On giving up religion

It’s a long time since I’ve been to the beach. The sun on yellow sand. The wind whipping up eddies in the water. White foam on waves, and the smell of salt in the air.

The blue Ventura bus took us the length of Warrigal Road and turned across the Nepean Highway towards the Mentone railway station. We got off at the ten-pin bowling club with its long stretch of building across the way from a motel. 

Who would want to stay in such a place? Close by the beach to be sure, but otherwise smack bang in the middle of grim suburbia, with not much on offer beyond the usual accoutrements of life in the suburbs. A potpourri of small shops and an L-shaped garage that still served its customers at the bowsers. These alongside the Catholic Church and its primary school, where we sometimes went to Mass. 

It was in this church of St Patricks, not the Cathedral in the city by the same name, but the parish church in Mentone, where I first decided on giving up religion.

One Saturday at the six o’clock Mass. One of those rule changes that came in after Vatican Two whereby Catholics were given more options about Mass attendance. No longer an absolute on Sundays. We could get a sleep-in on Sunday mornings if we went instead on Saturday evenings. This was one of those rule changes that watered down the astringency of our religion and first gave me pause to consider. 

Those hard and fast rules from my childhood were like putty in the Pope’s hands. He could change them at will. He was supposed to be infallible. But it was as if he had become a populist politician in search of votes. I knew that people were leaving the church in large numbers, drawn by promises of a secular life, or disenchanted by the hypocrisy some detected in their priests and archbishops. 

It’s hard to say what I thought in those days, a young woman just past her entrance into adulthood. And what I have since concluded. The way current events affect our memory of the past. In this case, my memory as a young woman, just shy of her nineteenth birthday, when first seduced by a man and filled with awe at the mystery of it all. 

The sex had not been great. It hurt, I remember, and there was blood. This clumsy seduction in Paul’s childhood bed where he lived with his parents in Edithvale. Paul who was six years older than me and had not yet managed to find a settled life for himself.

After school, he had begun a course in dietetics at Gordon institute in Geelong but didn’t stick it out. He took to working where I met him in Hall’s bookstore in the city, to fund his gambling habits. 

Paul had one sister Janice and she lived in a bungalow in the back garden of their parents’ house with her husband, Dave. Jan worked as a secretary when I met her but soon after she fell pregnant with their first and only child, a little boy whose presence pleased his grandmother, Paul’s mother, but did little to assuage Paul’s desire to live anything other than the precarious life of a gambler. 

This was only the beginning for me. When I met Paul, a solid man given to excess weight around his belly – he drank too much beer and loved rich food. He tried to exercise it off with little success. It mattered to him, but not to me. I liked him that way. I liked everything about him, especially the shape of his face, round like an open moon, with dimples in both cheeks that gave him an impish look. 

The morning of my fall from grace he had called me on the telephone. I was at home alone studying for my first-year university exams. Full to the brim with apprehension in those days when our entire results rested on the consequence of one single exam per subject at the end of the year. In all subjects, except social biology, which Delys Sargent took. This radical woman who, towards year’s end, tried to ease the students’ burden by introducing a preliminary essay, which we needed to write under exam conditions for an hour but could prepare beforehand as she gave us the question ahead of time. Something along the lines of ‘Write about the effects of pollution on cities.’ 

I wrote my essay in full and virtually rote learned it before sitting the exam. As confident as a well-fed cat. I was shocked then when Delys rang me towards the end of swat vac to tell me I had failed said exam because I had not answered the question. I could however redeem myself, she said, if I did well enough in the forthcoming final exam. 

How could she do that to me? After her call, the world swayed before my eyes. Not since mental arithmetic in grade six had I ever failed an exam. I had steered away from studies that were too hard for me, and in my later years at school only chose subjects that came more readily. But Delys’s Social biology was a first-year compulsory subject for all would-be social workers at the University of Melbourne and I had no choice. 

Its quasi scientific approach to understanding the world troubled me. I could not manage the numbers, the bald facts of science. Too certain to my taste. As bad as the compulsory statistics we needed to pass for the psychology exams that first year, too. But at least in that subject there was a whole cohort of first year students who could not manage and Mr Ross, one of the senior tutors at the university, arranged remedial classes to go through the steps, as if we were in primary school. He steered us through. In Social Biology I was alone in my ignorance, or so I believed.

Social Biology was a trickster subject. The social against the biological. I had passed biology in my final year of school, my one science subject. Only just. I could not understand this thing called the human body with all its vagaries. And try as I might, the way things happened underneath my skin was still a mystery to me.

