Hobbs:

like stitch patterns. And I think I would nowadays gravitate

Mia Hobbs:

more towards something a bit complicated or colourwork.

Liz O'Riordan:

I think you get to a certain stage when you're

Liz O'Riordan:

bored just knitting stocking stitch.

Mia Hobbs:

I definitely plan my projects so that I have

Mia Hobbs:

different... I like something very challenging, because

Mia Hobbs:

sometimes I do just want to turn off the rest of the stuff going

Mia Hobbs:

on in my brain and just be absorbed in it. And then

Mia Hobbs:

something for stopping me getting distracted if I'm

Mia Hobbs:

listening. So I definitely would plan them like that. And I think

Mia Hobbs:

sometimes I do... Like with this project I've got on the go right

Mia Hobbs:

now that's got mohair, I did really have a hankering for the

Mia Hobbs:

tactile sensation of mohair, I think.

Liz O'Riordan:

It is lovely and soft, isn't it?

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. I'd love to hear about a significant

Mia Hobbs:

knitting project for you, Liz.

Liz O'Riordan:

I think it was probably the first blanket I

Liz O'Riordan:

made, done by knitting squares in all sorts of different

Liz O'Riordan:

colours. And I did that during my A-levels. I look at it and it

Liz O'Riordan:

was a great time of my life, and so many memories were kind of

Liz O'Riordan:

caught up in it. I knitted these huge squares, and then I would

Liz O'Riordan:

crochet an edge around them, and I thought, "Wow, this is

Liz O'Riordan:

amazing! I have made this blanket." It's actually a proper

Liz O'Riordan:

thing that I used and I wore. And I then gave it on. So our

Liz O'Riordan:

local hospital had volunteers who knit blankets for people who

Liz O'Riordan:

were dying. So they have colourful blankets on the

Liz O'Riordan:

hospital beds, and nurses know the blanket means that they're

Liz O'Riordan:

towards the end of their life. And I donated it to them. And

Liz O'Riordan:

that to me was a lovely way of giving something that didn't fit

Liz O'Riordan:

in with my life now on to someone else. And I think the

Liz O'Riordan:

things that mean the most to me are things I've given to people,

Liz O'Riordan:

like really complicated scarves. They're not expected to say

Liz O'Riordan:

thank you. It's that act of love of giving it to someone else

Liz O'Riordan:

that really means a lot to me. I often put more effort into those

Liz O'Riordan:

than I do for things I'm making myself.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah, so there's a big part of knitting that is

Mia Hobbs:

about the feeling you get when you give something away to

Mia Hobbs:

someone else.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes, completely.

Mia Hobbs:

Do you generally know beforehand? So if you're

Mia Hobbs:

knitting a scarf like you said, a complicated scarf, would you

Mia Hobbs:

generally know who's going to receive that, or not

Liz O'Riordan:

Generally. So a scarf I knitted recently and

Liz O'Riordan:

necessarily?

Liz O'Riordan:

gave to someone, I thought it would be for someone and then

Liz O'Riordan:

life happened to someone else. And by the time I'd finished it,

Liz O'Riordan:

life had happened to someone else, so actually no, they need

Liz O'Riordan:

it most. And often I'm just bored. I think, "I want to knit

Liz O'Riordan:

a beautiful intricate lacy scarf, and I don't need one so

Liz O'Riordan:

I'll find someone to give it to when it's done. Because I don't

Liz O'Riordan:

need another jumper at the moment." Again, you can knit so

Liz O'Riordan:

many things and actually you don't wear them because you have

Liz O'Riordan:

so many and it's really hard thinking, "Right. What do I

Liz O'Riordan:

actually want to wear that will go with my wardrobe?" instead of

Liz O'Riordan:

"Ooh, that's a pretty colour!"

Mia Hobbs:

Do the recipients always appreciate? Does it

Mia Hobbs:

matter to you whether they know what's gone into it or whether

Mia Hobbs:

they're not going to chuck it in the washing machine?

