A while back I heard about November being Shaken Baby Month,
and specifically about a hospital that sent every November Baby home in a
Purple Baby Hat – to remind parents to NOT shake their babies.
This really touched my heart – and I decided that I wanted
to become involved in this cause. So I set a goal to make 100 Purple Baby Hats
to donate to the local hospital. A few days ago I finished up the last of them.
It was a great feeling! I had a big basket full of hats, so I dumped them out,
snapped a quick photo, and counted – just to make sure that I had 100. I
counted 107 Purple Baby Hats.
Yesterday I called Trudy, the Charge Nurse in the Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at UVRMC in Provo, and we had a great hat chat. Apparently this hospital hasn’t done purple hats in November before, but she was
thrilled to know that I already had them done – and said that if I brought them
by that they would definitely use them. So this afternoon I stopped by Utah
Valley Regional Medical Center and dropped the hats off in the Hospital
Nursery.


This all started because of my mom. Making baby hats is something
I inherited from her. For as long as I can remember, Mom used a handmade wooden
loom to make baby hats as gifts. Her hats were beautiful and perfect.
Unfortunately, despite many attempts, I just can’t use her loom correctly. When
Mom passed away, we found a dishwasher-box-size Yarn Stash – which my sister
insisted that I take home: “You’re the only one Mom taught to crochet.” So I
brought home all the yarn, tried and failed with the loom, and felt guilty
every time I walked by that huge box of yarn. Eventually I figured out that I
could crochet baby hats, so I decided that I would crochet while watching
movies. (It helps me feel less guilty about just sitting there, and it keeps that part of my mom's legacy moving forward.) Apparently I’ve
watched a lot of movies over the years, because I’ve certainly made a lot of
baby hats over the past 10 years.

Oh, and yes – I did stop at Redbox on my way home tonight
too!
As we lose ourselves in the service of others,
we discover our own lives and our own happiness.
-- Dieter F. Uchtdorf