Doll Can Create

100 Mile Life/Grandma Core

Here I Am, Send Me — September 29, 2025

Here I Am, Send Me

Exodus 3:1–15 & John 8:56–58

Moses was going about an ordinary day. He was tending sheep in the wilderness. Then God showed up in the extraordinary. It was a bush aflame but not consumed. Out of that fire came a voice: “Moses, Moses!” And Moses replied, “Here I am.”

This story reminds us that God often meets us in the middle of our daily lives. It may not be through a burning bush. It can happen in a quiet walk, a conversation, or a moment of stillness. These are the moments when we suddenly sense His presence. Ordinary places become holy ground when God is there.

When God called Moses, Moses hesitated: “Who am I that I should go?” And God’s answer was not to build Moses’ confidence but to assure him: “I will be with you.” That same promise continues in the words of Jesus. He said: “I am with you always, even to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20).

At the burning bush, God revealed His name: “I AM WHO I AM.” Centuries later, Jesus would echo those words: “Before Abraham was, I AM” (John 8:58). The same God who called Moses calls us still. He is revealed fully in Christ. Christ walks with us, strengthens us, and sends us.

So when God calls your name, you have opportunities to show kindness. You can forgive. You can serve. You can also take a step of faith. You don’t need to ask, “Who am I?” Instead, trust in who God is. The great I AM goes with you.

Reflection Question

Where is God calling you to turn aside and notice God’s presence this week?

Prayer

Lord Jesus, You are the great I AM. Thank You for calling us by name. Thank You for sending us in love. Thank You for walking with us each step of the way. Help us to answer with courage: “Here I am, Lord. Send me.” Amen.

🍂 Rocking Chair Reflections: What September Taught Me — September 27, 2025

🍂 Rocking Chair Reflections: What September Taught Me

Pull up a chair, pour yourself a cup of tea, and settle in with me. The needles are clicking softly in my hands. I think back over September. It has taught me more than I expected. The evenings are drawing in. The air has turned crisp. I find myself reflecting on what both DollCanCreate and this gentle GrandmaCore life have whispered into my days.


🌿 What DollCanCreate Reminded Me

  • Showing up matters. Some days, all I had to share was a sock half-knit. Occasionally, it was a quick glimpse of tomatoes from the farm store. But I learned again that it’s the rhythm of showing up, not the perfection of the finish, that connects us.
  • Local stories hold power. A skein of wool from down the road carries more than just flavor and texture. Apples from the orchard do as well. They carry a story. September proved that when I share those stories, others feel rooted too.
  • Different doors, same home. People came in through different channels, whether it was a blog post, a YouTube vlog, or a printable checklist. However, they all entered the same cozy home. That felt like a gift.

🧶 What GrandmaCore Whispered

  • Slow is a rebellion. Sitting in a rocking chair while the world rushes by isn’t laziness — it’s choosing presence. Each stitch is a small “no” to the frenzy and a gentle “yes” to peace.
  • Hospitality is holy. A warm welcome doesn’t always look like a grand dinner. Sometimes it’s sharing a cinnamon bun from the farm store, or simply offering listening ears and soft yarn to touch.
  • Faith knits it all together. The scriptures I carried this month reminded me of new mercies every morning. They spoke of scars healed in Christ and blessings of the harvest. This reminds me that GrandmaCore isn’t just about cozy living. It’s about rooted, faithful living.

✨ A Lesson for the Heart

If September had one message, it was this:
ordinary life is sacred. Slow living is not wasted living.

Every sock stitch, every apple pie, every whispered prayer is part of the greater pattern God is weaving. And sometimes the rocking chair is the holiest place of all.


📖 Scripture to Rock With

“The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.”
— Lamentations 3:22–23


🌸 A Cozy Blessing

As you step into October, may you carry September’s gentle lessons with you.
May you find warmth in small joys. Find rest in quiet moments. Trust in God’s faithfulness — stitch by stitch, day by day.

