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I guess I have to adapt to change

Life is Simple: Some people may call me boring; I prefer “consistent.”

Jerry Crownover

April 29, 2022

2 Min Read
sunset

If someone were to ask my wife to describe me, using just one word, she would most likely use the word … boring. I prefer the word consistent. I don’t like change, or surprises, or things out of place, or any disruption in a schedule, even if that schedule only occurs in my mind.

To illustrate my consistency (or boredom), I have worn the same brand and style of blue jeans for 45 years. Only the waist size has changed. Anyone who has known me for more than a decade knows that I drive only one kind of truck and one kind of tractor, and I only vote one way on Election Day.

I have been with my only wife for 38 years, and if she ever leaves me (due to boredom, no doubt), I’d finish out my years as a single man, for it would just be too much of a change for me to break in a new one.

I chronicle all of this in order to explain my frustration with the U.S. Postal Service and its recent change of procedure. It seems that the movement of mail from the hometown of my youth to my present address will now take a 300-mile detour through Kansas City, causing certain items to arrive at my home later. Please refer to Paragraph 1.

For the past 60-some years, ever since I learned to read, I have received my weekly hometown newspaper every Thursday. Through blizzards, tornadoes, floods, ice storms and wars, I could always count on sitting down on Thursday evening and reading The Ozark County Times. Even though I haven’t lived there in 50 years and I have no living relatives left in the county, I derive great pleasure from keeping up with the people with whom I grew up with — every Thursday.

Hardly a week goes by that the obituary page doesn’t describe someone I knew. If I turn to the birth announcements, more often than not, I know the child’s grandparents or great-grandparents. When I read the court records, the family names still ring with a familiarity of my younger days. If there are pictures accompanying a story, I can usually identify the place without reading the caption, and I’ve been able to do that, every Thursday.

My family reminds me that even my hometown weekly paper is available online, just like the big boys, and if I’m so obsessed with making sure I keep my Thursday ritual intact, I could simply log on and read it on the computer. Again, refer to Paragraph 1.

I guess I’ll just have to adapt to change and deal with the fact that I may have to see the deaths, births, court cases and fascinating pictures from my hometown not every Thursday, like I have my entire lifetime, but sometimes on a Friday. Last week, the paper arrived on a Saturday … a Saturday!

Crownover farms in Missouri.

About the Author(s)

Jerry Crownover

Jerry Crownover wrote a bimonthly column dealing with agriculture and life that appeared in many magazines and newspapers throughout the Midwest, including Wisconsin Agriculturist. He retired from writing in 2024 and now tells his stories via video on the Crown Cattle Company YouTube channel.

Crownover was raised on a diversified livestock farm deep in the heart of the Missouri Ozarks. For the first few years of his life, he did without the luxuries of electricity or running water, and received his early education in one of the many one-room schoolhouses of that time. After graduation from Gainesville High School, he enrolled at the University of Missouri in the College of Agriculture, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1974 and a master's of education degree in 1977.

After teaching high school vocational agriculture for five years, Crownoever enrolled at Mississippi State University, where he received a doctorate in agricultural and Extension education. He then served as a professor of ag education at Missouri State University for 17 years. In 1997, Crownover resigned his position at MSU to do what he originally intended to after he got out of high school: raise cattle.

He now works and lives on a beef cattle ranch in Lawrence County, Mo., with his wife, Judy. He has appeared many times on public television as an original Ozarks Storyteller, and travels throughout the U.S. presenting both humorous and motivational talks to farm and youth groups.

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