Hello, Diane,
When I spent some time in Florida, I was really edified when the church I attended made this announcement five minutes before mass:
“When the bell sounds, we will observe five minutes of silence to prepare our hearts to celebrate the liturgy.”
And then we heard the bell tone once, and the silence of the church was pregant with prayer and awe. I absolutely treasured this!
Sometimes at morning mass, our prayer ladies run overtime with their multitude of vocal prayers, and we only have a minute or two before the mass begins to recollect ourselves and offer our Mass intention to God. Yes, it is annoying, but since this does not happen often, I accept it as a human oversight in not always being able to time their prayers.
Have you run into people who are so devoted to the rosary that it becomes an obsessive attachment that interferes with true spirituality? St. John of the Cross spoke strongly about this in Bk. 3 of Ascent of Mt. Carmel. Years ago at my parish in Michigan, there was a prayer leader who began the rosary as the priest was leaving the altar, almost as if to cause a guilt complex for those who dared to leave the church. I recall a couple of times that he stood up and publicly admonished us for not staying to pray. So sad.
Carole