Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep

The Innkeeper's Blanket (Encore)

32 min
Jan 22, 20263 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

An encore episode of the bedtime story podcast featuring "The Innkeeper's Blanket," a soothing narrative about an innkeeper who rediscovers crochet during winter and creates an imperfect but cherished handmade blanket. The story emphasizes finding joy in creative hobbies, embracing imperfection, and the meditative qualities of handcrafted work.

Insights
  • Rediscovering forgotten hobbies can provide meaningful engagement and grounding during slower seasons or transitions
  • Imperfect handmade items hold greater emotional value than flawless manufactured goods because they reflect authenticity and care
  • Seasonal rhythms and natural cycles can structure personal projects and creative pursuits in sustainable ways
  • Solitude and repetitive creative work serve as effective counterbalances to busy hospitality work seasons
Trends
Growing interest in analog hobbies and handcrafted goods as counterweight to digital fatigueMindfulness through creative practice (crochet, knitting) as wellness alternative to productivity optimizationSeasonal living and off-season planning in hospitality and service industriesAppreciation for imperfection and organic variation in handmade goods over mass production
Topics
Crochet and fiber artsSeasonal work rhythms in hospitalityHandmade goods and craftsmanshipWinter activities and seasonal projectsMindfulness through creative practiceInnkeeping and hospitality managementNostalgia and memory through objectsImperfection and authenticity in design
Companies
Cured Nutrition
Sleep supplement brand sponsoring the episode with their sleep bundle product featuring CBD and CBN formulas
People
Katherine Nicolai
Creator, writer, and narrator of the Nothing Much Happens podcast and bedtime stories
Bob Witterschheim
Audio engineer credited for the podcast's production and sound design
Quotes
"It had started as a scarf. I hadn't picked up a crochet hook in ages a decade maybe."
Narrator (Katherine Nicolai)Story opening
"Like riding a bike, I quickly crocheted a long chain of simple stitches. And as I did, I even said aloud, yarn over."
Narrator (Katherine Nicolai)Early in story
"This one is for me. I wouldn't give it away. I'd keep it as proof that even when things are imperfect, they can still be warm and enjoyable."
Narrator (Katherine Nicolai)Story conclusion
"They're a soft space to settle. Nothing much happens in them. There's nothing to keep track of. Just listen and relax, and sleep will come."
Katherine NicolaiEpisode introduction
Full Transcript
Get more Nothing Much Happens with bonus episodes, extra long stories, and ad-free listening, all while supporting the show you love. Subscribe now. Hi, I'm Catherine Nicolai, and if you're looking for something gentle to listen to that isn't news or true crime or self-improvement, I made this for you. Thanks from the village of Nothing Much is like easy listening, but for fiction. Cozy, warm, calm stories about ordinary moments that feel a little magical. They're grounding, soothing, and quietly uplifting without being cheesy, relaxing without putting you to sleep, and just dreamy enough to remind you that there's still sweetness in everyday life. Make for your commute while you're tidying up or when you want a little escape that feels simple and good. Search for stories from the village of Nothing Much wherever you listen. You already know how much good sleep matters, because when you sleep well, everything feels a little easier. Your mood, your focus, even how your body feels the next day. When you don't, it can feel like you're dragging that tiredness with you everywhere. That's why I want to tell you about the sleep bundle from cured nutrition, which I've been using as part of my own wine-down routine, and which I gifted to another friend today. What I appreciate about it is that it's designed to help your body ease into rest, rather than knocking you out or leaving you groggy the next morning. The sleep bundle combines two formulas that work together to support deeper, more restorative sleep. It includes there's end capsules, which are made with calming botanicals like zelarian root, chamomile, ashwaganda, and magnesium, along with broad spectrum CBD to help quiet the mind and relax the body. The bundle also includes their CBN nightcaps, or night oil, which support deeper sleep quality through the night. I take them about an hour before bed. Usually while I'm dimming the lights, getting into my reading, I like that they work with my natural sleep rhythms. I wake up feeling rested, not foggy, and that makes a big difference. Right now, the sleep bundle is already 10% off, and you can take an additional 20% off at checkout with my code Sweet Dreams, the discount stack. Plus all orders over $100 automatically qualify for free shipping, including the sleep bundle. Visit curednutrition.com slash nothing much, and use my code Sweet Dreams at checkout for the extra savings that's c-u-r-e-d-nutrition.com slash nothing much coupon code Sweet Dreams. Welcome. To bedtime stories for everyone, in which nothing much happens, you feel good, and then you fall asleep. I'm Katherine Nicolai. I write and read all the stories you hear on nothing much happens. Audioengineering is by Bob Witterschheim. We are bringing you an encore episode tonight, meaning that this story originally aired at some point in the past. It could have been recorded with different equipment in a different location, and since I'm a person and not a computer, I sometimes sound just slightly different. But the stories are always soothing and family-friendly, and our wishes for you are always deep-brassed and Sweet Dreams. Now, we need a bridge between our daily lives and good sleep, a way to create a little space for your mind to rest in. And that's what our stories are. They're a soft space to settle. Nothing much happens in them. There's nothing to keep track of. Just listen and relax, and sleep will come. I'll