blog description

Old women talk about old things: history, myth, magic and their
checkered pasts, about what changes and what does not.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Crone = Ugly ?


My sister claims I must have a lot of karmic debt to pay off since the past seven years of my life have been mostly spent taking care of the sick, dying, and aged — first helping with my dying mother, then my terminally-ill life mate/soul mate, now my elderly father — but I have a hunch it’s more that I’m going through my crone stage a bit earlier than normal. Although “crone” has become a pejorative term, crone is one of the mythological stages of a woman’s life (maiden, mother, crone). Crones cared for the dying and were spiritual midwives at the end of life, the link in the cycle of death and rebirth. They were healers, teachers, way-showers, bearers of sacred power, knowers of mysteries, mediators between the world of spirit and the world of form.

Sounds wonderful, doesn’t it? Something to look forward to becoming — a wise woman — and yet crone is a word few women embrace, and no wonder since over the centuries, crone has come to mean “ugly old woman.”

It seems strange that there are so many derogatory words for ugly old women — witch, hag, crone, harridan, battle-ax, beldam, shrew, termagant — yet not a single derogatory to word to describe ugly old men. (At least, I can’t think of any.) And why are such wise women considered ugly, anyway? Apparently, after men have had their way with young maidens, then used up their youth in bearing and rearing children, they somehow expect women to still be attractive. Nowadays, of course, with creams and lotions and make-up and hair-dyeing and all the other beauty treatments available, most women do retain at least a semblance of their youthful looks. And yet those ancient terms for “wise old woman” still retain their pejorative connotations.

But no matter what she looks like or what she is called, a woman who calmly listens to the crotchets of the old folks, who patiently sits by the bedside of the dying, who deals with life’s unpleasant chores with a minimum of complaint, has an aura of beauty. I would be willing to be that no one who is ministered to by one of these “crones” thinks she is ugly. I bet her beauty shines through to them, if no one else.

I also bet she isn’t aware of her beauty. Like me, she is probably simply doing what needs to be done as calmly as possible.

It seems odd that so many of us who have lost our mates end up taking care of aged parents, but perhaps we are the ones who have the patience for dealing with the slow and inexorable ways of age and death.

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Pat Bertram is the author of the suspense novels Light Bringer, More Deaths Than One, A Spark of Heavenly Fire, and Daughter Am I. Bertram is also the author of Grief: The Great Yearning, “an exquisite book, wrenching to read, and at the same time full of profound truths.” Connect with Pat on Google+

9 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Pat. Thoughtful as always.

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  2. Very wise and insightful thoughts Pat. Thank you for sharing. Jude

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  3. Thank you for inviting me to be a guest on your wonderful blog, Juliet. I never would have contemplated the history and etymology of "crone"ism if it weren't for you.

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  4. One of the amusing things about AARP Magazine is their constant use of pictures of people 50-80 who look younger than their calendar age suggests they should look. Sure, people don't need to feel old, but I don't look as good as those photographs. But woe be unto those who call me "an old geezer."

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    1. That's one of the reasons I won't subscribe to the magazine -- instead of making age more appealing, they seem to do their best to celebrate youthfulness. And they use celebrities on the cover. Cripes -- you'd think there would be at least one magazine that saw the beauty in ordniary people.

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    2. I am having a croning for my 60th. I am marrying myself, and making vows about my intentions to love, support, and encourage those that come into my path. I am one person attempting to change this word. I am wearing crone like a crown! yup.

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    3. I am having a croning for my 60th. I am marrying myself, and making vows about my intentions to love, support, and encourage those that come into my path. I am one person attempting to change this word. I am wearing crone like a crown! yup.

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  5. Love to you, Coral, and wear your crone body proudly...it is a crown of a life of experience love joy ecstasy pain fear sorrow

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