By the time I lost my virginity, that quaint expression still used today. To lose something in your body that bespeaks an innocence, a quality of not being used up, of being available as fresh as a bottle of milk, not yet opened. The thick layer of cream still there visible at the top. By the time I lost my virginity I was convinced I too would become a university drop out like Paul and need to work for a living. 

I lost my virginity to Paul on his single bed in a room lined at one end with his books on horse racing and chess. A few miniature soldiers and other figurines from his ongoing childhood interest in war games. Some sealed paint tins to one side, and paint brushes left to soak in turpentine. In later years I loved to watch Paul sit still at a table, tiny soldier in one hand, paint brush in the other. He dabbed the necessary red of his soldier’s jacket first. Then with an even tinier brush dabbed gold points on the buttons and smeared the epaulettes on his general’s shoulders. 

Paul loved these soldiers as if they were his children, his lovers. He attended to them more lovingly than to me, except on that first encounter when he wanted more than anything to take from me my virginity. He told me this later. But I could tell that mid-weekday in his house in Edithvale that I had arrived at his request for one thing only. For him to get to know me in the biblical sense. In another sense, I had come to rid myself of the burden of my virginity. I had come to enter adulthood.

In the church at Mentone that Saturday evening five days later, as I sat beside my mother listening to the priest drone on about those people who criticised the church as if it was not their church but someone else’s. As if they were not also responsible for our church. Something inside me rankled. I was no longer fit to belong to this church. I had sinned so grievously without confession I could not even take communion. 

Until that day I had never been to Mass without taking communion. Like most others in the church, I had lined up in the central aisle and walked to the alter rails to wait in line for the priest to place the host on my outstretched tongue. 

Corpus Christi (The body of Christ),’ the priest said and held the host high above my uplifted face before placing it on my tongue. Then I pulled in my tongue, the host perched there as my saliva soaked away its crispness. I continued to suck on the host careful to keep my teeth away from Christ’s body. Even as a young adult, with a different sensibility and awareness that this host was not in fact Christ’s body, but a representation and I would not hurt him if I chomped onto the host before swallowing, I could not bring myself to do anything other than to make the host go sloppy and shrunken enough to swallow whole. Even as I was afraid of choking. I knew it was important to chew all my food well before I swallowed. 

That day I was caught in a dilemma. To take communion was a lie. In having sex outside marriage, I had sinned mortally and was no longer eligible. Not to go to communion was to let my mother know I was in a state of serious sin. Or else, as I made clear to my mother after the Mass had ended that I had begun to have my doubts about the value of religion. I had shifted my sin. The church was at fault. Not me. 

Letter to a long lost love

Sometimes I see you on the street. Your round face stands out within a sea of faces and my heart skips a beat. You were so much older than me then, an ancient twenty six years, when I was only nineteen. 

Do you remember the bookshop where we met, Halls Books, with its wooden floors and no cash registers on display? Money flew through the air overhead in sealed capsules along electrified wires to the office on the top floor where Mrs Beebe counted and stored the take. 

I worked upstairs in the second hand books section where the staff were school leavers like me, most of us destined to ship off to university at the end of the holidays, except for you and Glenice, whose left eye wandered. 

You once bedded Glenice, or so you told me, several months later when we first became an item, almost a year after that first day when I met you, when I stole down to the section of the store where the full time staff sold paperbacks and you caught my eye. 

You called me ‘Frenchy’. I, who was no more French than a kangaroo, but the name held such charm. It had a flirtatious ring such that I found myself sneaking down to paperbacks just to see ‘the man from novels’, as I named you in my head. 

Then one day, out of nowhere, you asked to take me to the movies, to see the Satyricon and my heart was in my mouth with excitement. But I was a good girl, still living at home, and I needed first to ask my mother. 

She looked at me twice. I had never asked such a thing before. I had never allowed myself to take an interest in boys, not since the one in my second final school year whom I met at a dance, who came home for dinner one night and then flirted with my younger sister. I dropped him in a flash and decided I would not go out with boys until I finished my education. 

‘What film? My mother asked, as if that might give her a clue as to how to reply. When I mentioned the Satyricon she stopped stacking dishes in the cupboard.

‘Say no,’ she said

‘I can’t,’ I said. 

‘If you can’t say “no” now, when will you ever?’

I went to the movie. All those naked bodies, and the story lost on me. It mattered only that I sat in a dark picture theatre beside you and when it came time to go home you held my hand as we crossed the road.

We went down to the beach and sat in the sand before you took me home. You held me close when I felt something hard against my thigh. What could it be? 

I was a child of innocence, a child raised in a good Catholic family against a backdrop of a drunken father who pulled out his penis from time to time and threatened us with it.

I must have blotted out any memory of that and of what a hard-on might mean, but I didn’t tell you. I played along. 

