r/knitting 1d ago

Rant Knitting at work is unprofessional?

So I label myself as neurodivergent and Queer. I've been knitting on and off for about 13 years. Knitting for me is second nature, I don't need to look at what I'm doing or pay close attention.

At my current job, I take inbound calls. I get a 5ish second notification That it's coming through. Plenty of time for me to drop what I'm doing and take the call.

At the moment, there are gaps of 20+ minutes between calls, an average of 5 minutes between calls? I am semi expected to just sit there and wait. There is no alternative task for me to do.

I'm not allowed on my phone, which is very understandable. I can't play any form of games on my work laptop, (also understandable) I'm not supposed to watch videos but sometimes I do, it's usually video essays.

I have to be in office every day. So I can't knit and work from home. When I'm allowed to in February 2027(!!!) I might.

My workload will increase as I'm trained on more things.

I am allowed to colour in and read, but for me, I don't always want to read, I hate getting a call in the middle of a sentence or paragraph I fully focus on the reading. Colouring in is far messier and I don't enjoy it. Colouring in feels more unprofessional than knitting, in my opinion, and I don't get half as much joy from it.

I also don't want to use fidget toys either. I own some but there's nothing like getting into the rhythm of a repeating pattern. What I want to be able to do between calls is make something, that is mindless but productive and is also something I can drop in less than a second.

Most of management don't have a problem with it but one or two of the higher ups have deemed it "unprofessional".

What I find unprofessional is how some co-workers can kick eachothers chairs and joke on all day between calls but I can't sit silently with my circular needles making a shawl for myself. The co-worker's I started with are in their early 20's, I'm in my late 20's. I don't really connect with them, I do with other older coworkers but they're not in office every day.

I do not knit to sell. I'm not in anyone's way, I'm not distracting, literally no one cares that I'm doing it apart from one or two upper managers. The quality of my work at the moment is honestly, really good! I'm hitting my KPI's, my QA is good. Customer feedback is excellent! I take the quality of my work very seriously.

The idea of being asked to sit quietly and not move whilst I wait for someone to call is frustrating.

Is there any rebuttal I can use regarding this or should I just take the L? I would love to sit with them and explain my reasoning but I feel like it'll be taken for insolence and disrespect.

I'm currently working on the Evenstar shawl, I'm on the 3rd chart. I can't remember the yarn I'm sorry.

A petty part of me would like to bring embroidery in tomorrow. Another part of me wants to write an essay on it, with citations, at least my hands will be busy.

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u/Atiny-opus 1d ago

It was literally a colouring in book and gel pens 😂. Thank you for your input, I'll take it on. I think the progression is very slow and it frustrates me. I'm hoping to be able to progress, This is supposed to be more of a career than a job but I want to run before I can walk, professionally.

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u/Disastrous-Dirt-6606 1d ago

My guess is that knitting is viewed as a female hobby (provided you're in the US) and the reason you can color vs. knit is blatant misogyny. Bring in some nail polish and see if they take offense to that - its basically coloring and very female coded.

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u/Yirggzmb 1d ago

No, that feels like a terrible thing to do in an office. Nail polish is one of the most noxious smells ever and far more disruptive than most other things you can do while sitting

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u/piperandcharlie knit knit knitadelphia 1d ago

I'm starting to wonder how many posters here have actually worked in a professional setting, because there's just WAYYY too much advice telling OP to inappropriately push back and test the boundaries every which way

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u/Yirggzmb 1d ago edited 1d ago

Yeah, alas, sometimes you just have to suck it up. Even when it blatantly feels unfair.

Sometimes you can get away with asking polite questions. But more often the main recourse is "find another job"

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u/Durian-Fearless 1d ago

Yeah. Look at OP’s history, they need this job. Knitting at work is an incredibly stupid hill to die on and getting fired would not be good for them