From my rocking chair to yours,
Grannie Doll 🧶💜


Grannie Core & Slow Fashion: A Wardrobe with Soul — September 24, 2025

Grannie Core & Slow Fashion: A Wardrobe with Soul

The rhythm of a rocking chair

is deeply comforting. The soft clink of knitting needles also offers comfort. Additionally, the hum of a sewing machine in the background soothes the mind. Grannie Core is more than just an aesthetic. It’s a way of living. It honors the handmade. It cherishes the well-loved. It values the time-tested. When paired with the values of slow fashion, it becomes a gentle rebellion against the fast, disposable culture of today. It’s about clothing that carries stories, faith, and family in every stitch.


1. Cherishing the Handmade & Heirloom

Our grandmothers knew that handmade garments were treasures. A hand-knit sweater wasn’t just wool and pattern—it was warmth, love, and care made tangible. Slow fashion echoes this truth. Instead of mass-produced items, we embrace pieces that carry time, thought, and often the hands of someone we know. Every quilt, apron, or shawl tells a story that becomes part of our own.

“She makes linen garments and sells them, and supplies the merchants with sashes.” — Proverbs 31:24


2. The Wisdom of Mending

There is quiet holiness in mending. When we darn a sock or patch a hole, we choose restoration over waste. Mending reminds us that what is torn can be repaired, what is broken can be useful again. Our clothes—like our lives—need not be discarded when frayed. In fact, those patched places often become the most beautiful.

“He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” — Psalm 147:3


3. Seasonal, Natural Materials

Grannie Core invites us to return to the rhythms of the seasons. Wool for winter warmth, cotton for the kitchen, linen for hot summer days. These natural fibers breathe, wear well, and return to the earth gently when their time is done. Choosing them isn’t just a fashion decision. It’s a way of honoring creation. It’s living with respect for the world God has given us.


4. A Wardrobe with Soul

A Grannie Core wardrobe is not stuffed with fleeting trends but shaped by a few faithful pieces. A cardigan has seen decades of family gatherings. A shawl has traveled to church on cool mornings. A dress has memories stitched in its seams. Slow fashion reminds us that clothing is not simply fabric; it is witness to our days.


5. Community & Storytelling

At the heart of it all, Grannie Core is communal. It’s in the knitting circles, the quilting bees, the recipe swaps and fabric trades. It’s where skills are passed down and stories are shared, often over a pot of tea. Slow fashion is not only what we wear but the way we connect through making, mending, and remembering together.


Closing Reflection

Grannie Core and slow fashion encourage us to leave the spinning wheel of consumerism behind. They invite us to find rest in something steadier, softer, and more enduring. They remind us that clothes are not just what cover us—they’re part of our story, stitched with love and faith.

May we find joy in the small acts of making and mending. May we wear our wardrobes like we wear our lives. Our lives should be full of memory, meaning, and grace.

Why Source Wool Locally? — September 23, 2025

Why Source Wool Locally?

Unboxing Provenance Fibre Club

There’s something magical about opening a box of fibre. The colours, the textures, the promise of what it will become. When my Provenance Fibre Club subscription from Julia arrived, I couldn’t wait to dive in. Each braid held not just fibre—but a story.

As I unwrapped each treasure, I felt my excitement grow. But it also reminded me of the bigger question: why source wool locally?


Connection to Place

When we choose local fibre, we’re literally spinning the land around us. Each lock carries the imprint of the farm, the fields, and the seasons. It’s a way of holding our home in our hands.

Supporting Farmers and Makers

Behind every fleece is a shepherd who has cared for those animals through storms and sunshine. By sourcing locally, we honour their work and help keep small farms thriving.

Sustainability

Local wool travels fewer miles to reach us. That means less fuel, less packaging, and a gentler footprint on the earth. It’s one small but meaningful way to live in harmony with our values.

Unique Character

Local breeds raised in particular climates develop distinct textures and qualities. These fibres can’t be replicated elsewhere—they are one-of-a-kind.

Storytelling

Every skein spun from local wool carries a story. It’s not just yarn—it’s the voice of the farm, the shepherd, and the land. When we knit or weave, we share that story with others.


As I spin through my Provenance Fibre Club box, I imagine: this is more than fibre. It’s connection, sustainability, and creativity wrapped up together.

If you’ve never tried local wool, let this be your invitation. Visit a nearby farm, sign up for a local fibre club, or swap with a neighbour. Discover the joy of spinning stories that belong to your own backyard.

