Archive for September 5th, 2009

Oh no, a Crone?

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

When I was growing up a crone was an old hag and sometimes was associated with witches and magic. Magic always fascinated me as I’m sure it did most small children.   Later I encountered “cronies” that seemed to be a bunch of old men hanging around together for the seemingly illicit act of drinking and swearing and playing cards together.  Mom would say about Dad, “Oh, he’s down at the fire hall messing around with his cronies.”  And so I never thought much about me being a crone because, well quite frankly, I didn’t fit into either of those categories.

And then, as the boomers got older and the boomer’s mothers got older we needed a moniker that would in some irreverent way honor our ancient bodies and our ancient and supposedly wise  old minds.  And so lately, The Crone, has become simply someone very old and maybe very wise.  Especially a woman.  Men are not crones.  I can think of a lot of other names for old men, but crones just isn’t one of them.  We can get into that in a later blog if we are still speaking to one another.

So. here we are stuck with the label of “The Crone” after you are fortunate enough to have passed some magic point in your life.  And, I have concluded that it must be the miniute, the very, exact minute after you turn 70-years old.  I think it is an honorable age where any woman can hold up her head high and come to the realization that she has lived longer than most people and will probably live even longer yet than most people.  Here is the Crone who has finally fingured out that she has enough experience under her belt to write story after story about the vagaries we call life.  The good times, the bad times, the sermon times, and the wondering times, the funny times, and the really comical times, and at the end of a particularly long day, perhaps even a bit of really deep wisdom will surface. If we wait long enough.

Being the Crone sounds absolutely fabulous, freeing, a freshness of expression that may have been held in bay all this time because mommy would’n like it, or the children might be upset, or one’s brother or father would threaten to take you out of the will, and you know what - the old crone, “don’t give a tinker’s damn” as my mother would say.  Maybe more modern follks might have a different way of expressing it, but it is really up to each on of us to hang onto the crescent moon and swing for a bit. 

Being the Crone is the time in your life to let your hair down, put on your favorite outfit, a light puff of your best perfume, and maybe a hat, but then maybe not.  Go out and throughly enjoy all that God has in mind for you to truly love and experience.  WooHoo – what a feeling – free as a bird, soaring, gliding, able to sing my own song!  Hope you come along for the ride.

500 Words

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

When I was writing a newspaper column about condominium living I was told that it should be no more than a thousand words.  Not having written much for publication at that time I thought a thousand words would take me forever, that is if I could even write that many words.  Or perhaps, I thought what if I simply had to write two thousand or three thousand words to say what I wanted to say?  It was a good discipline for me to have to focus my thoughts and condense them into 1,000 words so that they were readable and yet made sense.

As I made my way through seminary and two, then four, then ten, then twenty page papers for this professor or that professor, the concept of a thousand words was lost.  No more to focus in, hone your thoughts, and be clear and succinct.  Papers for professors required so many more words, with the exception of one – my homiletics professor.  Ten minutes was the ideal time for a sermon.  I quickly learned that one hundred words equaled about a minute of preaching.  Aha!  My thousand word discipline was paying off in fashioning an almost perfect ten minute sermon.  Mind you, the sermon may not have been perfect, but the timing was impeccable.

And then, along came blogs and emails and Facebook and, OMG, Twitter.  Blogs could go on and on, but I found myself attracted to those that were short and sweet.  Emails were best at about a hundred words.  Facebook, maybe fifty.  The real challenge though was Twitter with its 140 characters.  Not words, characters, as in A, B, C, 1, 2, 3….spaces, commas, even periods counted.  Although Twitter is fast becoming only “headlines,” it is disciplining people to write in a short, concise, and focused manner.

Out of curiosity I decided to cut and paste my favorite blogs into MSWord – meaning, those that actually held my interest and said something meaningful – and see how many words they contained.  Almost without exception they were in the vicinity of five hundred (500) words or less.  The most recent one was from The Geranium Farm and in 428 words Barbara Crafton captured the essence of rain.

For over a year now I have been mulling around the idea of creating my own blog.  But what to write about, what subject, how long, what shall I name it?  I am a priest; should I write about God or godliness?  I am a woman; should I write about feminism?  I am a crone (I crossed the 70-year old mark this year); should I write about the elderly or aged?  Actually, I like being a crone – it liberates me. I am an opinionated individual, and I realized I can write about many things.  But, only if they are five hundred words – more or less.  And, so, here I am with my first blog and I am calling it “Words from The Crone.”  Hope you enjoy it!