A little back story on my trials and tribulations battling Catholic nuns in the 1960's. As you know, I went to a Catholic grade school. In first grade, we learned how to print the alphabet and then to print words with big blue pencils. I remember the nuns getting this strange device that held 6 pieces of chalk in some sort of metal and wood handle and she would make perfect straight lines, six at a time across the entire chalk board. Then, one by one, each student, (inmate) would be asked to go to the blackboard, (Actually, the boards were green) and print their full name and address on the board. My writing was just atrocious.
No matter how hard I tried, I just couldn't stay within the lines. The nuns would get frustrated with this and scold me and warn that I better improve lest I want to go and see the principal. What was she going to do? Help me with my printing? DOUBT IT!
Anyway, the days turned into weeks and my writing skills did not improve and the inevitable phone call to my parents was now reality. My parents were called about the "problem" and was suggested they take me to a "Specialist" to work on my writing skills.
My parents pulled out my kindergarten papers and and compared them to what I was doing in first grade and noticed that indeed my writing had gotten worse. My dad asked bluntly if I was screwing up on purpose, (He knew I was a troublemaker) and I told him that no, I wasn't. I was really trying hard. I didn’t want the nuns yelling at me because I couldn’t stay inside the perfectly drawn chalk lines. I wanted them yelling at me for something fun I did to piss them off.
At this time, I asked my dad a question about Catholics. I asked dad why Catholics are only right handed. He looked puzzled and inquired why I would ask such a question. I proceeded to explain that on my first day of school the nuns showed everyone how to print the alphabet with our big blue pencils. Then they asked every child to print their name on the black board.
When I picked up the chalk and started printing my name with my left hand, the nuns said to only use my right hand. Sister Charlotte said that all Catholics are right handed and that this training would be invaluable when I went to second grade and learned to write instead of print. For in writing, I would have to tilt my paper and my letters, and I needed to be right handed to do so. What the hell did I know? I was freakin six years old.
My dad was silent. He looked lost. He asked me to repeat what I just said. He then asked if I was lying to him. One thing I learned at a very early age was to never lie to my father. He didn’t like that. I tried a few lies on him before and my punishment was swift and precise. Remind me to tell you about the belt episode at a later blog entry.
Well, my mother was called in to the living room and I repeated the story to her. I was then handed a pencil and paper and asked to print my name and address. With my left hand, I did pretty darn good. With my right, it was awful. I was then told to go get lost and play with my brothers.
My father drove me to school the next day and dropped me off at the front door. He said he had some business with the principal and he would see me when I got home from school. Although I didn’t hear the conversation my father had with Sister Eileen, I could well imagine it. I don’t think it was much of a conversation anyway, more of a, look here, there is how its going to be from now on sister conversation….My father was very persuasive.
Anyway, from that day forward, all Catholics were right handed, except for me, who apparently had special dispensation from the Pope letting me print left handed. All the children gasped as I walked up to the black board and actually printed using my left hand. Some thought I wasn’t really Catholic. I believe this may have been the birth of my loathsome attitude towards the nuns as they would now belittle every little nuance of my printing. I believe they were mad that I was left handed.
Funny thing is though, that yes I was left handed, but also right handed. In third grade, I switched writing back to right handed. I hated getting that lead all over my hands as I dragged my pencil over the paper writing. I was afraid of the lead after my brother Jack told me that I could die from lead poisoning if to much pencil dust got onto my skin. Damn him.
The nuns now had a chip on their shoulders, and I was just the kid to knock it off time and time again. They would never see it coming, they were expecting it from the right and I attacked from the left……
LURKING ON THE GRASSY KNOLL
Just checking in, are you leaving the grassyknoll and coming here?
ReplyDeleteNot leaving the Grassy Knoll Institute. Just moved it on down the road to here.
DeleteRobert, the nuns were two busy looking into my permanent record.
ReplyDeleteI went to Catholic primary (1-8) school during the late 40s and early 50s. I was then lucky enough to go two years to a high schools with Christen Brothers. Wow. But that's another story. Your blog brings back memories I have been suppressing for a lifetime, but I haven't had such a good laugh in a long time.
ReplyDeleteRobert
P.S.
How did the nuns let you escape without knowing the difference between principle and principal?
Fortunately, in the year before I started school (1953, the state
ReplyDeleteof Maryland, in its illimitable wisdom, passed a law mandating that left-handed children could NOT be forced to write with their right hands; the only way that a child could change handedness would be if a medical doctor deemed that it was a
necessary procedure. That let ME off the hook!
The "dear sisters," however. never let up on their harassment or
their ridicule of me. We had to use fountain pens when we wrote and understandably, I was an ink-stained mess at the end of the day. And just as predictably, these "Christian 'ladies'" would drag me up to the front of the class for "collective ridicule time."
My academic grades were consistently A+; my penmanship, F-. and
I was told in second grade that " I would be held back EVERY year
as having failed a grade because of my penmanship." Thus, I was
treated to images (bayed by the nuns, in front of classes of
up to 92 other hostages) of myself as an adult, stuffed into
a child-sized desk,STILL in the second grade, trying - some 15
years later - to achieve at least a "passing" grade in penmanship
(which, of course, they would never grant me because "I was an
evil little girl! God doesn't love you because you are EVIL!")
The Catholic Church wonders why their numbers (and gate receipts)
are down sometimes? Just ask the "Baby Boomers" who were "treated" to the Catholic school experience of the 1950s...
My handwriting is still below par, glad I have this keyboard in front of me. :D
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteDataKing said
October
16, 2007 at 9:00 am
Just checking in, are you leaving the grassyknoll and coming here?
Reply
Robert Neary said
October
8, 2009 at 7:17 pm
I went to Catholic primary (1-8) school during the late 40s and early 50s. I
was then lucky enough to go two years to a high schools with Christen Brothers.
Wow. But that’s another story. Your blog brings back memories I have been
suppressing for a lifetime, but I haven’t had such a good laugh in a long
time.RobertP.S.How did the nuns let you escape without knowing the
difference between principle and principal?
Reply
LOTGK saidOctober
8, 2009 at 7:17 pm
Robert, the nuns were two busy looking into my permanent record.
Reply
Tracy Ramos saidJanuary
13, 2011 at 9:48 am
Fortunately, in the year before I started school (1953, the state
of
Maryland, in its illimitable wisdom, passed a law mandating that left-handed
children could NOT be forced to write with their right hands; the only way that
a child could change handedness would be if a medical doctor deemed that it was
a
necessary procedure. That let ME off the hook!
The “dear sisters,” however. never let up on their harassment or
their
ridicule of me. We had to use fountain pens when we wrote and understandably, I
was an ink-stained mess at the end of the day. And just as predictably, these
“Christian ‘ladies’” would drag me up to the front of the class for “collective
ridicule time.”
My academic grades were consistently A+; my penmanship, F-. and
I was told
in second grade that ” I would be held back EVERY year
as having failed a
grade because of my penmanship.” Thus, I was
treated to images (bayed by the
nuns, in front of classes of
up to 92 other hostages) of myself as an adult,
stuffed into
a child-sized desk,STILL in the second grade, trying – some
15
years later – to achieve at least a “passing” grade in
penmanship
(which, of course, they would never grant me because “I was
an
evil little girl! God doesn’t love you because you are EVIL!”)
The Catholic Church wonders why their numbers (and gate receipts)
are down
sometimes? Just ask the “Baby Boomers” who were “treated” to the Catholic school
experience of the 1950s…
Reply
LOTGK saidJanuary
13, 2011 at 12:38 pm
My handwriting is still below par, glad I have this keyboard in front of me.