Every skein has a story, and every stitch holds a place. May your fibre journey keep you rooted, keep you warm, and keep you close to home. Until next time, spin gently and live locally.

Grannie Doll

Why Wool Matters 🐑🌿 — September 22, 2025

Why Wool Matters 🐑🌿

Today, as I sit with my knitting in hand,

I reflect on a fiber that has been part of my life for so long. That fiber is wool. It may seem like a simple thing. It is a skein of yarn spun from a sheep’s fleece. Nevertheless, for me and for many of us living closer to the land, wool carries a story that’s worth telling.

Wool Is Local

When I choose wool from nearby farms, I’m not just buying yarn. I’m supporting shepherds, small mills, and rural communities who care for their flocks with dedication. Each skein connects me to the fields, pastures, and farmers within my 100-mile circle.

Wool Is Sustainable

Wool is renewable, biodegradable, and natural. Unlike synthetic fibers that linger in landfills, wool eventually returns to the soil, nourishing it. It’s a beautiful example of creation’s design—what’s given to us can also be returned with care.

Wool Is Practical

It’s warm in winter, breathable in summer, and it resists odours in ways synthetic fibers can’t match. A well-made wool garment can last for decades, passed down through families like a quilt of memory and comfort.

Wool Is Comfort

For me, spinning, knitting, or simply handling wool has always been calming. It quiets my racing thoughts and steadies my heart. In every stitch, there’s a prayer. There’s a rhythm of stillness. It connects me to God’s peace and the slow work of my hands.


A Gentle Reminder

Wool is important for many reasons. It is more than a material. It signifies a way of living simply. It involves caring for the earth and honoring those who bring it to us. When we wrap ourselves in wool, we wrap ourselves in connection.


💬 Let’s Talk

Do you have a favorite wool story? Maybe a cozy blanket, a beloved sweater, or even a project on your needles right now? Share it in the comments—I’d love to hear!

👉 If you’d like to follow along on this journey of slow, local living, make sure you’re subscribed. Subscribe to my YouTube channel to stay updated. Subscribing will keep you updated on new content. I share each day of the 30-Day 100 Mile Life Challenge there. Together, we’re discovering that living closer to home brings us closer to what really matters.

🌸 With gratitude, living life 1 stitch at a time,
Grannie Doll

Wounded, Yet Blessed — September 21, 2025

Wounded, Yet Blessed

Genesis 32:9–30

Have you ever carried a wound so deep it shaped how you walk through life? Maybe it’s the ache of grief, the weight of regret, or the slow wear of illness. Jacob knew what that was like. One dark night, on the banks of the Jabbok River, he wrestled with God and walked away limping. But he also walked away blessed.

Jacob’s story is strange and mysterious, but it’s also deeply human. Because we all wrestle. We wrestle with our past, our doubts, our fears, our relationships—and sometimes with God Himself. And like Jacob, we don’t come out of those nights unmarked.


Wrestling in the Dark

Jacob’s prayer that night is raw and honest: “I am unworthy… deliver me, I pray” (vv. 10–11). That’s where wrestling begins—with honesty. We don’t need fancy words to get God’s attention. We can bring our fear, our need, our brokenness just as it is.

In the darkness, Jacob wrestled until dawn. It wasn’t a clean, easy fight. It was gritty. It was exhausting. And that’s how faith often feels. But wrestling is not weakness. Wrestling is faith refusing to let go.


The Limp and the Blessing

At the turning point, God touches Jacob’s hip, leaving him wounded. From then on, Jacob walks with a limp. But the limp isn’t a curse. It’s a sign. Jacob has met God face to face and survived. He has a new name—Israel, the one who struggles with God.

We, too, carry limps:

  • The limp of grief after loss.
  • The limp of chronic pain or illness.
  • The limp of regret for words we can’t take back.
  • The limp of a heart broken by disappointment.

Our woundedness is real. It changes how we move through life. But here’s the hope: our wounds can also be the places where God meets us. They are the places where He blesses us and makes us new.


From Jacob to Jesus

Jacob’s limp points us towards, to another who would be wounded: Jesus Christ.

