Angry Knit In Solidarity Hosts
Start a local Angry Knit In Group
Start a local Angry Knit In Group
Our goal is to support everyday people getting organized and involved in their local communities.
Standing in solidarity is about being 'in it' together. We are not silent when there is a problem and we are active parts of the solution. It is an opportunity to turn anxiety into effective civic action. Anyone, anywhere can start organizing. You can find what you are passionate about, what skills you have, and work with others to reach a shared goal. That looks different for every person and every group. Maybe it is a Knit In, maybe it is a vigil, maybe it is a tea part to fill out FOIA requests and make public comment. We can't all do it all, but we can all do something.
Our Action page has resources, public event calendars, tips, reading lists, and more.
What does your community need? What can you do about it? Who can help you?
Monday, March 2 · 5:00 – 6:00pm
Time zone: America/New_York
Google Meet joining info
Video call link: https://meet.google.com/crg-njnw-kie
Friday, March 13 · 5:00 – 6:00pm
Time zone: America/New_York
Google Meet joining info
Video call link: https://meet.google.com/dgi-tbei-xbf
Solidarity events are not part of the official event hosted by the KCL Angry Knit-In team and not affiliated with the Knitting Cult Lady brand or the KCL Angry Knit-In Volunteers/Organizers.
We can only be responsible for our event. Any event you choose to hold is solely your responsibility.
We can offer support through providing this guide as a resource for you to organize your own event and share best practices we have discovered through our own experience.
You know your area, demographic, and community needs better than us, it is important you use your best judgement to address the needs, concerns, and requirements of your local event and community as you organize civic engagement.
We are not responsible for what you do or how you do it.
This guide, support, and resources act only as a reference to help you get started on your own planning process.
Branding and information from the KCL Angry Knit-In official event, website, discord, or created and put out by us are not to be used in any way that misrepresents our community, goals, event, or practices.
You may not use any of our branding or information for financial gain or mislead anyone about your event being in solidarity, but not affiliated with, the official event.
We may make updates to this information at any time.
Host Your Own Knit-In
Stand in solidarity with activists fighting authoritarianism and frog the system!
Solidarity events are not part of the official event hosted by the KCL Angry Knit-In team and not affiliated with the Knitting Cult Lady brand or the KCL Angry Knit-In Volunteers/Organizers. We can only be responsible for our event. Any event you choose to hold is solely your responsibility. We can offer support through providing this guide as a resource for you to organize your own event and share best practices we have discovered through our own experience. You know your area, demographic, and community needs better than us, it is important you use your best judgement to address the needs, concerns, and requirements of your local event and community as you organize civic engagement. We are not responsible for what you do or how you do it. This guide acts only as a reference to help you get started on your own planning process. Branding and information from the KCL Angry Knit-In official event, website, discord, or created and put out by us are not to be used in any way that misrepresents our community, goals, event, or practices. You may not use any of our branding or information for financial gain or mislead anyone about your event being in solidarity, but not affiliated with, the official event. We may make updates to this document at any time. That said - get organized, get connected, and get civically engaged!
Gather your team
Organizing is hard (and no fun) to do alone
Identify what skills are needed and choose people for those skill sets
Value the experience and expertise of people who can support your effort
Collaborate and work together as a team with clear communication
Choose a location
This can be a venue, your capitol, your representatives office, public spaces, etc.
Ensure you have all the permitting for your planned event and adhere to local laws and ordinances
Choose a day and time
You can have an ongoing event, a sit-in where people do not leave until their voices have been heard
A recurring event
A one time event to help locals connect to civic organizations
Ensure your permits are up to date and account for times and durations
Gather your resources
Find community members, local officials, and local organizations to raise awareness and connect participants to resources they can use to take meaningful civic action
Invite union and local leaders to speak and share resources with the people
Create or get any materials needed for the event
Engage the community
Invite others, share your event, and encourage people to show up
Share your event with us in the discord channel or via email
Market your event locally and/or online
Ensure participants are prepared
Offer resources for trainings
Let people know what to expect
Remind people to be responsible for their own safety and legal compliance
Things to Address
Permits
Liability insurance
Legal conditions
Audio/Visual Release
Compliance with local laws and ordinances
Safety
De-escalation training and tactics
Emergency and contingency plans
Meaningful civic engagement
Best practices
Avoid controversial locations such as police stations, areas with known agitators, schools, hospitals, daycare centers, and areas where vulnerable populations may be impacted
Leave no trace practices
Ensure you clean and maintain your areas and are good stewards of community spaces
Have a safety plan that includes medical aid and de-escalation
Delegate tasks and use the power of your community, none of us can do this alone
Crowd source ideas and respect the opinions offered by the community and use your best judgement to discern the appropriate steps
Take care of yourself and get support as you organize
Any funds and/or material goods raised for community support should have full transparency and no funds/goods should be used for personal gain
Financial and material goods should have a clear destination and be fully delivered
Anxiety to Action Theory and Process
This worksheet can be printed, written into a notebook, or added into notes on your phone. This idea is a part of gaining momentum in activism by taking the first steps out of overwhelmed paralysis into effective civic action. The other part goes back to the idea of “strength of weak ties.” Read through the links below to educate yourself on these concepts.
