My Word for 2025: Harmony

Happy New Year! I hope your holidays so far have been beautiful and filled with joy. After a bevy of get-togethers, I more or less crashed with a bad head cold on December 20–just in time to go to a Shenandoah Valley retreat center with my sister until Christmas morning.

The quiet provided me with a great opportunity to think about 2024–my first year of retirement from the day job–and how 2025 might look different. I had lots of fun travel adventures (and caught up on sleep!), but I’ve been feeling unsettled. Some of it might have had to do with election fatigue–I think it struck all of us, regardless of whom you voted for. But then I looked back on some of the habits I wanted to cultivate but didn’t when I selected “Repurposed” for my 2024 word. I didn’t follow through on more dedicated prayer time, for one thing, and a fall in July claimed my exercise routine. To be honest, I used the fall as an excuse so I had more time to fritter away on silly computer games.

At the retreat center, I returned to Paul’s Letter to the Colossians, which my women’s Bible study group delved into last fall. Colossians 3:14 in particular resonated with me: “Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony. (NRSVUE).”

I checked out Merriam-Webster’s online definition of harmony, which speaks of internal calm and a “pleasing arrangement of parts.” I may not ever achieve perfect harmony, but that will be my word to live by this year as I try with the Lord’s help to create a more pleasing arrangement” of the parts of my life.

Do you have a word for 2025? If so, email it to me by January 14 with a short explanation of why you chose that word. I’ll share a sampling of the answers (first name only), and one responder selected at random will receive a gift from me related to the word.

By Melanie

Melanie Rigney is the author of Radical Saints: 21 Women for the 21st Century and other Catholic books. She is a contributor to Living Faith and other Catholic blogs. She lives in Arlington, Virginia. Melanie also owns Editor for You, a publishing consultancy that since 2003 has helped hundreds of writers, publishers, and agents.

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