  • Jacob wrestled in the dark; Jesus wrestled in Gethsemane, sweating drops of blood.
  • Jacob was struck in the hip; Jesus was pierced in His hands, His feet, and His side.
  • Jacob limped into the sunrise. Jesus carried His wounds to the cross. Three days later, He rose into the dawn of resurrection.

And here’s the miracle: by His wounds, we are healed (Isaiah 53:5). The risen Christ still bore His scars—they were not erased but glorified. And so too, our wounds can become testimonies of grace.


Wounded, Yet Blessed

Jacob clung to God and said, “I will not let you go until you bless me.” That’s faith: holding on in the dark, even when wounded, until the blessing comes.

Friends, whatever limp you carry today, don’t let go. Bring your wounds to Jesus, the wounded healer. Cling to Him. Because in Him, even our deepest wounds can become the doorway to blessing.


Reflection Question

What wound do you carry that God want to turn into a place of blessing?


Prayer

Lord Jesus, you are the wounded healer. We bring you our limps, our scars, our hidden hurts. Bless us in our struggles. Teach us to see our wounds not as shame but as signs of your grace. By your wounds we are healed. Amen.


👉 If this reflection speaks to you, share it with someone who may be wrestling in their own dark night. You never know what blessing your encouragement might bring.

Grocery Savings Without Feeling Deprived — September 19, 2025

Grocery Savings Without Feeling Deprived

“Embracing the 100 Mile Life for sustainable living”

Living a 100 Mile Life can seem like it cost more. This involves sourcing as much of our food, fibers, and essentials from within a 100-mile radius. But here’s the truth: When you embrace seasonal eating, you can discover grocery savings. Shopping local produce doesn’t leave you feeling deprived. In fact, the 100 Mile Life can actually make your meals richer, simpler, and more budget-friendly.

1. Shop Seasonal, Shop Abundant for Grocery Savings

One of the best grocery savings tips is buying what’s in season. Local fruits and vegetables are most affordable when they’re abundant. Instead of expensive imported strawberries in January, enjoy crisp apples in September, squash in October, or sweet corn in July.

GrandmaCore wisdom: Buy in bulk when harvests are plentiful. A bushel of tomatoes or apples costs less per pound. With a little preserving, you’ll enjoy budget-friendly seasonal meals all winter.

2. Build Relationships With Local Farmers

Knowing your farmer means knowing your food—and often, saving money. Regular visits to a farm stand or market can result in small discounts. You will get bonus extras, like “take these cucumbers, they’re odd-shaped.” Sometimes, you can even barter. Supporting local farmers not only strengthens community, it helps you cut costs compared to supermarket shopping.

3. Embrace Simple, Frugal Meals

Local ingredients often encourage simpler recipes. A hearty soup made from root vegetables, beans, and fresh herbs can be filling and healthy. It can cost far less than take-out. These meals embody frugal grocery shopping while connecting you back to traditions of home-cooked care.

4. Reduce Waste and Stretch Your Grocery Budget

When you buy farm fresh food, it often lasts longer. Still, reducing waste is key. Roast beet greens with the roots, simmer chicken bones for broth, shred day-old bread into croutons. These small choices stretch every ingredient, creating grocery budget hacks that save you more than you realize.

5. Redefine “Treats” in the 100 Mile Life

A cinnamon bun from a local bakery, a wedge of regional cheese, or berries you picked yourself—these become meaningful luxuries. Because they’re intentional rather than impulse buys, you savor them more deeply while keeping your grocery budget in check.


The Joy of Enough

The secret to saving money on groceries without feeling deprived is embracing the joy of enough. Focus on seasonal eating. Support local farmers. Practice mindful shopping. You’ll find the 100 Mile Life doesn’t shrink your world. It expands it in surprising and satisfying ways.


Friend, what’s one local food swap you’ve made that saved you money? Share it in the comments—I’d love to hear!

