Twelve Pines Retreat Center, Physician Mom Crafters, crafting, inclusion

Physician Mom Crafters and ME

I’ve just returned from my third annual craftcation with Houston-area Physician Mom Crafters (PMC). It’s exactly what it sounds like: a crafting vacation with doctors who are moms and like to craft.

For the third year in a row, we’ve set aside one weekend in the fall to gather at Twelve Pines Retreat Center in Huntsville and make beautiful things. From watercolor to wine cork creations, paper-crafts to painting, and quilting to quilling, you never know what works you’ll find in progress.

But there’s a wee little detail you may have picked up on … namely, that I’m not a physician.

I’m a mom and a novice crafter, but a doctor I am not. So how is it that I’ve joined this credentialed, intelligent, and creative group of women for a third annual craftcation? 

Here’s how it happened… 

A few years ago, when we were new to this part of Houston, Todd met a med-peds doctor at a physician meet-and-greet and knew I would like her. He kept her name and information in case we decided to switch pediatricians, which was already on the horizon. I was intrigued by the idea of having the same doctor for myself and my child. And when we did make the switch, Todd’s intuition was proven right. I liked her immediately. 

I don’t remember when, but somewhere along the way, our new doctor invited me for a girls’ night out with friends, all of whom were also doctors, except for me. When I first met Katy, then Brooks, Stephanie, and several others, I had few (if any) local friends. I had a very young child with differences, some known, some still emerging. I felt isolated and alone as a mom (see my post, If You Don’t Play …) and had little drive to make friends, even though I desperately needed them. Because of their consistent efforts to include me, these “doctor moms” became my friends, one invitation at a time.

These “doctor moms”
became my friends,
one invitation
at a time.

Over the past nine or so years, I’ve joined some combination of the doctor moms for productions of “Wicked” and “Chicago,” for mani-pedis, fundraisers, birthday dinners, a paper-crafting group, and even an escape room. (Yes, we made it out.) I’m not sure the doctor moms knew how much I needed a peer group when they started asking, but for whatever reason, they were intentional about including me. They welcomed me in, despite my non-doctor status, and made my next few years far less lonely than they might have been. I was, and I remain, deeply grateful.

A few years back, my core group of doctor mom friends invited me to dinner out and a mini-craft retreat at one of their homes. Then, two years ago, Katy and Stephanie organized an official “craftcation” for a group they belonged to, Physician Mom Crafters, and invited me to come along.

Physician Mom Crafters

The first craftcation was small, and I already knew all of the doctor moms there. The following year, I met a few more Physician Mom Crafters, including one who wasn’t a mom. I remember us laughing about not quite fitting the title. But truly, nobody cared. This year, I met a few more Physician Mom Crafters, including another non-physician mom who came with a friend. What I’ve found over time is that the same wide-open welcome the doctor moms extended to me runs deep in the spirit of this entire group. It’s truly a beautiful thing.

There are plenty of stories out there about mean girls and the women they become, never fully outgrowing childish social limitations. But in my experience, there are some pretty amazing women out there, too, who live and breathe what it means to be good humans. The Physician Mom Crafters who I shared space with again this past Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, are those kind of women.

They are funny, talented, supportive, and kind, and not at all competitive with each other. They are generous with their time, often pausing their own projects to share tips and techniques and teach a friend. And they are seamlessly inclusive. Regardless of race or religion, marital status, kids or no kids, even whether or not you are a physician … if you are with them, you are part of the group. You matter. You belong.

The world is as it should be at the annual craftcation, and I feel fortunate to be a part of it.

My takeaways

I’m not sure why it never occurred to me before I knew the doctor moms that strong professional women could be crazy good crafters, too. That I could enjoy something so traditionally feminine as crafting and still be a good feminist. Maybe since I’m a second child, I feel like I need a model to teach me these things, to give me permission. And here, I have found many wonderful models for who we can be, how we can live.

I came away from this weekend, as from the others, with a hodgepodge of completed projects:

But mostly, I came away richer for spending time with these women who so graciously welcomed me into their community.

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