Liz O'Riordan:

It always matters to me, but they're to close

Liz O'Riordan:

family and friends who know what it's like and how much hours

Liz O'Riordan:

went into it, so they do understand. So I had a group of

Liz O'Riordan:

friends who kind of knit and crochet on Twitter, and one of

Liz O'Riordan:

the first cardigans a friend made looked a bit female

Liz O'Riordan:

gynaecological. So we called it a fanny cardigan. And then we

Liz O'Riordan:

thought we would set up a shop called Tits, Knits and Hookers,

Liz O'Riordan:

because I was a breast surgeon with knitting and their crochet

Liz O'Riordan:

hooks. So we'd sell cake and knit, and that was like, "Right,

Liz O'Riordan:

we will do this. So we all retire and we will just sit and

Liz O'Riordan:

knit and crochet and chat all day long, and life would be

Liz O'Riordan:

wonderful."

Mia Hobbs:

Are they friends you've met online or people you

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes, friends I've met online. It all started... So

Liz O'Riordan:

know in real life?

Liz O'Riordan:

I'd just been diagnosed with breast cancer, and I was on the

Liz O'Riordan:

train to London with my husband and we were starting to talk

Liz O'Riordan:

about Christmas knitting patterns. And I managed to

Liz O'Riordan:

find... something led to willy-warmers because I was

Liz O'Riordan:

talking about my time as a urology surgeon, and you could

Liz O'Riordan:

find patterns for men's boxer shorts which had a willy-warmer

Liz O'Riordan:

attached. So we were laughing on the train. And that then led us

Liz O'Riordan:

to finding a pattern for a knitted condom! Which obviously

Liz O'Riordan:

wouldn't work. Which I then made and put Lindt chocolate balls on

Liz O'Riordan:

and it goes on my tree every year. And since then we've just

Liz O'Riordan:

gone looking for crazy knitted things that you'd never ever

Liz O'Riordan:

make.

Mia Hobbs:

So it sounds like that kind of humorous side... So

Mia Hobbs:

that was how you met this group of friends?

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes. And I've met some of them in person, and it's

Liz O'Riordan:

just lovely. But we have our own little group and we'll share

Liz O'Riordan:

what we're making and have a laugh, and "Oh my god, this

Liz O'Riordan:

looks like this... it didn't look like that on the pattern."

Liz O'Riordan:

It's nice to have that, and just share the mistakes and the pain

Mia Hobbs:

[Laughs] Yeah, so craft has brought a new

Mia Hobbs:

when your husband makes you lose count.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, definitely more friends. Yes. So again, the

Liz O'Riordan:

connection.

Liz O'Riordan:

Australian surgeon who knits as well - there's like so many

Liz O'Riordan:

people who just get in touch because you're doing it, and

Liz O'Riordan:

it's lovely. And other people have been inspired to learn how

Liz O'Riordan:

to knit by watching a YouTube video because they've seen me

Liz O'Riordan:

post something. And I love that you can inspire other people to

Liz O'Riordan:

get on board with a habit.

Mia Hobbs:

chat on a train journey.

Liz O'Riordan:

Exactly. And probably get no knitting done at

Liz O'Riordan:

all, because you're too busy talking. But I love that. And

Liz O'Riordan:

it's not expensive. You can get wool in a charity shop and a

Liz O'Riordan:

couple of needles and actually make something.

Mia Hobbs:

So it sounds like it brings quite a lot of joy to

Mia Hobbs:

your life.

Liz O'Riordan:

It does. But for me, it's about using my hands in

Liz O'Riordan:

a complex way. It is my kind of, "I'm not operating, but this is

Liz O'Riordan:

how I do it now".

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. And seeking the challenge, as well, of a new

Mia Hobbs:

type of thing.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes, definitely. I think, "What can I do next?

Liz O'Riordan:

I've done entrelac, I've done brioche, I've done intarsia.

Liz O'Riordan:

There must be something else I can do."

Mia Hobbs:

Sure. And I can really hear that it's important

Mia Hobbs:

to you to get that sense of achievement, and to feel like

Mia Hobbs:

it's a useful thing that goes out into the world and has a

Mia Hobbs:

life afterwards.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah. I don't get patients flashing me in

Liz O'Riordan:

Sainsbury's showing me their scars anymore saying, "Thank

Liz O'Riordan:

you, Doctor, you can't see it." It's that kind of, I guess, a

Liz O'Riordan:

sense of self-gratification.