tell the story twice, and I'll go a little bit slower the second time through. If you wake again in the night, you can turn a story right back on, or just think through any detail from it that you can remember. Doing that shifts your brain right back into a place where it will fall asleep. Our story tonight is called The In Keepers Blanket, and it's a story about a favorite hobby, rediscovered when the quiet of winter. It's also about a simmering pot in the kitchen, geese gathering before they fly, and making something by hand that is perfectly imperfect. Now, it's time to set things down and switch off the lights. Get your eye mask, or your teddy bear, or your favorite pillow, and get as comfortable as you can. Let your muscles soften, and your body go heavy into the bed. I'm taking the next watch, so you can let go. Truly, you're safe. Take a slow breath in through your nose, and sigh from your mouth. A relaxed one more. Breathe in. And out. Good. The In Keepers Blanket. It had started as a scarf. I hadn't picked up a crochet hook in ages a decade maybe. But while I was cleaning out a closet on the second floor, I'd found a basket full of yarn and hooks in several sizes. Might sat right down on the stairs, and pulled a length of fiber from one of the skeins, and wondered if my hands still knew how to do this. After enough, as I tied off a loop and poked a hook through it, like riding a bike, I quickly crocheted a long chain of simple stitches. And as I did, I even said aloud, yarn over. But what my mother had said when she'd taught me this first step in the process when I was a little girl. I turned the chain around and stitched back over it, marveling at how my fingers remembered the movements of tucking the hook through the loop, wrapping the yarn over and pulling it back through. When I got to the end of the row, and went to turn it again, I remembered my mother counting out three chain stitches before turning so that the design didn't slope at the edges. And I made them myself counting one, two, three. I'd sat there in the dim winter light, and held the row of stitches out at arm's length to admire it. I knew right then I'd found a project for the winter months. I tucked my wobbly first attempt back into the basket and gone back to my chore at the closet that day. After all, I thought that crocheting would not be best enjoyed in the chilly hallway, sitting on a stair. I had in front of the fire in the library after my work was done. And I always had a good deal of work to do at the end in the off season. When guests were coming and going, as they did from late spring to early fall, we could keep up with daily room cleaning, for cooking and serving. But anything beyond that had to wait, and it waited for me and for the winter. I'd done lots already, and I didn't mind being alone in the big house. I played music to keep me company, and worked from room to room, deep cleaning, steaming the curtains, polishing the wooden banister from the front hall, all the way up to the attic on the fourth floor. As visited now and then, I would have tea parties in the giant ballroom. Once a week, I went to book club at the shop in downtown. I cooked pots of soup down in the kitchen, and ate pickles from our pantry that chef had put up in large batches in the summer. I liked cleaning out the cupboards and closets, most of all. I'd been the inkeeper here for many years already, but I knew that this house still had secrets she kept from me. So each winter, I'd pick a few cubbies and closets, and clean them out to their back walls. I always found some interesting things. Before I'd come upon the basket of yarn, I'd found a stack of old board games. The seams of their boxes, splitting apart, even under a layer of tape, that was likely already 40 years old. The best part had been opening them up, taking in their dusty, warm scent, and finding scorecards and faded pencil, showing who had won a hard-fought game of cribbage, long before I was a twinkle in the old house's eye. In a box with candlesticks, and for some reason, very old tulip bulbs, the stack of menus, some even handwritten from fancy dinners held here in the inn's earliest years. It sent pictures of them to Shaaf, who was cooking in a ski resort for the winter. They'd called me and we'd spent a silly half hour going through each appetizer, entree, and dessert. Wondering if our modern diners would be interested in any of these very vintage flavors, maybe we'd said, maybe we could find a few choice picks and add them to our rotation in the spring. When after days like that, I'd clean up and reach for my crochet basket and stretch out on the sofa in the library and work away for a while. That's how the scarf had turned into a blanket. I'd bought some new yarn at the craft shop and a bender hook that felt better in my hands. The owner had taken some time to kindly show me a few other stitches. And soon, I was well on my way into my new project. The nice thing about a scarf or even a blanket is that you don't really need a pattern. You just make it. So I'd started stitching a long chain and wrapped it around my neck now and then till it was as long as I felt it should be. Then turned it and worked my way back across the chain and so on and so on. At some point, I realized that I should probably stop. It was as wide as it needed to be to keep someone's neck and chin warm. But I just didn't want to stop. I was having a good time, so I kept stitching and turning, counting one, two, three. And my scarf was soon halfway to being a good sized blanket. I stretched it out over my legs and it kept me warm while I worked. The evenings passed and I kept stitching. The snow melted and came again, coating the gardens with white. The lake froze over completely and the geese gathered and flew off one day. Honking their goodbyes. I switched from soups to casseroles and simmered a pot with lemon peels and rose-marie on the stove. And one evening, my blanket was finally done. Though I'd been careful with my stitches, in the end, it came out a bit wonky. Not so as you'd