Start at the door

‘We’re all ruins in the making.’ Robin Hemley

My fingers are chilled. In the absence of fingerless gloves, they are only part of my body uncovered beyond my face and head on these cold mornings where to type is to feel the cold rise through the keyboard. 

Fingerless gloves, and I remember her hands. Sister Domonic of the short stature and regal poise. Nuns were like aristocracy. When you read the lives of the founders, many of them like our founder, Marie-Madeleine d’Houët, were noblewomen whose lives were turned on their heads for whatever reason. Women who decided the best way to finish their lives was to lead others in prayer and penance and help the sick and needy. To educate the uneducated, the children who could not otherwise get an education. 

The Faithful Companions of Jesus, so named after the women who stood at the foot of the cross of Jesus during and after his crucifixion before his body was laid in the tomb. Mary, his mother, and Mary Magdala, those two symbols of the chaste and adulterous. The two symbols which have taken over the Christian world and marked women’s fate for ever. Beginning with Eve in her paradise garden and that fateful apple of temptation. After all it was her fault. 

I remember these lessons the nuns taught.

‘Now girls, remember to keep a boy’s ardour in check. He cannot stop himself, but you can put a lid on anything God would not like.’

I never understood what the nuns feared might stir up in the hearts of these men, what lustful desires looked like, even as I had an inkling from my own father. His love of the salacious. His interest in women’s breasts, those featuring on the front pages of The Truth newspaper. 

But the nuns were not talking about our fathers or even our brothers. They were talking about the young men who went to the schools nearby. The boys who might join our school at the nuns’ invitation. The boys from De La Salle in Malvern or from St Patricks when it existed, or from Xavier, and the Christian Boys College in St Kilda. All the local Catholic boys’ schools, including toffy St Kevin’s where we Vaucluse girls sometimes went on sports days to borrow their oval. 

‘Be careful not to inflame them,’ the nuns said, as if these boys were like piles of kindling ready for the match. We needed only to strike one red head against the rough side of the small box from Bryant and May, and whoosh all would be in flames.

I have a prompt written in my scrawl on a post-it note which I stuck to the back wall of my computer along with several others. I stick these prompts onto the back of my computer for the mornings and weekends when I write. To give me a start to the process. But this prompt fails to jog my memory of what I wrote down in the first place.

But it’s an intriguing prompt.

Simply, ‘Start at the door’. 

I have a door in mind. The back entrance to Vaucluse, which boarders entered after times away from the convent. A wooden door neatly recessed into an otherwise long series of brick walls, with a small entrance way shielded by a gate. Inside a green door. Green one of the primary colours of my convent school, and I don’t know why only I’d hazard a guess it might have something to do with St Joseph the father of Jesus, the real-life adoptive father of Jesus and a carpenter. 

He always struck me as an odd fellow. One who was never caught up in the lust the nuns described in the boys who came to our school dances. Because he was the husband of Mary who conceived Jesus in an immaculate way, when a thunderbolt descended from Heaven. 

Something like in horror films. An alien overtaking a woman. You can watch them at the movies. Like Rosemary’s Baby, only this baby was Jesus and therefore like Mary was immaculate. Without sin, until they crucified him.

 When I write the story like this and remember the way it persisted in my small child mind no wonder it was confusing. The stuff grown-ups did together which we were not supposed to know about too soon, but there it was all around us. In the naked breasts of the women in The Truth and in the words of the bible if you were clued up enough to go looking. 

Even in the words of the prayers. Blessed is the fruit of thy womb. I almost blushed at that one. The word womb was as obscene as the word pregnant. A word we could not say. Only that a woman was expecting. In the family way. A euphemism for the consequences of all the ardour the nuns taught us belonged only in marriage.

When I brought my husband his second cup of tea for the morning, after I had made my own second cup and warmed my ice-cold fingers under the warm water tap to get the circulation going again, I told him I need some fingerless gloves.

‘Don’t you mean mittens,’ he asked.