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah. And also because I guess as a surgeon,

Mia Hobbs:

you're someone who's a high achiever, good with your hands,

Mia Hobbs:

attracted to a challenge, but also really interested in

Mia Hobbs:

helping people. And it sounds like in a way knitting can allow

Mia Hobbs:

you to tick all of those boxes.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah. And it's lovely. I think it's so nice

Liz O'Riordan:

when you get something homemade.

Mia Hobbs:

From other people?

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, you know, they've kind of really taken the

Liz O'Riordan:

effort and thought about you. And I think it's really nice

Liz O'Riordan:

giving someone that gift. Because a scarf fits everybody.

Liz O'Riordan:

[Laughs]

Mia Hobbs:

Yes, this is true! I always end with asking about

Mia Hobbs:

what the greatest gift is that knitting has given you for the

Mia Hobbs:

rest of your life.

Liz O'Riordan:

I think it's a sense of achievement, that it

Liz O'Riordan:

doesn't matter where I am or how bad I'm feeling, I can get the

Liz O'Riordan:

needles out and I can make something and say, "That wasn't

Liz O'Riordan:

a wasted day."

Mia Hobbs:

So it's a way of having a kind of soothing

Mia Hobbs:

activity, but also having achieved something.

Liz O'Riordan:

I think so. Yeah, it's something I can always do

Liz O'Riordan:

that will just make me feel, "Yeah, you can still do

Liz O'Riordan:

something. You're okay."

Mia Hobbs:

Have you found when you were feeling low, you could

Mia Hobbs:

still knit?

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes. And rather than spending hours

Liz O'Riordan:

doom-scrolling on my phone, I'll just turn it off or put some

Liz O'Riordan:

music on and I will just knit and it's just that thinking

Liz O'Riordan:

time. A lot of thinking time, I've got the dog on my lap but

Liz O'Riordan:

he's got caught up in the ball of wool, but it's just that kind

Liz O'Riordan:

of... I just feel safe. And there's something lovely about

Liz O'Riordan:

the feeling of that heavy blanket growing on your lap.

Liz O'Riordan:

Just that feeling of just me and my wool and I'm fine. Sorry,

Liz O'Riordan:

husband! [Laughs]

Mia Hobbs:

We'll edit that bit. [Laughs]

Liz O'Riordan:

We'll edit that bit! No, he knows. He knows.

Mia Hobbs:

So that's amazing. So it's really the sense of

Mia Hobbs:

achievement and a feeling of peace and comfort that you get

Mia Hobbs:

while you're doing it.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, definitely. What about you?

Mia Hobbs:

I think, yeah, all of those things. I think it's

Mia Hobbs:

really difficult to tie it down to what the... I do feel like

Mia Hobbs:

it's a way of accessing comfort, in a way. I feel like it is a

Mia Hobbs:

bit of a superpower that I have, like this secret skill that if I

Mia Hobbs:

go into a situation that's potentially stressful, it will

Mia Hobbs:

calm me down. And many people I've interviewed, and I

Mia Hobbs:

certainly would count myself as someone who's not particularly

Mia Hobbs:

good at classic mindfulness or meditating, but it is a way that

Mia Hobbs:

I feel like physiologically, it probably reduces my blood

Mia Hobbs:

pressure and my stress. I also think I'm not great at

Mia Hobbs:

concentrating and just sitting and listening to training or

Mia Hobbs:

something. It's different in therapy, obviously, because I'm

Mia Hobbs:

more in a dialogue, and I'm engaging. But just sitting and

Mia Hobbs:

listening, I'm not great at, and knitting really helps me with

Mia Hobbs:

focus. But I think it's also, in terms of my body image, I feel

Mia Hobbs:

like I really like the self-expression and the

Mia Hobbs:

creativity, that I like it being a wearable art, in a way, or a

Mia Hobbs:

wearable expression of who I am. And I feel like I've kind of

Mia Hobbs:

opted out of standard fashion, because I'm more interested in

Mia Hobbs:

the process of making and then I love it and want to wear it.