The original concept was in relation to job hunting but the research has evolved:
In Psychology today, more relevant to our goals
A blog from Cornell, highlights important points.
Being an activist is about solidarity more than friendship. Solidarity is unity of action and mutual support among individuals with a common goal or interest. It is lovely that we can make great friends along the way, but those ‘weak ties’ are strong together. You do not have to be close or know a person’s life story to work together and be effective. As the Cornell article linked above states, “ Studies have shown that more than 80 percent of contacts with helpful information were from the weak ties.” When we value our fellow activists we can learn from their skills, experience, and expertise. Focus on the goal. We are here together to preserve democracy and we don’t all have to be best friends to do that, we just have to work together.
As you move through the worksheet steps and build on these foundations, stay curious. Listen to your community, learn from them, and ask questions. We can all do something right now and we are here to decide what that is.
The worksheet is broken into four steps, each explained below, followed by an example.
In Solidarity,
Angry Knit In Team
Step 1 Identify
3-5 Topics/areas of focus that bring me anxiety, fear, anger, confusion, or passion
This process is about identifying what it is that is overwhelming to the point of inaction. What is too much? What is scary? What is confusing? Is it elections, foreign policy, healthcare, environment, law enforcement? By naming the thing that is causing us to freeze we can learn about it and we understand things, they become far less scary. The more we know, the more power we have.
Step 2 Learn
3-5 Resources for education, information, and actionable steps
Knowledge and resources work when we apply them. Who is talking about this topic with reliable information? Where do I learn about this thing? What organizations are working on this and how can I support them? What actions are people with expertise on the topic suggesting? When those resources are easy to access people are more likely to use them. If there is a phone number for the lawyers guild, put it in your phone now. If there is a quick response team in your community, connect with them now.
Step 3 Skills
3-5 People with skills and solidarity
Who do I already know or have met today that I can connect with to learn, have support, and be in action with me? Maybe someone has a skill set you can learn from or utilize in your efforts. Maybe you can get a calling group together. Maybe your friend you haven't talked to in a while is going to protest and you can join them. Be in connection with real people. Be so connected that isolation becomes a distant memory. Value the wisdom and skill sets of those around you.
Step 4 Break the ice
3-5 things I will start doing today. This is your activism to do list!
We are thinking about our barriers to entry. What is the smallest, lowest risk step I can take to build momentum? By doing the novel thing you build resilience, confidence, and challenge yourself to be the hero you read about when you studied civil rights movements. Take the first step and soon it will feel like a normal part of civic action. The big feelings get smaller and the frustration is managed by the very simple fact that you did your part and tried. Remembering that feeling gives you more confidence for your next area of focus. We build on the things we do by layering in more. You become a resource and support for others. That impact ripples out and builds the coalition.
An Examples of how this can work.
Example. 1
Step 1 - Identify. Maybe you want to call your reps but are too anxious to do it.
Step 2 - Learn and resource. You learn more about how it works, what the process is, and the efficacy. You discover the 5 calls app as a resource and download it to your phone. You read “tips for calling reps” on the knit in website.
Step 3 - Find skills and solidarity. You have found two people who will be moral support as you call and help with accountability through check-ins. You three text each other when something happens so you can get on the phone right away, and you support one another with tips and motivation. Who knows, maybe you will become the support for someone you meet.