💛
With gratitude and hope,
Grannie Doll

The Challenges of Living a 100-Mile Life 🌿 — September 18, 2025

The Challenges of Living a 100-Mile Life 🌿

When I first began

this 100-Mile Life journey, I knew it would be an adventure. It would be full of discoveries, creativity, and connections with local growers and makers. What I didn’t fully realize was just how many little challenges would rise up along the way. Each one has stretched me, sometimes frustrated me, and often surprised me. But they’ve also shaped this path into something deeper than just “buying local.”


🌱 Food & Meal Planning

One of the first things I noticed was how much my pantry had to change. Foods I once took for granted—bananas, coffee, rice—suddenly became special luxuries I had to think twice about. Planning meals meant paying close attention to the seasons. Strawberries in June are heavenly. Come January, I’d better have canned or frozen some if I want to taste summer sweetness.

It takes more work to preserve, to store, and to plan. But in that effort, I’ve found a rhythm of gratitude. Every jar of tomatoes in my cupboard feels like a victory.


🧶 Fiber & Clothing

Then there’s my love of wool and fiber arts. Finding local wool has been a joy, but it also comes with hurdles. Some farms don’t produce enough to supply bigger projects, and local mills are fewer than you’d think. If I want to spin or knit a sweater, it takes patience. I need to piece together skeins from different sources. I will also learn to work with blends I wouldn’t have chosen before.

Yet, those limitations have taught me something precious. The garment on my needles has a story. It is tied to my land, my hands, and my community.


🏡 Household & Lifestyle

I’ve also had to rethink the everyday items I once bought without a second thought. Spices, oils, cleaning supplies—many don’t come from within 100 miles. Some I can substitute, some I can make, and some I simply go without. Convenience has shifted too. There’s no longer quick trips to the big box store. Now it means going to farmers’ markets, local shops, or even a neighbor’s porch.


💰 Budget & Sustainability

Another challenge is the cost. Buying from small farms and artisans often means paying a little more. But here’s the flip side: That money goes straight into my community. It supports real people I can actually talk to and thank.

Time, too, is part of the cost. Local shopping doesn’t always happen in one big swoop—it takes more planning, more intentionality, and sometimes more patience.


🌍 The Emotional Side

And then, there’s the heart side of it all. Family and friends don’t always understand why I’d choose to “limit” myself. At times, it can feel like deprivation. But I’ve come to realize that what looks like a limitation is actually a doorway to creativity. Every missing item is an invitation to discover something new, to slow down, or to lean into community.


Closing Thoughts ✨

Living a 100-Mile Life isn’t simple. It has stretched me in ways I didn’t expect. But with each challenge comes a reward—deeper connections, greater creativity, and a growing sense of gratitude.

This isn’t about perfection. It’s about learning to live more fully where we are. We do this with what we have and alongside the people who share our corner of the world. 🌿

So yes, there are challenges. But they’re the kind that shape us into something stronger, wiser, and maybe even more joyful.

💬 I’d love to hear from you. What challenges have you faced if you tried living within 100 miles? Or do you imagine you’d face challenges? And what local treasures have you discovered along the way? Share your stories in the comments—I think we can learn so much from each other’s journeys.

With gratitude,
Grannie Doll
“The earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it.” – Psalm 24:1

Click to download the checklist

Support Local Producers: A 100-Mile Journey — September 16, 2025

Support Local Producers: A 100-Mile Journey

Day 16

Theme: Let’s connect a little deeper with the people who make your local food and goods.


Daily Task (active + simple)

  1. Take 20–45 minutes to map local producers within your 100-mile radius. Include farmers, mills, and bakers. Add yarn shops, honey producers, and maple syrup makers. Don’t forget cheesemakers, co-ops, and thrift stores.
  2. Pick one maker you don’t already buy from and plan a visit (or order one small item). If you can’t visit today, send an email or message. Ask them their story — who they are. Inquire about what they raise or make. Request one tip for shoppers.

