Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep - The Temperature Blanket
Episode Date: March 9, 2026Our story tonight is called The Temperature Blanket, and it’s a story about a project inspired by a chance meeting and a yen to keep track of the days as they pass. It’s also about blank books and... seashells, granny squares and garter stitches, rows of yarn blending into a account of the year, and taking a few moments each day to make something lasting and beautiful. Subscribe to our Premium channel. The first month is on us. 💙 We give to a different charity each week and this week we are giving to the Prism Project. Prism Project offers a Safehouse Program, providing full wrap-around, restorative services to child survivors of trafficking. Pre-Order Links for Kathryn's New Book Here! NMH Merch, Autographed Books and More! Listen to our daytime show Stories from the Village of Nothing Much Sit Meditation with Kathryn Pay it forward subscription Follow us on Instagram Visit Nothing Much Happens for more Village fun! Get Cozy at the Inn with this Playlist! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, I'm Catherine Nikolai, and if you're looking for something gentle to listen to that isn't news or true crime or self-improvement,
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Welcome.
to bedtime stories for everyone,
in which nothing much happens.
You feel good, and then you fall asleep.
I'm Catherine Nikolai.
I write and read all the stories you'll hear on nothing much happens.
Audio engineering is by Bob Wittersheim.
We give to a different charity each week,
And this week we are giving to the PRISM Project.
Prism Project offers a safe house program,
providing full wraparound restorative services to child survivors of trafficking.
You can learn more about them in our show notes.
For ad-free and bonus episodes, please consider becoming a premium subscriber.
There's a button right there on Spotify or Apple for it,
or you can go to Nothing Much Happens.com.
Busy minds need a place to rest,
a gentle tether to keep them in place long enough
for sleep to fill in the gaps.
And that's how this works.
Just listen.
I'll tell the story twice,
and I'll go a little slower the second time through.
If you wake in the middle of the night,
you could listen again
or just pull those details back into your mind
and think through any part of the story you can remember
and you will drop right back off.
Our story tonight is called the temperature blanket
and it's a story about a project
inspired by a chance meeting
and a yen to keep track of the days as they
pass. It's also about blank books and seashells, granny squares, and garter stitches, rows of yarn,
blending into an account of the year, and taking a few moments each day to make something
lasting and beautiful. So lights out campers, get the right pillow in the right spot,
and make yourself as comfortable as you can.
You have done enough for the day.
Truly, it is enough.
And now nothing remains but deep, restorative sleep.
Let my voice be like a guardian, protecting, watching over,
keeping you safe as you rest.
Draw a full breath in through your nose.
Let it out your mouth.
One more, draw it deep.
Out with a sigh.
Good.
The temperature blanket.
Some people write in their journals each night,
a dear diary moment before going to bed,
in which they jot down their movements for the day.
What they thought or planned or saw.
And I have tried it several times, in fact.
Every so often I see another beautiful blank book in a shop
and think, this is the one that will inspire me to record my goings-on.
That last one I bought, it turned out to not be the one,
but this one, this one will do it.
I know, even as I am buying it,
that the color of the cover,
a ribbon to mark the page,
or the texture of the paper,
have nothing to do with
whether I will make keeping a diary
a long-term habit or not.
It's me.
Or I should say,
maybe it's not for me.
It's something I'd like to think of myself doing.
It sounds calm and organized and mature.
It's aspirational.
But not apparently who I actually am.
And for a long time, I couldn't reconcile my general interest in archiving.
in finding a way to chronicle my days with my inability to do so in writing.
Then I realized that there were lots of other ways in which I already kept track
and collected experiences like beads on a string
that told the story of a week or a month or longer.
There were the pencil marks.
on the inside of the pantry door
that showed how much my nephews grew each year,
the dog-eared pages of my favorite cookbook,
that were folded over when a new dish was made,
the collection of ticket stubs from movies and concerts
that covered the fridge.
None of them were in a book,
but they were all a sort of diary entry.
Even the collection of sweatshirts in my closet
that I'd been growing since my first trip in college.
The seashells in the jar on the front table
and the Afghan on my sofa
were a form of journaling,
especially the Afghan.
Well, that was what my grandma had always called,
them. But most folks probably just said blanket. I'd been working on it for nearly a year now.
