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Seamwork Radio: Sewing and Creativity

A Bright Spot in the Dark with Ashley

Seamwork Radio: Sewing and Creativity

Colette Media

Fashion & Beauty, Leisure, Crafts, Arts

4.9830 Ratings

🗓️ 1 August 2020

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Ashley grew up in British Columbia, Canada and had a freewheeling, happy childhood.
Her mother was confident, creative, and charismatic. Everyone seemed to adore her, especially Ashley. She was full of energy and seemed able to do anything.

But as Ashley got older, a different picture emerged. She learned that her mom had a secret, and over time it would destroy their relationship – and her mom's life.

But somehow, for some reason, the experience of sewing with her mom remained one of the few bright spots.

"I just feel like, you know, that was sort of one of the one of the activities that we shared where she wasn't she wasn't so critical. She wasn't hard on me. She was competitive with me. You know, she coached me. She gave me some space. She gave me, like, access to her tools."

"I'm pretty sure my mom made the shirt she's wearing, plus the sweater my toddler brother was wearing, and she definitely made the pink corduroy overalls I'm wearing, plus the booties. I used to ask her about those overalls all the time. For some reason I was delighted by the buttons, which were little kitties."

"You can see the wall hanging in the background that my mom made. I feel like that could probably sell for a lot of money at some hipster craft fair these days!"

"You can just see the fur tops of my brother's mocassins - she definitely would have made those."

"She was so tall, look how high I have to reach her hands! She liked to dress strikingly - bold colours and designs that accentuated her features. I remember she had to wear a stick-on bra with that dress because it was open in the back with verticle panels from collar to waistline, and we laughed about that; she was always showing me how to be classy - bra straps should never be visible for example."

"She knit a special blanket for each of her babies during her pregnancies, and for mine she said she just knew intuitively that she was having a girl, so she chose the peach colour. I actually remember her finishing my baby brother's blanket in the hospital bed just hours after delivering him. She was a tough lady."

If you are interested in helping address drug use in a compassionate way, Ashley has provided some wonderful links to help you get involved.

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You know, she created me.

0:02.7

She made me.

0:04.3

So there's no replacement for that.

0:13.5

I'm Sarah Mittnick, and this is Seamwork Radio,

0:16.5

where we tell stories about the surprising ways that sewing impacts our lives.

0:28.3

Thank you. where we tell stories about the surprising ways that sewing impacts our lives. Before we start, a quick note for listeners.

0:31.3

This story mentions abuse, drug use, and contains strong language.

0:35.7

It might not be suitable for all listeners, so please take care.

0:39.0

Okay, on with the show.

0:43.4

Sometimes it can feel like we each carry around two different versions of our childhood.

0:49.0

The first version is the memory you made at the time. It's everything that you saw and you

0:53.6

felt and you heard when you were actually living it.

0:56.4

It's a child's perspective.

0:58.6

The second version is the one that comes later when you're an adult.

1:02.6

You learn things as you get older and maybe you have a new way of looking at things.

1:06.2

I think this is normal for most of us.

1:08.7

But when the adults around you are harboring secrets, secrets that are

1:12.9

going to blow your life apart one day, these two versions of your childhood can be wildly different.

1:19.1

That's what happened to Ashley. Ashley grew up in a small town in the interior of British Columbia,

1:24.3

Canada. Her parents met when her mom was working as a cook at a mining camp

1:28.5

where her dad was also working. Her mom and dad had a tumultuous relationship, and he was often

1:33.9

working up north, operating heavy equipment for gold mines in the Yukon. They were writing letters

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