When I was a kid, I would plead with my mum to get me new latchhook kits. I would spend hours making rugs I thought I would frame and mount on my bedroom wall. I finished a few but none of them made it to the wall.
Then, I moved on to crocheting because that’s what my mum was into. I tried to make cute doilies (emphasis on tried). After a while, I had half-doilies stuffed in bags at the bottom of my closet with my latch hook rugs. Even though I didn’t really want to finish them, I didn’t want to part with them either.
Did I mention that I also had a thing for puzzles? …and drawing? I had every type of marker and pencil ever made back then. I’d need a whole week to describe the various types of paper I had to make spectacular crafts. I was a bit better about my half-drawn art. I didn’t shove them in a bag…they just went in a folder, never to be seen again. In the end, they all still spelled C-L-U-T-T-E-R.
Now that I’m older, I would do things a little differently. Though I would probably still have a few works in progress, I might…
1. Finish them with a friend. Wouldn’t it be great to see what you could end up with when you work with a friend? …maybe someone you’ve been meaning to catch up with? It might take a couple of meetings to finish up the project, and once you’re finished, give it to your friend as a memento of your time together.
2. Donate them to a senior center. Let someone else finish your project. Some senior centers welcome these kinds of donations because it’s another activity seniors might enjoy. It’s kinda like passing the baton.
3. Make something new…or just let them go. Turn your old thing into some new thing (like turning an old tire into rubber mulch), but if it’s going to collect a few more dust bunnies, it just might be time to let it go.
Are you still holding on to half-finished projects?












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Got pictures? Who doesn’t, right? If you’re like some of my clients, you probably don’t have the time to organize all those photos and put them in some sort of order. Well, help is on the way. Today, I spoke to Cynthia Simmons, a Creative Memories consultant, who told me about a great event that’s happening this weekend. The 







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