Step 4 - Break the ice. Now you actually do the novel thing of doing the thing. Start small, build your momentum, flex those muscles, and keep the ball rolling.
Example. 2
Protests scare you and seem overwhelming. You learn about the history of protests, the effect they have in building the movement, and you want to participate. You aren’t ready for a protest, but you drive by to scope it out, wave, and show your support. Then you can drop off water, handwarmers, or food. Next you make some signs to pass around. As you go you learn tips about safety and the process. You have a bag ready with eye wash, ppe, first aid, a sign, and any phone numbers you may need just in case. Now going and staying starts to feel less overwhelming because you have had multiple touches with the idea, seen how it is, and have gotten prepared to be there. We are breaking the ice (pun intended) to move from a state of inaction to a state of organized, effective action.
Slogans to Stand By
If it scares you - study it
If its too much - break it down
If its too hard - find your reason to do it anyway
If your heart is broken - you do it with a broken heart
Anxiety to Action Worksheet
Step 1 Identify: 3-5 Topics that bring me anxiety, fear, anger, confusion, or passion
Step 2 Learn: 3-5 Resources for education, information, and actionable steps
Step 3 Skills: 3-5 People with skills and solidarity
Step 4 Break the ice: 3-5 things I will start doing today. This is your activism to do list!
Community Circles Exercise
This exercise is designed to move from hierarchy to a circle. It is a chance to evaluate our privilege, vulnerability, situational awareness, and ability to protect. The concept can be carried throughout everyday life to increase awareness of risk and meaningfully adjust to intersectional spaces. It is a thought experiment as much as real life one.
The Frame:
Patriarchy is a hierarchy.
A ladder. A pyramid.
Power at the top. Everyone else beneath it.
Matriarchy is a circle.
Not women at the top.
But children and the vulnerable in the center.
The question isn’t “Who’s in charge?”
The question is: “Who are we protecting?”
The Physical Setup:
1. Form a wide circle.
2. In the center place:
A blanket
A basket of yarn
Or written words like: children, immigrants, queer kids, the elderly, the poor, the sick, the silenced
3. If children are present, they are invited (never required) to sit or play in the center.
The center represents who power is for.
No one stands above.
No one commands.
The Exercise:
Round 1: Naming the Ladder
Prompt: Where have you experienced hierarchy in your life — and what did it cost you?
(Workplace. Church. Military. Family. Government. No debate. Just stories.)
Round 2: Turning the Structure
Have everyone look at the center.
Prompt: If our power was organized around protecting the people in the middle, what would change?
Examples might emerge:
Policies
Budgets
Language
Safety
Who we listen to
What we measure as success
Let people imagine it concretely.
Round 3: The Commitment
Final prompt: What is one way you can move from ladder-thinking to circle-thinking in your own life?
Small. Specific. Personal. This is where it becomes embodied, not theoretical.
Closing Ritual
Everyone reaches one piece of yarn toward the center.
Not tied together. Not tangled. Just extended.
This is what protection looks like.
Not domination.
Not control.
Care.
Hold 10 seconds of silence.
Then release.
The opposite of patriarchy is not women in charge.
It’s care in charge.
Critical reflection questions:
How do I evaluate vulnerability? Age, race, pregnancy, disability, gender?
How do I value my ability to protect others by virtue of the privilege I may or may not carry?
In what situations do I feel vulnerable?
Who would I want to stand in front of me?
What’s My ROLE?
Pick the archetype that best fits you for this event and generally
Write it on your name tag
Each group/table should have at least one of each role
Caretaker
Event, I make sure people are fed, helped, supported
Generally I make sure people have what they need and help when I can
Protector
Event, I walk on the outside and can provide de-escalation
Generally I make sure are safe
Connecter
Event, I connect with people and learn their skills
Generally I match skills to needs and and always know who to call
Organizer
Event, I make sure the collective craft is coming together and we have all the roles
Generally I organize logistics and follow through on ideas
Collector
Event, I make sure all the items are collected and passed to the right teams
Generally I collect items and manage the distribution to those who need them
Mover/mobilizer
Event, I can move things where they need to be and hold signs
Generally I help physically move things to where they need to go
Some Ideas of places:
Local Street Team for the Unhoused
Local Women's Shelter
Local Community Shelter
Local Nursing Homes
Local Veterans Affairs Center
Local Indigenous Community Center