Liz O'Riordan:

Yes. And it's nice wearing something you've

Liz O'Riordan:

made that no-one else can have, and being a bit different,

Liz O'Riordan:

because the shops are just full of the same colours and you

Liz O'Riordan:

think, "No, I'm going to do orange and purple and red

Mia Hobbs:

And I think I've definitely got a different

Mia Hobbs:

together!"

Mia Hobbs:

relationship with colour. When I made this yellow, I used to

Mia Hobbs:

think I wasn't someone who would wear yellow but it makes me feel

Mia Hobbs:

happy every time I put it on! So of course I should wear yellow!

Liz O'Riordan:

I'm all about the yellow! Says she wearing black.

Liz O'Riordan:

[Laughs]

Mia Hobbs:

Yeah, so I do think it's brought so much. And I love

Mia Hobbs:

introducing new people to knitting, and I'm really

Mia Hobbs:

enjoying working with teenagers and giving them that skill. Like

Mia Hobbs:

you said, you've had it for such a long time and it's benefited

Mia Hobbs:

your life. Maybe you didn't realise it always, you know,

Mia Hobbs:

throughout your A-levels.

Liz O'Riordan:

I don't think I did.

Mia Hobbs:

I certainly had revision breaks in my doctorate

Mia Hobbs:

where I would knit, and it would allow ideas to percolate if I

Mia Hobbs:

was writing an essay. And I think that has really been

Mia Hobbs:

invaluable and I'm really more putting psychological labels on

Mia Hobbs:

the ways in which it's been helpful to me, but it's been

Mia Hobbs:

there doing it all along. [Laughs]

Liz O'Riordan:

Yeah, it's amazing, isn't it? It's just

Liz O'Riordan:

that... Everyone should knit.

Mia Hobbs:

They should! And maybe if it's not knitting for

Mia Hobbs:

everybody, you know, there might be other ways they could have a

Mia Hobbs:

creative outlet that's something you do with your hands,

Mia Hobbs:

something that you literally create. Like you said about

Mia Hobbs:

gardening, I think some people might find that more their

Mia Hobbs:

medium, but I think a lot of the ways it would help them would be

Mia Hobbs:

very similar.

Liz O'Riordan:

Definitely.

Mia Hobbs:

Liz, it's been an absolute pleasure to hear your

Mia Hobbs:

stories about knitting and how it's benefited you, and I'm so

Mia Hobbs:

glad that it has brought you through some darker times and is

Mia Hobbs:

continuing to bring joy to you and all the people who are lucky

Mia Hobbs:

enough to receive your gifts.

Liz O'Riordan:

Thank you, Mia. It's been great to chat.

Mia Hobbs:

If people want to find out more about you on

Mia Hobbs:

social media, see what your knitting, where would they do

Mia Hobbs:

that?

Liz O'Riordan:

So on Instagram, I'm @oriordanliz. On Twitter,

Liz O'Riordan:

I'm @Liz_ORiordan. Feel free to drop me a line and I will reply

Liz O'Riordan:

to anybody about anything.

Mia Hobbs:

Super. And I always encourage showing and telling of

Mia Hobbs:

knitting, so I'd also love to see all your knitting!

Liz O'Riordan:

I'm now going to stalk your profile and see,

Liz O'Riordan:

"Right, what's the next jumper I'm going to make?"

Mia Hobbs:

[Laughs] Well, it's been an absolute pleasure. Thank

Mia Hobbs:

you!

Mia Hobbs:

Thank you so much for listening to the Why I Knit

Liz O'Riordan:

Thanks, Mia.

Liz O'Riordan:

podcast. If you'd like to find out more about therapeutic

Liz O'Riordan:

knitting, you can follow me on Instagram @knittingistherapeutic

Liz O'Riordan:

or at my website www.therapeuticknitting.org. If

Liz O'Riordan:

you're enjoying the podcast, I would really appreciate it if

Liz O'Riordan:

you could leave a rating and a review on your podcast app. This

Liz O'Riordan:

will help grow the podcast and let more people know about the

Liz O'Riordan:

therapeutic benefits of knitting. And don't forget to