Our Members' Blogs

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

HOW sorry are you?!

By Nancy Shuman


File:Jean-Etienne Liotard 07.jpg
Young Girl Singing into a Mirror by Liotard (Wikimedia Commons).



I often sang along with the radio in my preteens, long before most of you were born (really).  Never mind that I was a far from engaging vocalist.  Never mind that I was shockingly oblivious to lyrics as well.

I croaked along merrily with a soft ballad describing "white on white, lace on satin, blue velvet ribbons on purple cake..."  I even went so far as to discuss this unusual lyric with a friend.

"Doesn't that sound like the ugliest wedding cake ever?!," I tsk-tsked, never questioning the validity of my perceptions.  Either my friend had the same hearing problem as I, or she was too kind to correct me.  But we seemed to both envision a towering cake of dark purple, ringed round with turquoise bows.  I'm ashamed to admit how old I was before I found out the truth about this, but let's just say that it was my husband who told me.  And we were already married.  "...it's 'blue velvet ribbons ON HER BOUQUET'," he clarified.

Oh.

It seems my hearing lapses were not limited to lyrics.  I learned the Act of Contrition in first grade, and recited it in Confession at least bi-weekly.  I was in fourth grade when the priest on the other side of the dark shadowy veil stopped me just after I'd begun with my usual:  "O my God, I am partly sorry for having offended Thee, and I..."


Continue reading at Nancy's blog The Breadbox Letters.

3 comments:

  1. I wonder if somewhere there's a very elderly priest still doing so as well......? Thanks, Mary!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Lol (:
    I can relate!

    ReplyDelete

Please keep your comments charitable and free of bad language. Thanks!