The September Methuselism Award goes to

Lynn Ruth Miller. According to Growing Bolder, Lynn Ruth published her first book, Starving Hearts, at age 67. Her website says it has sold 6,200 copies! At 70 she reinvented herself and began doing standup comedy in a one-person show entitled Aging is Amazing.

Obviously Lynn Ruth doesn’t stand still long enough for moss to grow on her. At 80 she is still going strong. The active octogenarian proves, beyond any doubt, that aging is amazing. Discover where you will be able to see Lynn Ruth and other things she has added to her list of accomplishments, like this YouTube videoon her website.

The August 2014 StoryDame Methuselism Award goes to…

Joan Rivers, born in 1933 according to Wikipedia. According to We Killed: The Rise of Women in American Comedy, Rivers, who wanted to be an actress, fell into comedy because she could make a little money at night after hitting agents all day in the mid-60s. She was the first woman who was part of “the new confessional wave.” Today the Barnard College graduate hosts the Fashion Police on E! and sells her own line on HSN. Catch Joan on her YouTube series, In Bed With Joan, or read about her in her own words in her newest book, Diary of a Mad Diva.

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What to do when you find yourself imprisoned?

Imprisonment draws to mind things like prison incarceration and slavery. It can also mean being held captive mentally, emotionally, or physically. Things that prevent free movement include agoraphobia, disabilities, injuries, sloth, addiction. When you find yourself held captive, what do you do? French mystic Jeanne Marie Bouvier de la Motte Guyon (1648-1717), imprisoned in the Bastille, the fortress Louis XIV used to imprison upper-class French society, wrote her biography.

The Bastille. ©iStockphoto/ilbusca

The Bastille. ©iStockphoto/ilbusca

I ran across The Autobiography of Madame Guyon in the 1990s. I bought it at a bookstore, but you can read it for free today. Guyon took me to 17th century France in the reign of Louis XIV where things were heating up in the religious realm. In 1785, Louis revoked the Edict of Nantes issued by Henry IV in 1598, that gave the French protestants the right to practice their religion without fear of persecution. It was in this climate that Guyon, a devout Catholic, fell under sway of the practice of living in the presence of God through continual prayer. When her message caught the heart of Barnabite Francois Fenelon and religious circles of French court, her ideas were condemned and she was arrested.

Confined, Guyon wrote her religious autobiography, a practice popular among 17th century religious and noble women. Tristine Rainer says the practice originated with with Saint Augustine, “the fornicating, thieving, carousing, then converted sinner/saint” who wrote Confessions about 399 AD. However, Guyon’s autobiography steers more toward an explanation of her theology and suffering than the racy confessional bestsellers of her era that led to the novel.

Though lost, Guyon’s autobiography was discovered and published in French in 1992. Is there an imprisonment confession/justification, religious or otherwise, in your future?