Wednesday, September 19, 2012
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Thursday, September 6, 2012
This Is Why I'm Going to Hell
I was raised in a
devout household. My mother was a devout Catholic and my father was a devout Agnostic.
The product of such a union was a bewildered girl with a strict code
regarding what I’m not sure I believe in. But as a child, on Sunday mornings
while my father was either working or fishing, my mother took my sister and me
to mass.
My
mother, having been educated by the Jesuits, knew all the complex rules and elaborate
codes of her faith. You would think I would have been spared knowing these things,
being fortunate enough to have a cheap mother who sent me to the public (read:
free) school with all the other little heathens. But my mother made sure to
pass along all her Catholic wisdom to my sister and me. For instance, we were
not allowed to eat before going to mass, so we would be “pure” to receive the
host. Another rule we strictly adhered to was that we mustn’t wear shorts to
church or else we’d burn in hell.
But
my mother’s favorite rule was that no wine could be left over after the service
ended. So every week after mass, as people streamed out of church toward the
pancake breakfast or the bars downtown, my mother directed us to the room
behind the altar known as the sacristy where she volunteered for her Christian
duty of finishing off the wine. It did not seem to matter to her that every
member of the congregation had either dipped their host in the chalice or
sipped their share from it outright, she grabbed it with both hands and guzzled
Jesus’s blood just the same.
For many children,
attending church for an hour a week isn’t for listening and learning, it’s a
test of patience and a chance to see just how entertaining your imagination is.
Each week I tried to will God to send a lightning bolt through the skylight above
the priest’s head at the altar during the consecration of the host. I wasn’t
trying to kill him, just wow the congregation with a sign from God. I would
work on other psychic abilities too: trying to get the cute boys to turn around
and sneak a peak at me, or dropping a ceiling fan on the old lady in front of
us who warbled when she sang. And then there was the day I thought I acquired
the unusual ability of being able to smell over extraordinarily long distances.
I was staring in boredom at the flower arrangement below the lectern and then …
I smelled the fragrant blooms. From
fifteen rows back! (I counted!) I thought maybe God had given me the gift of
superolfactory perception. It was a couple years before I realized it must have
been perfume from one of the ladies nearby.
On typical Sunday
mornings as children, we would attend Sunday school classes at the Catholic
school on church grounds at 9:30 a.m. before heading to mass at 10:30. Introduction
to Sunday school came with my own mother, who was the religious education
instructor for the kindergarten class for more than a decade. I may have been
only five at the time, but I can recall some of her lessons. One of them involved
all the kids in class having to say what we thought God looked like. After a
handful of “Santa” answers, my mom was overjoyed to hear me say I thought God
looked like a cloud.
Another facet of teaching
catechism to kindergarteners, according to my mother, was reading us Jewish
literature, or at least Shel Silverstein’s The
Giving Tree. She read this book to her class every single year and still
could never keep herself from sobbing at the end and terrifying all the
children.
In fourth grade,
our Sunday school teacher, Miss Miller, tried expanding our horizons by
teaching us about other faiths. She drew the symbols of other religions on the
chalkboard and then described to us what they stood for.
“This one is the
cross. We are all Christians and our symbol is the cross because Jesus died on
the cross.” We all nodded our heads. This we understood.
“This one is
called the Star of David. It is the symbol for the Jews and may be what King
David’s shield looked like when he was a young warrior.” Our eyes were
beginning to glaze over. We lived in a small farming town in Wisconsin . What was a Jew?
Next she drew what
looked like two tadpoles canoodling. “This is the Yin and Yang. It’s about
things that are opposites. Day and night, summer and winter, empty and full. It
is a symbol for people who believe in the Chinese philosophy of Confucianism
and Taoism.” Okay, we got the opposites, but that’s where it ended.
There were a
couple other symbols she showed us that I have completely forgotten. At the
end, Miss Miller asked us if we knew anyone who was a religion other than
Christianity, symbolized by the cross.
My hand
immediately shot up. Because I was the only one in the class raising her hand, Miss
Miller called on me.
“Kelly, who do you
know who has a religious faith represented by one of the other symbols on the
board?”