“No,’ I said. ‘Fingerless gloves, the ones without fingertips so you can use your fingers freely.’ He looked bemused. ‘Mittens,’ I went on. ‘The type that have no individual finger covering only a mass covering.’ I wiggled my fingers in front of my face.  Mittens are usually for children who do not need to use their fingers. The rest of us wear gloves.’ 

I shall make it my business to get myself some fingerless gloves before these cold days are over.

I shall look like Sister Dominic only I am now so much older than she was then. I was a girl in her mid-teens, and Sister Dominic was in her thirties. Still a young woman and still young when she finally left the convent a few years later.

I know so little about her. She and my analyst Mrs Milanova morph into one in my dreams. And I have long thought of both as replacements for my mother. In my psyche.

Both were elusive. They were hard to find, and I searched for them everywhere. The number of dreams I have when I’m back at Vaucluse as when I was sixteen, walking along the ambulacrum with its red brick colonnades in search of Sister Dominic or Sister Shella as she became. 

After Vatican Two the nuns were permitted to show their hair and shorten their habits if they chose. Some chose not to. At least not at first. Nuns could also go back to using their first names. No longer having to bear the names of saints, often male saints. A practice that baffled me as a child. 

All these women sporting the names of men. Sister Mary Paul, Mother Mary John, before they dropped the Mother appellation for Sister. Sister Stanislas, Sister Anthony.

By the time I reached the end of my school journey all nuns had stopped calling themselves Mother, all except the reverend mother. Over the years they even dropped the sister and all other tell-tale signs of nuns though some still wear crosses on the pointy ends of their collars. Hell bent on revealing something of their religious affiliation.

Not always a safe thing to do.

I left you a long time ago at the door to the convent on Rowena Parade, the one we boarders used after weekends away. Once inside the boxy office where we were greeted by the nun on duty usually one of the workers from the kitchen. These were the nuns who lacked the education of the more esteemed nuns and sent their lives in actual service to God and the other nuns and the boarders. 

They cooked and cleaned. They scrubbed floors. The hid behind the scenes but we caught glimpses of them when we walked through the back corridors of the convent where they day scholars never went. On our way to the dormitories, a stone’s throw from the nun’s cubicles. Only we never went their either. Forbidden territory. 

So much forbidden territory in a convent. We walked over tessellated tiles, red and ochre with cream borders. Onto parquetry floors and the sign. ‘No stilettos allowed’.

I could only imagine some mothers who came to the convent in their stilettos who walked along those cold floors in stockinged feet, suddenly dismantled and reduced in stature after an edict from the nuns who despised all things worldly, in anyone who visited the convent, especially its students and inhabitants.

My index finger is losing circulation again and the need for fingerless gloves increases. We are only just onside the convent barely through the corridor that runs past the reverend mother’s room which you would not want to visit unless you were called to receive your blue medal as a daughter of Mary. Otherwise, it was tantamount to being called to the principal’s office in a secular school. And only happens to those who are bad. To those who have sinned. To those guilty of wrongdoing.

And I cannot say I went to the reverend mother’s office for such behaviours because on the surface I practised being a good girl. I stayed away from trouble and practised all the things the nuns taught. 

Chastity, poverty and obedience even before I ever made their vows. And although I was once tempted to join them, all in a bid to stay close to Sister Dominic/Sheila, in the end, the life at university with all the shattering of illusions, even with my few visits to the Newman society, the place the University of Melbourne where Catholics pooled together, I could not stick by her side. 

There was a whole world out there promising so much more. Even as I contemplate wearing those fingerless gloves and evoking her spirit in my memory, I am no longer lured to such a life of austerity. 

For her to banish the chilblains. For me to banish the cold. 

