The piece below is a modified
edition of my final article that concluded my weekly column – P-Pep! that ran for 23 years.
Have you ever performed a ‘swan song’?
Credit: GetDrawings.com |
The peak can be a perilous place, because, to where do
you go from the peak? By quitting she would avoid the embarrassment of her
voice cracking in performance and disappointing her fans, or having music
critics carping that it’s time she quit.
And so, she plans a retirement recital featuring a
selection of her best-loved repertoire. That performance will be her “Swan
Song.” Credit: webiconspng.com |
Those were usually bittersweet occasions. In the
earlier days it meant tearing our sons away from their friends and school chums
and the familiar haunts where they’d spent some of their growing-up years. The
sweetener, though, was a sense of adventure and eagerness, despite trepidation,
for taking on new challenges.
It’s not uncommon for some fun-poking at swan-song
events, as emcees and colleagues reminisce, presenting generous tributes of
appreciation, or engaging in ‘hot-roasting,’ as they recall comedic incidents
and oddities of the departing ‘swan.’ Mild roasting was not uncommon in my case,
since there’s ample idiosyncratic fodder to draw from.
I began writing this inspirational column, P-Pep!
during August of 1996 in The Watford Guide Advocate. It has continued
throughout the process of amalgamation with several other papers and their
rebirth into the Lambton Middlesex Standard.
We’re not in heaven yet; however, it’s time for a new
writing voice and a new column name. And now, after twenty-three years P-Pep!
column will be gone. Perhaps the publisher will continue making this space
available for someone else to – as it were – sing the praises of our Lord Jesus
and offer an elevated focus to encourage our readers along their respective
life pathways.
I’m still singing vocal music – mostly sacred. My
voice cracks . . . a lot, and yet I’m grateful that I have health and strength
still to sing and play, speak in services and visit the sick, and am blessed
that my wife May shares in many of these pursuits. For now, I’ve been drawn
back into a pastoral role in a country church and community ministry.
I’m grateful to the publisher for accepting my
submissions and am especially grateful to Vicki MacKenzie for her skill, care and
friendship; she has formatted P-Pep! throughout these many years. I’m
grateful too, for you, the reader. Without you, P-Pep! would have been pointless!
As I go ‘swanning’ out of this space I pray that you
will all be blessed with a joyous Christ-filled Christmas, and with a New Year
that, along with its challenges, will include much cheerful encouragement, with
grace and peace through Jesus our Lord.
Peter.~~+~~
So it has been and so it is.
To
all of our TWG authors blogspot contributors
and readers and your loved ones: May the Blessings of God in Christ Jesus our
Lord be multiplied to you this Christmastime and throughout the Coming Year,
with grace and peace, through the Prince of Peace. Our Place |
Amen.
~~+~~
Peter is author of Parables from the Pond (Word Alive Press) and Raise
Your Gaze ... Mindful Musings of a Grateful Heart (Angel Hope Publishing).
~~+~~
3 comments:
I love this, Peter. Now I have a term for the peak at which one is encouraged to exit a venture. Wishing you a beautiful Christmas of holiness and joy.
Thank you, Susan. Wishing also for you and your loved ones a most precious Christmas and bountiful blessing in every dimension of life through the Coming Year. ~~+~~
Swan songs are often the sweetest, the most thought-provoking, as is your writing. Thank you Peter. You always evoke a sense of "God is near' in your writing.
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