“My dad.”
“And which one is
it?”
I had already
decided on my story the first time I saw the symbol on the board. I liked space
and wanted to think I partly came from some place cooler than Earth. “The star,”
I told her.
“Oh!” Her facial
expression was awash with wonder and acceptance. “The Star of David,” she
gushed. “That means your dad is Jewish.”
She was clearly fascinated to learn that a half Jew was sitting right here in
front of her, in Catholic Sunday School. Jews for Jesus! That would also
explain to her why my father was never at church with the rest of my family.
A little later
that same year as we were studying the sacraments, we were taught how to
baptize someone in an emergency. If there was not a priest around to perform
the sacrament for an unbaptized person who was on death’s door, any individual
could perform the rite. Therefore, the nine-year olds in our class were given
instructions on how to wet one’s fingers and make the sign of the cross over
the afflicted individual.
I was trying to
think of a situation in which one of us could possibly find this information of
use. Perhaps one of my little classmates would stumble upon a beaten-up drunk in
an alley on the way home from school. Or maybe someone’s parents would still be
in bed Saturday morning as one of the fourth graders sat up watching cartoons,
and there would be a knock at the door. The child would open it, only to have a
man pitch forward into the room with a bloody knife sunk in his back. Of course
the kid wouldn’t really know if these men had already been baptized, but why
take the chance that they hadn’t?
Fortunately for
me, and everyone else in the class, Miss Miller already had a situation in mind
when she decided to teach us emergency baptisms.
“For example,” she
said, scanning the room until her eyes found me. “Kelly, let’s say you’re
playing catch in the backyard with your father when he suddenly clutches at his
heart and falls to the ground, his eyes rolling back in his head. Find some water,
or if there is none available, spit will do, and wet your hands. Then make the
sign of the cross over him, touching his forehead, heart, and shoulders as you
say, ‘I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit.’” As she said the words, she drew a big cross in the air with her
hands, blessing my father’s imaginary dead body in front of her.
I committed to
memory the lesson of that class. Although I never did have to perform an
emergency baptism on my father, I did put the lesson to use a couple years
later.
My mother had
found a “cute” holy water font. I would love to know at which store she was
shopping when she ran across this item. The font was made of porcelain and
meant to hang on the wall in a home. Above the small bowl for the holy water
knelt a little angel praying. We decided to hang it on a nail above the light
switch in my bedroom. In the lobby of our church was a little tin barrel with a
spigot that was filled with holy water. Church members were welcome to take
some of this water home with them to use for I-cannot-even-begin-to-imagine-what-purpose.
One Sunday my mother took an old used cottage cheese container to church with
us and filled it with holy water to put in the font in my bedroom.
Besides doing the
sign of the cross when I entered and exited my bedroom, I soon found another
use for the holy water.
My sister and I
rarely got along. Four years older than I, she was in high school at the time
and headed down the road toward becoming one of the world’s few female serial
killers. She appeared to me to be nothing but evil. Her days consisted of
spewing out insults at me, physically harming me if I so much as crossed the
threshold of her room, and listening to an unhealthy amount of Prince on her
record player. So for the most part I stayed out of her way and hid in my room,
organizing my filing cabinet or rearranging my furniture, while she stayed in
her room, trying on clothes, putting on makeup, and making lists of who she was
going to kill first. Pretty much everyone in the house avoided her, except for
one helpless little soul: her cat. And so it happened one night, after a particularly
violent tirade that had her storming back in her room, slamming the door, and
cranking up When Doves Cry at an
obscene volume, that I whisked the vulnerable Kitty into my bedroom, locked my
door, and performed the emergency baptism to save him from my sister, the
Devil.
I dipped my
fingers in the holy water in the font on my wall and recited the words, “I
baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”
It was a bit tricky, because I wasn’t sure exactly where a cat’s shoulders end
and the neck begins, but I fumbled my way through it, touching what I figured
was close enough to the proper body parts.
