BEYOND NEVER
At 16, because
of problems at the public high school, I am sent to a Catholic girls’ high
school. It is an unique experience for me to be taught by nuns and priests, to
follow the practices of morning, noon and evening prayer, daily rosary,
frequent confession, first Friday communion, to wear a drab navy uniform, no
make-up, no bare legs, to be made to think about the religion into which I was
baptized, along with its obligations, a religion which my parents and
grandparents ignored, except for, perhaps, in their hearts.
I am
intimidated, silent before my teachers, absorbing doctrine and practices with
fear, belief, curiosity and sometimes boredom as the priest or nun dwells too
long on a fault, a habit, a sin to expunge or better still, to avoid. Oh, the pitfalls that could and would
confront us chaste teenage virgins.
thunderous rain-
a little fib nibbles
at my sleep
Was I interested in the religious life, in becoming a nun, a teaching sister, a nursing sister, a missionary? No, I say to the nun who asked. Out of a class of 98 three say yes.
They don’t
stick, all those drills and habits instilled during the two years of high
school, followed by four more years at the college run by the same order of
nuns. Practices and routines fall away like leaves in October, sometimes
returning, budding anew months, years later for a short time, until the cycle
repeats itself. The core of belief
remains, often unacknowledged, but there, guiding my thoughts and actions,
giving hope and solace, raising questions that remain unanswered, raising
doubt, yet stubbornly hanging on. I join my parents and grandparents in a faith
stripped of accoutrements and accessories, but imbedded within my being.
winter twilight
the route home
still familiar
Bottle Rockets
#24, Winter 2011
2 comments:
A very captivating and well-written piece. I like both of your haiku: "a little fib nibbles at my sleep" is great.
Thank you, Janet. Those nuns made us feel that even a little fib would keep us out of heaven.
Adelaide
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