One
of my hobbies is counted cross-stitch - the more intricate, the better.
I belong to a few discussion forums on intricate cross-stitch, and the
topic in one recently turned to whether you stitch the face first,
leave it to last, or whatever. It's a coincidence they should be
discussing that, since I just had to make that decision.
I'm doing a kit, Bucilla's Jesus Christ at 33.

It's not the most detailed chart, certainly not as detailed as ones from Golden Kite or Scarlet Quince, among others (no affiliation). Still, I passed it in the craft store, and it cried out. What could I do?
Now, chart details usually tell you to start in the middle, so the
design will be centered, then work your way out from there. But for very detailed charts,
with sometimes over 100+ colors, you need a system, or you lose your
way fast. One of the most common methods is to do it section by
section, left to right, top to bottom. Some stitchers will leave the
faces off, preferring to do them last, so the piece "comes alive" as
it's finished. Others like to do the face first, so they feel connected
to the piece, and are more motivated to finish. The more intricate
charts can take several years to complete, so motivation is a big
factor. UFOs (unfinished objects) are all too common.
Well, when I brought the kit home, and was separating the floss,
looking at the finished picture, a phrase kept running through my head:
"Keep your mind's eye on the Lord." It's a paraphrase of something St. John Bosco
supposedly said in a biopic on his life. In times of stress, that
phrase comes to mind frequently... don't worry about the troubles
around you, just keep your mind's eye on the Lord. I decided to do the
face first, so as I stitched, I could "keep my mind's eye on the Lord."
It was a bit weird at first, just the cloth, and a few isolated
stitches. Bit by bit, you could make out the details of an eye, a brow,
a cheek. It slowly took shape. Just a hint of a presence at first. The
more I worked at it, the more I focused on it, the more I could see,
and the more I could sense He was there.
Life is like that. We're told to "keep our eye on the Lord," but
sometimes we can't see anything. Just a blank canvas, with a hint here
and there of His presence. If we just go about our business, not really
paying attention, we'll just get a glimpse now and then. But if we look
at the random stitches in our lives, and work at laying in more
stitches, area by area, we can see more of Him. The more we work at
seeing Him, the more the canvas gets filled in with His presence. The
colors appear richer, the picture more defined, more lifelike. more
complete.
Sometimes, no matter how hard we try, no matter how hard we squint,
we just can't see the true picture at all. We can't make sense of any
of it. No matter. If we're faithful about working at it, the picture
will come. Stitch by stitch, row by row, day by day -- 'til one day we
see Him clearly in the fullness of His presence, face-to-face.