Kitty lived to the
ripe old age of twenty-two, and my sister never did become a serial killer. (That
I know of.) My sister took it pretty hard when the cat died. She had the cat
cremated and the ashes put into a little vessel that was small enough to wear
on a chain around her neck. (Totally normal.) I never told her that I baptized
her cat, but I like to think about how surprised she will be when she gets to Heaven
and finds Kitty waiting for her.
After the sixth
grade, religious education classes were taught on Wednesday nights instead of
Sunday mornings. It was common for all school districts to hold sports
practices Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays, with Fridays free for our own
recreations and Wednesdays for the kids to attend church classes. For my junior
year, the classes were held in the basement under the rectory. There were two
classes held in separate rooms, each taught by a volunteer from the church.
My class was
taught by an older lady named Ms. Kulwicki, who was kind and maybe just a
little too gullible. My friend Melanie and I could get her off topic and
chatting endlessly until class time had run out and we had accomplished nothing
on the curriculum. One day we got her going on the subject of capital
punishment. We fueled the flames of her rant by asking innocent questions such
as, “Why does the government think it can play God?” or “Doesn’t Jesus say that
an eye for an eye is an outdated teaching and that we should learn to turn the
other cheek?”
And then there was
the day that Ms. Kulwicki didn’t show up. The fifteen or so kids in our class
sat around the long table in their cold folding chairs and talked amongst themselves.
About 10 minutes after class was supposed to have started she still hadn’t
shown up. Someone decided to head upstairs and look in the parking lot for her.
The rest of us thought it would be funny to turn off the lights. The room,
being a windowless cement cell in the basement, was pitch black. A few kids
started crawling under the table, poking at the other kids.
The student who
had left returned to say there was still no sign of our teacher. We were not
yet ready to ruin our “night off” by reporting her absence to the alternate
teacher in the neighboring room or the priests upstairs. Kids began turning the
lights on and off at random, walking in and out of the room, breaking off into
groups to make jokes, sitting on the table, and hitting each other with their
folders. The noise in the room was turning into a dull roar. After 45 of the 60
minutes of class time had elapsed, Melanie and another girl, Anna, volunteered
to preach from the bible as a joke. The other students sat around the table and
watched the stand-up routine while I said I would take one last look upstairs
for our teacher. I walked out the door and turned the corner in the hall and
nearly ran right into Ms. Kulwicki.
“I was just coming
back out to look for you!” I exclaimed, unable to hide my surprise.
“I’m so sorry,”
she said, rushing by. “I accidentally fell asleep!”
She opened the
door to the classroom, and there, seated around the table, were a dozen
17-year-olds quietly listening to two of their female classmates taking turns
reading from the bible. Our teacher was overwhelmed with the wholesomeness of
her class and thanked Melanie and Anna profusely for taking over for her.
God has an amazing
sense of humor.
But
all was not fun and games in the Catholic Church. After I left home for
college, the stories first began to break about the sins of certain Catholic priests
and how the church had been hiding the fact that a number of their own had been
molesting young boys. This did not come as a surprise to everyone. As many had
already asked, What man feels a calling to a vocation where women are dressed
in black obscuring sheets and are not given equal status to males? Or one that
forbids marriage? I think it is a little telling that there is an old joke that
says, “How do you get a nun pregnant? Dress her as an altar boy.”
I
had my own version of this joke. I first told it to my sister on Christmas. I
had just attended Christmas services with my boyfriend at his Protestant
church. When I returned home my mother insisted that my sister and I go to
Christmas mass with her. I was furious to be forced to attend two holiday
services on the same day. We arrived at church just as the ceremony was
starting, and since all the “faithful” had suddenly come out of the woodwork
for the holiday, there was a full house. We were forced to stand in the back
vestibule for the next hour, peering through the windows at the service with
the other latecomers. It was at this point that I turned to my sister and
whispered, “How do you get a nun pregnant?”
She gave me a
blank stare.
“Fuck her,” I
said.
It was good that
we were standing outside the chapel, because there’s a chance that the priest
didn’t hear us laughing till we cried. And now you know why I’m going to Hell.
I’m going to miss Kitty.
Back when I was still going to Heaven.
First Communion, May 1981
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