Rana makes something to hold onto

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Rana noticed it in the children first.
The way they held onto things.
A sleeve.
A piece of fabric.
Anything familiar enough to feel steady.
There were days when everything felt temporary.
Where they lived.
What came next.
How long anything would last.
Rana couldn’t change that.
But she could make something.
She started with scraps.
Pieces of fabric others might have overlooked.
She cut them carefully.
Stitched them together.
Shaped something small enough to hold.
The first stuffed animals weren’t perfect.
The stitching was uneven.
The shape slightly off.
But it was soft.
And that was enough.
She kept going.
Thread through. Pull. Tie. Repeat.
Over time, the stuffed animals became more refined.
But the intention stayed the same: to create something steady in a moment that wasn’t.
Now, when Rana finishes one, she holds it for a second before setting it down.
Checking the seams. Smoothing the fabric. Making sure it feels right.
These stuffed animals don’t fix everything.
They don’t change where someone is.
But they offer something real: comfort, familiarity, something to hold onto.
And in the process of making them, something shifts for Rana too.
What began as a small act becomes something more.
A way to contribute, to create, to rebuild, piece by piece.
When you hold one of these, you’re holding that intention.
Something made with care.
Something made to last.
Something made in the middle of uncertainty and moving forward anyway.
Shop Handstitched Dolls

The post Rana makes something to hold onto appeared first on Search for Common Ground.

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