Tis_Bearself
Patron
I think maybe there’s a language confusion at work here.This is precisely the point: veil, in consecrated life, has a specific meaning even if its colour and extent and fabric and other elements may vary significantly. A mantilla is a mantilla but a Religious veil is a veil for women Religious. The same is true for the monastic cowl. I can recognise instantly the distinction between Camaldolese and Cistercian and Benedictine, for example…and someone wearing one who is not Camaldolese, Cistercian or Benedictine is every bit as offensive as a lay person walking into the parish church and sitting down in the front pew while wearing a chasuble or dalmatic or wearing a mitre, for that matter. It is grossly and wildly inappropriate.
I’ve stated in several of the past posts that, in my opinion and that of a lot of other people based on past discussion of this subject, a person who isn’t a member of a religious order should not be wearing a habit, or a veil, that would tend to deceive people into thinking they were a member of a religious order.
“Veiling” as a term used on the Internet, in various articles, and on this forum has not referred to wearing the cap or veil of a specific order, which are, as you mentioned, quite distinctive to said order. Women use it to refer to their headcovering for Mass or other worship or sometimes in their daily life if they feel it makes them more modest or conforms to some tradition. However, these women generally buy something advertised as a “chapel veil” or “Christian veil” or “Christian headcovering” or “mantilla” or “hood” etc. They don’t wear a nun-type veil. Since the OP is having a hair loss problem, she may want something more opaque than a lacy mantilla, and therefore could choose from any number of hoods, head wraps, or bandannas not associated with orders.
To me this is like if someone wanted to wear a white hat but not be mistaken for a nurse (perhaps in previous eras when nurses were very proud of their caps and the cap symbolized their entry into the profession and people associated it with nurses), then you’re free to choose a white hat that is not going to give the impression of a nurse’s cap., so you’re not passing yourself off as a nurse. There are plenty of white hat styles. One might use the word “cap” to refer to some of them. But you pick one that doesn’t look like a nurse’s cap. It would also be unfair to say, “women should never wear little white hats, those are for nurses only.”
So, if the other poster made her statement thinking that “veil” always denoted a nun’s headcovering and by wearing one you are by default imitating a nun, I understand her statement. I was using “veil” in the broader term of all the different types of headcovering I see on lay women, which ranges from mantillas to hoods with scarves to bandannas to headwraps, none of which look like the veils of nuns.
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