You were kind in those first few visits. You took things slowly and spared me the indignity of losing my virginity on a sandy beach between the rubbish bins and the run of beach boxes where the sand dunes rose. 

Losing my virginity came later well after you had decided to quit your job and took yourself off to Tocumwal to work in a pub there. You’d had a crisis of confidence. Somewhere in my archives, I still have a letter you wrote to me from the pub, 

‘Dear Frenchy…I miss you.’

It was easy for me then, after you came home, to visit your house in the middle of the day when I should have been back at my house studying for exams. 

One day, you called me on the phone, come on over, you said. 

I did not say ‘no’.

You answered the door draped in a towel. You took me to your bedroom and invited me to take off my clothes and join you in bed. 

It hurt, and there was blood. That’s when you told me about Glenice and how after sex, she bled for hours. It was in her parent’s holiday house and Glenice had invited you down for the day while her parents were away. She was older than me, more experienced, but it had been her first time, too, and she bled on until you both freaked out and you took her to the hospital. 

This story left me with my first dose of doubt about you. 

No need to worry on that account. In the end, women were not my rivals. Women weren’t horses. You could not bet on them.

In time we moved in together but every Saturday and often during the week, I lost you to the racetrack. At first, I didn’t mind. You won often enough and from your winnings we could survive; me, on my student scholarship and you on your winnings. One day, rich, the next poor. So poor I had to study for my psychology exams by candlelight after they’d cut the electricity. 

Finally, when I graduated and took my first job, I promised you I’d support you so you could go back to study, to make something of your life beyond that of a professional gambler. You chose the police. 

Of all the institutions in the world. The Commonwealth police were different from the regular force, you said. No traffic duty, no commonplace burglaries, but there you were stuck in a sentry box on St Kilda Road night after night and some of the lustre went from your eyes, while a young medical resident from my work asked me out.

I said ‘no’ at first, but then decided to give it a go. 

And you and I came to a grinding end. 

After the first ‘yes’, I took infidelity to new heights and kept it from you when you went off on training courses. One day, I found a note in your handwriting and scrunched up on the floor, a list of what was wrong between us.  

Top of the list: ‘You don’t love me anymore’. 

I stopped loving you just as you had started to love me.

After all those years of me adoring you and you taking me for granted, the tables turned. One evening after we’d spilt, the telephone rang and interrupted my fitful efforts at sleeping.

‘You fucking bitch,’ your voice down the phone. ‘You fucking bitch.’ Your words trailed off. Time slowed down. Was this a dream? Was this a phone call in my sleep? In a minute I would wake up.

‘Everyone knows what you’ve been up to. Everyone knew but me. I’m the last to know.’

I found my voice but the words were croaky.

‘What are you talking about?’ I knew what you were talking about but I wanted to deny it even as I knew it was true. I wanted to think it didn’t matter. I wanted you to think it was nothing. That I had betrayed him. I had slept with another man. Slept with. A euphemism. Had sex with, fucked, shagged, you name it. I had gone off with another man while you were away for weeks on end. You’d expected me to sit at home, the good and loving girlfriend, the good and loving partner, always faithful.

‘I’m coming over now,’ you said. ‘I’ve got your stuff. You can have it back. I never want to see you again.’

The dial tone buzzed in my ear. I held the phone close. I could not believe you’d rung off without me talking you round. I dragged on my dressing gown.

Good, I thought. You’ll be here soon. I’ll settle you down. I’ll soothe you with a few gentle words. I heard your car pull up in the carport below. I looked through the blinds. You opened the car door and flung the books and clothes that I had left behind as a mark of our relationship. 

When we had separated three months earlier, we had agreed on an amicable split. We had agreed to go our separate ways, that we would each be free then to explore new relationships, but from time to time we could renew our relationship with the occasional one nightstand. 

            I pulled up the blinds and swung open the window. ‘Come up,’ I said. ‘Don’t just throw stuff there. Come up and talk.’ You kept on throwing books, my old grey cardigan onto the plie, my CD case, my walking boots. 

I held my voice low. I didn’t want to wake the neighbours. ‘Please talk,’ I said again to you, the silent man whose arm moved up and down like a piston as you threw the last of my shoes onto the pile. You slammed your car door shut. You hadn’t even cut the engine. You reversed without looking up to see me. 

That was how we left it. The end of the scene. The death of a four-year long relationship. My first ever. 

Only man image of your hand remains.

Forty years later I look for your face in each crowd. It hasn’t aged one bit. It still has that boyish glow, as if your horse just won first place at Mooney Valley. And we can take ourselves off to a top restaurant and spend the next day in bed.