Quick 100-mile recipe — Maple Pork Chop with Roasted Root Veggies

(Uses local pork, apples, maple syrup, root veg)

Ingredients (serves 2)

  • 2 local pork chops (about 150–200 g each)
  • 1 tbsp local maple syrup
  • 1 tsp mustard (local or pantry)
  • 1 apple, sliced thin (local)
  • 2 medium potatoes, cut into wedges (local)
  • 2 carrots, cut on the diagonal (local)
  • 1 small onion, quartered (local)
  • 1 tbsp olive oil (or local butter)
  • Salt & pepper, dried herbs (rosemary/thyme)

Method (30–40 min)

  1. Preheat oven to 425°F (220°C). Toss potatoes, carrots, onion with oil, salt, pepper, and herbs; roast on a tray for 25–30 min until golden.
  2. Meanwhile, heat a skillet. Sear pork chops 3–4 min per side until golden. Reduce heat; add apple slices to pan, pour on maple + mustard, spoon over chops and let glaze finish for 2–3 min.
  3. Rest chops 3 minutes. Serve with roasted veg and apples. Portion control: 1 chop + generous veg + 1 apple half per person.

Storage tip: If you bought extra local apples or veg, slice the apples thin. Dry them in the oven at a low temperature. Alternatively, simmer them in a little syrup to make a small jar of apple compote. It freezes or jars well.


Mini Craft / Maker-Love Activity (10–20 min)

  • Make a small thank-you/label card to include with your purchase from that maker. Add a hand-drawn logo or floral border. Include a short note: Example : “Bought with gratitude — Doll Creelman / 100-Mile Life.” Snap a photo for your socials.

Journal / Reflection Prompts

  • Who made the food in my kitchen today? Name them.
  • What surprised me about that maker’s story?
  • How does knowing who made my food change the way I eat or store it?
  • One small step I can take to support a local maker this week is…

Short devotional

“Small hands and steady work make the table possible. Today, by meeting a maker, we practice gratitude and stewardship — small choices that stitch us into our local community.”



Day-16 Checklist

  • Map 5 nearby makers (farm, mill, baker, yarn shop, co-op)
  • Visit or message one maker today
  • Buy one small local item (support local!)
  • Make a thank-you/label card to include with purchase
  • Cook the Maple Pork Chop recipe or try a local ingredient in a new way
  • Journal one reflection (line space)

“Little steps make a big difference. May peace and gratitude carry you through today.”

— Grannie Doll


Generated image

What Is the 100 Mile Life? Day 15 — September 15, 2025

What Is the 100 Mile Life? Day 15

Living Local, Simply, and Well

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to live more closely connected to your community? Imagine being closely tied to your farmers, your makers, and your land. That’s the heart of what I’ve been exploring through the 100 Mile Life Challenge.

In my recent live stream, I shared our half way point in this lifestyle. It is about committing to source as much of what we eat, wear, and use from within a 100-mile radius. It’s not about perfection—it’s about awareness, creativity, and building stronger connections with the people and places right around us.


What the 100 Mile Life Means 🌱

At its core, the 100 Mile Life is an invitation to slow down and live more intentionally. It asks us to:

  • Notice where our food, fibers, and household goods come from.
  • Choose local when we can, supporting nearby farms and artisans.
  • Celebrate the small joys of living simply and sustainably.

For me, it has meant rediscovering the flavor of local produce. I have relished in the beauty of hand-dyed yarn. I have also experienced the richness of community connections.


Why It Matters 💡

Living this way has been both surprising and rewarding. Sometimes it’s challenging—like figuring out how to replace ingredients I used to grab without thinking. But other times, it’s pure delight. I find honey from just down the road. I meet a farmer who grows the exact beans I love.

The journey has already reshaped my pantry and my perspective. It’s not just about what I buy—it’s about the stories and relationships woven into every choice.


An Invitation to You 🤝

Maybe you’re curious about what’s grown near you. Maybe you’d love to try sourcing just one ingredient locally. Or maybe you’re already on this path in your own way.

Here’s my challenge for you:

  • Draw your own circle. Look at a map and find your 100-mile radius.
  • Pick one thing. Choose a food, fiber, or product to swap for a local choice.
  • Share your story. Tell me in the comments or during the next live stream what you discovered!

Looking Ahead 🌸

There’s still time to join in the fun and I can’t wait to see how it unfolds. Together, we can learn and adapt. We will celebrate the joy of living more closely connected to the world right outside our doors.

✨ If you missed the live conversation, you can watch the replay here: YouTube Replay

Let’s keep this conversation going—what would living a little closer to home look like for you?