And that was not because it was incredibly huge, or because I'd gotten distracted and left the work
for months at a time. No, it had taken nearly a year, because it was a temperature blanket. Because it was a
temperature blanket, and therefore designed to be knit at the rate of one row per day.
I'd never heard of a temperature blanket before coming across one.
At one of my nephew's soccer games, or maybe it had been volleyball.
That part doesn't matter.
It had been a chilly spring day, and the family's,
sitting on the bench next to us, had a beautiful blanket stretched over their laps.
There were so many colors, but the way they blended into one another felt like a sunset or
watercolors mixing on a canvas. When I asked about it, they shared that it was a temperature
blanket that each row of stitches showed the high temperature of a day of the year.
I had so many questions, and thankfully the man seated right beside me had been the one to make it.
He told me that he crocheted his, but they were equally beautiful when knitted, that some people
even made blankets from granny squares,
so that instead of an ombre of color,
they looked more like a pixelated picture
of the year's weather.
So, one row per day, I asked,
do you start on January 1st?
I felt like I'd already missed the opportunity
to make one by a few months,
months. And how do you pick the colors? Is there a list somewhere that everyone follows?
He'd patted my hand and chuckled, leaned in, and said, there are no blanket, police, my dear,
and that had made me smile and relax. He told me I could certainly start on January 1st,
if that's what I wanted. But today was...
just as good a day to begin, that I could even go back and find out the high temperature
for each day of the year so far, and try to catch up, but that he just picked a day to start,
and made a new row each day till the sun had gone all the way around the earth. As for the colors,
They can be whatever you like.
Some people pick shades of blue,
an icy white for colder days,
greens for mild temperatures,
and oranges and yellows for the summer.
And some do it randomly.
They close their eyes
and fish around in their basket of yarn
and pull something out
and that will be for all days when it's, say, between 10 and 19 degrees.
Those blankets can be really pretty and sort of surprising when they're done.
He said he'd set up a chart for his own creations decades before
and stuck with the same colors ever since
so that he could look back and see that, yes,
Indeed, the summer 15 years ago had been a hot one,
or that year that the winter was so mild it barely even snowed,
had been three blankets back.
I told him I only had a few skeins of yarn at home,
not enough for a wide range of temperatures,
but that I still wanted to start right away.
and he encouraged me, reminding me that since the daily high didn't usually swing by double digits,
I'd have time to fit out my craft basket as I went, and I had started that night.
When the game had ended, and my nephews and their dads asked if I wanted to join them for dinner at their house,
I'd begged off, saying I had big plans for the night.
At home, I found my knitting needles, a half-sane of yarn that was a pretty gray-green,
and reminded myself how to make a garter stitch, which I felt would be best for this project.
And soon it became a regular part of my evenings.
Every night before bed, I double-check the weather report and my color chart and sit down and knit.
I even ran into my blanket mentor a few more times through the end of the spring season and the beginning of the fall.
I often brought it with me
as a soccer game or dance rehearsal
was a perfect place to work.
He always asked to see it,
to see how far I'd come
and chatted with me about color choices.
Now I was just a week or two away
from finishing my first temperature blanket.
It had become,
so big that I'd had to stop carrying it around and committed to charting out the last days at home.
In it, I saw the days of bitter cold and warm sunshine.
I saw the time I'd had to pull out a whole week of work because I'd misread my chart.
and I saw my own creative will
to turn a year's worth of numbers
into a story that was more than the sum of its parts
blanket or Afghan or diary
I had made a record of my time in this world
and it was beautiful
the temperature blanket
Some people write in their journals each night, a dear diary moment before going to bed,
in which they jot down their movements for the day, what they thought, or planned,
or saw, and I have tried it several times.
in fact.
Every so often,
I see another beautiful blank book in a shop.
And think,
this is the one that will inspire me
to record my goings-on.
That last one I bought,
it turned out to not be the one.
but this one, this one, will do it.
I know, even as I am buying it,
that the color of the cover, a ribbon to mark the page,
or the texture of the paper,
have nothing to do with whether I will make keeping a diary,
a long-term habit or not.
It's me.
Or maybe I should say, it's not for me.
It's something I'd like to think of myself doing.
It sounds calm and organized and mature.
It's aspirational.
but not apparently who I actually am.