notice when you were cutled up under it. But when I laid it on my bed, it had a definite hourglass shape I hadn't intended. I felt a bit like the year actually, and being and flowing, full to thin and back again. And I decided I liked the organic nature of it. It was homemade and it showed. Well, I said to myself, that settles it. This one is for me. I wouldn't give it away. I'd keep it as proof. But even when things are imperfect, they can still be warm and enjoyable. The in-keepers blanket. It had started as a scarf. I hadn't picked up a crochet hook in ages a decade maybe. But while I was cleaning out a closet on the second floor, I'd found a basket full of yarn and hooks in several sizes. I'd sat right down on the stairs and pulled a length of fiber from one of the skeins. And wondered if my hands still knew how to do this. Sure enough, as I tied off a loop and poked a hook through it, just like riding a bike, I quickly made a long chain of simple stitches. And as I did, I even said aloud, yarn over. That I remembered was what my mother had said when she taught me this first step in the process. When I was a little girl. I turned the chain around and stitched over it, marveling at how my fingers remembered the movements of tucking the hook through a loop, wrapping the yarn over and pulling it back through. When I got to the end of the row, and went to turn it again, I remembered my mother counting out three chain stitches before she turned so that the design didn't slope at the edges. And I made them myself counting one, two, three. I'd sat there in the dim winter light and held the row of stitches out at arm's length to admire it. I knew right then I'd found a project for the winter months. I'd tucked my wobbly first attempt back into the basket and gone back to my chore at the closet that day. After all, I guessed that crocheting would not be best enjoyed in the chilly hallway sitting on a stair. But in front of the fire in the library, after my work was done. I always had a good deal of work to do at the end in the off season. When guests were coming and going as they did from late spring to early fall, we could keep up with the daily room cleaning, the cooking and serving. But anything beyond that had to wait. And it waited for me and for the winter. My done lots already. And I didn't mind being alone in the big house. I played music to keep me company and worked from room to room, deep cleaning, steaming the curtains, polishing the wooden banister from the front hall, all the way up to the attic on the fourth floor. Friends visited now and then and we'd had tea parties and the giant ballroom. Once a week I went to book club at the shop in downtown. I cooked pots of soup down in the kitchen and ate pickles from our pantry. The chef had put up in large batches in the summer. And I liked cleaning out the cupboards and closets, most of all. I'd been the inkeeper here for many years already. But I knew that this house still had secrets she kept from me. So each winter I'd pick a few cubbies and closets and clean them out to their back walls. And I always found some interesting things. Before I'd come upon the basket of yarn, I'd found a stack of old board games. The seams of their boxes, splitting apart, even under a layer of tape, that was likely already 40 years old. The best part had been opening them up, taking in their dusty warm scent. And finding scorecards, invaded pencil. Showing who had won a hard-fought game of cribbage long before I was a twinkle in the old house's eye. In a box with candlesticks, and for some reason very old tulip bulbs was a stack of menus. Some were even handwritten. From fancy dinners held here in the ends, earliest years. I'd sent pictures of them to Schaff, who was cooking at a ski resort for the winter. They'd called me and we'd spent a silly half hour going through each appetizer, entree and dessert. Wondering if our modern diners would be interested in any of these very vintage flavors. Maybe we'd said. Maybe we could find a few choice picks and add them to our rotation in the spring. After days like that, I'd clean up and reach for my crochet basket and stretch out on the sofa in the library and work away for a while. That's how the scarf had turned into a blanket. I'd bought some new yarn at the craft shop and a bendier hook that felt better in my hands. The owner had taken some time to kindly show me a few other stitches. I was well on my way into my new project. A nice thing about a scarf or even a blanket. It's like you don't really need a pattern. You just make it. So I'd started stitching long chain and wrapped it around my neck now and then till it was as long as I felt it should be. Then turned it and worked my way back across and so on and so on. At some point, I realized that I should probably stop. It was as wide as it needed to be to keep someone's neck and chin warm. But I just didn't want to stop. I was having a good time. So I kept stitching and turning, counting one, two, three. And my scarf was soon halfway to being a good sized blanket. I stretched it out over my legs and it kept me warm while I worked. The evening's passed and I kept stitching. The snow melted and came again, coding the gardens with white. The lake froze over completely and the geese gathered and flew off one day, honking their goodbyes. I switched from soups to casseroles and simmered a pot with lemon peels and rose Mary on the stove. And one evening my blanket was finally done. Though I'd been careful with my stitches, in the end, it came out a bit wonky. I'm not so as you'd notice when you were cuddled up under it. But when I laid it out on my bed, it had a definite hourglass shape that I hadn't intended. It felt a bit like the year actually, the early, ebbing and flowing, full to thin and back again. And I decided I liked the organic nature of it. It was handmade when it showed. Well, I said to myself, that settles it. This one is for me. I wouldn't give it away. I keep it as proof that even when things are imperfect, they can still be warm and enjoyable. Sweet dreams.