Illicit love

At the moment I’m stuck behind a screen of censorship.  Every thought that pops in I bat away.  Nothing passes the test of acceptability to the audience in my mind.  There are tears in the back of my mind and I know they have to do with an experience I’m not free to write about, and so I look further back to find the meaning behind it.  The feeling is one of rejection, of feeling a failure, of not being good enough, of making a mistake, only I don’t quite know what the mistake is.  I only know I’ve left another person hurt and it hurts me, but I’m not sure how to rectify it or whether I can or whether it will persist in the back of my mind as yet another example of my ineptitude.
Recently in Mark Doty’s blog he
describes how difficult it is for him when he cannot write about certain life
events, which he would like to draw upon within his imagination as fuel for his
writing, but cannot.  The event itself becomes
a block to his other writing and before he knows it he is unable to write at
all, not a blog, not a letter, not a diary entry.  
Perhaps it is to do with the taboo nature of certain events in their
immediacy. 
It’s pointless beating up on
ourselves.  It’s useless writing about
an experience in such cryptic ways. 
But I have to write my way into it and through it if I am to move beyond
it.

When I was young in my second last
year at school I fell in love with one of my teachers, a nun who had arrived at
the school after travelling overseas for several years.  She was younger than the rest of the nuns and more beautiful
with elf like features.  She wore fine
framed glasses that sat atop her button nose and when she smiled there was the
faintest hint of a dimple on one side of her cheeks. 
This nun befriended me as much as I
fell in love with her.  She set me
small tasks like passing on notes to my fellow students who learned Latin with
me.  At my school in the final
years of schooling, girls made a choice between Latin or needlework.  Most chose needlework but only a few of
us went on to study Latin in more depth. 
I studied Latin because I loved my
Latin teacher, this nun, first and foremost.  I studied Latin because in my family it was important to be
seen to be academic.  I studied
Latin because the thought of needlework sent shivers through me.   All those doilies.  
My favourite teacher the nun became
even more important to me when in the middle of the year my younger sister and
I were forced to board at school, instead of continuing as day
scholars. 
My school.  I took this photo in September 1969, a year after the events I describe here. 
There is a long story behind my arrival at school as a boarder with a suit case of marked school
clothes and a dressing gown handed down from the nuns’ store of surplus
clothes. 
Boarders tended to be the daughters
of wealthy farming families from the Western District and thereabouts.  Boarders were a breed apart, different
from the day girls who came from the suburbs around the school.  Boarders seemed superior to me, and consequently
I kept to myself after hours in the dormitory.
The feeling I have now, these tears behind
my eyes,  match the way I felt at night in boarding school.  My sister and I were given beds
alongside one another in the Immaculate Conception dormitory. 
The beds were single with cast iron
frames and mesh wire webbing under what in my memory seemed like a kapok
mattress.  Lumpy and
unyielding.  We went to bed at
nine, lights out half an hour later and in between times the girls shuffled in
loose fitting slippers to the bathroom to wash faces, brush teeth and visit the
toilet.
            ‘Glory
be to God,’ the nun in charge chanted as she turned off the
lights.  ‘No more talking now.’
And we listened as she shuffled off
down the corridor beyond the door that led to what I thought of then as ‘no-man’s
land’, the secret place where the nuns lived and slept. The place where my
favourite nun had a bed in a cubicle, which she later told me was no bigger than
a kitchen pantry. 
In the beginning of my boarding
school experience I did not think about this nun.  I did not think about home and my mother who had been left
behind on the advice of my oldest brother who decided that we younger children
should be farmed out elsewhere in order that my father and mother be given time
to sort out their differences. 
Their differences being, at least in my mother’s eyes, my father’s alcoholism. 
We told the other girls at school
that we had come to board because our parents had gone overseas to travel.  It seemed such a fantastic lie to me,
but one that was strangely acceptable. 
Not only did it imply that my parents had money enough to undertake such
a voyage but also that they were then of the upper class to which so many of
the boarders belonged, and yet we were more like the poor kids who lived in
Richmond in the side streets near to where the school was located. 
The story starts here.  But there are many other beginnings.  At the moment I’m struggling to find the ‘right’ beginning for my book.  Until I do, I fear I cannot go on.