And for a long time, I couldn't reconcile my general interest in archiving,
in finding a way to chronicle my days with my inability to do it in writing.
then I realized that there were lots of other ways,
in which I already kept track and collected experiences,
like beads on a string that told the story of a week or a month,
or longer, there were the pencil marks.
on the inside of the pantry door,
that showed how much my nephews grew each year.
The dog-eared pages of my favorite cookbook that were folded over
when a new dish was made.
The collection of ticket stubs from movies and concerts.
that covered the fridge. None of these were in a book, but they were all a sort of diary entry.
Even the collection of sweatshirts in my closet that I'd been growing since my first trip in college.
the seashells in the jar on the front table and the Afghan on my sofa
were a form of journaling, especially the Afghan.
Well, that was what my grandma had always called them.
but most folks probably just said blanket.
I'd been working on it for nearly a year now,
and that was not because it was incredibly huge,
or because I'd gotten distracted
and left the work for months at a time.
No, it had taken nearly a year because it was a temperature blanket
and therefore designed to be knit
at the rate of one row per day.
I'd never heard of a temperature blanket
before coming across one at one of my nephew.
use soccer games. Or maybe it had been volleyball. That part doesn't matter. It had been a chilly
spring day, and the family on the bench beside us had a beautiful blanket stretched over their laps.
there were so many colors,
but the way they blended into one another
felt like a sunset or watercolors
mixing on a canvas.
When I asked about it,
they shared that it was a temperature blanket
that each row of stitches
showed the high temperature.
of a day of the year. I had so many questions. And thankfully, the man seated right beside me,
had been the one to make it. He told me that he'd crocheted his. But they were equally
beautiful when knitted, that some people even made blankets from granny squares, so that instead of
an ombre of color, they looked more like a pixelated picture of the year's weather. So,
one row per day, I asked.
Do you start on January 1st?
I felt like I'd already missed the opportunity
to make one by a few months.
And how do you pick the colors?
Is there a list somewhere that everyone follows?
He'd patted my hand and chuckled,
leaned in and said,
There are no blanket police, my dear, and that had made me smile and relax.
He told me I could certainly start on January 1st if it was what I wanted.
But today was just as good a day to begin, that I could even go back and find out.
the high temperature for each day so far and try to catch up,
but that he just picked a day to start and made a new row each day
till the sun had gone all the way around the earth.
As for colors, they can be whatever you like.
Some people pick shades of blue,
and icy white for colder days, greens for mild temperatures,
and oranges and yellows for the summer.
And some do it randomly.
They close their eyes and fish around in their basket of yarn
and pull something out, and that will be the color,
For all days, when it's, say, between 10 and 19 degrees,
those blankets can be really pretty,
and sort of surprising when they are done.
He said he'd set up a chart for his own creations decades before
and stuck with the same colors ever since,
so that he could look back and see that, yes, indeed,
the summer 15 years ago had been a hot one,
or that the year that the winter was so mild,
it barely even snowed, had been three blankets back.
I told him, I only had a few,
skeins of yarn at home, not enough for a wide range of temperatures, but still wanted to start
right away, and he encouraged me, reminding me that since the daily high didn't usually swing
by double digits, I'd have time to fit out my craft basket as I went. And I had started that night
when the game had ended, and my nephews and their dads asked if I wanted to join them for dinner
at their house. I'd begged off, saying I had big plans. Saying I had big plans.
for the night. At home, I found my knitting needles, a half-scane of yarn that was a pretty gray-green
color, and reminded myself how to make a garter stitch, which I felt would be best for this project.
And soon it became a regular part of my evenings.
Every night before bed,
I double-check the weather report and my color chart
and sit down and knit.
I even ran into my blanket mentor
a few times through the end of the spring season
in the beginning of the fall.
I often brought it with me
as a soccer game
or dance rehearsal
was a perfect place to work.
He always asked to see it,
to see how far I'd come
and chatted with me
about color choices.
Now, I was just a week or two away from finishing my first temperature blanket.
It had become so big that I'd had to stop carrying it around
and committed to charting out the last days at home.
In it, I saw the days of bitter cold.
and warm sunshine. I saw the time I'd had to pull out a whole week's worth of work
because I'd misread my chart. And I saw my own creative will to turn a year's worth of numbers
into a story that was more than the sum of its parts.
Blanket or Afghan or diary.
I had made a record of my time in this world,
and it was beautiful.
Sweet dreams.
