Swapping spit

‘Sometimes the meaning leaks out of things,’ Lucy Treloar

The meaning leaks out and we’re left in a swamp of incomprehension. Lots of good creatures and plants grow in swamps but we humans can’t get a foothold. Neither firm land nor swimmable water and we lose our grip. 

This then is my state of mind on a humid morning close by year’s end when everything begins to coalesce and meaning flies out the window.

When Elizabeth Strout in her book Amy and Isabelle describes an episode of tongue kissing between two young folks as ‘swapping spit’, I’m left with a sense of awe and revulsion. The idea of swapping spit does not appeal. 

Isn’t it one of the greatest insults imaginable when one person spits on another? A sign of contempt and a helplessness on the part of the spitter. This is all they can find in themselves with which to despoil the other.

When we urge children to eat with their mouths closed, to cover their mouths when they sneeze, to blow their noses gently into a tissue or hankie, are we not urging them to dispose of the contents of their internal bodies with a degree of decorum?

No one else wants to see what’s inside your mouth as you chew. Even as it’s vital to chew. To watch the food mashed into its swallowable shape before it begins its journey through your digestive system. And I have not yet mentioned what comes out the other end. The greatest taboo of all.

Don’t pay attention to me this morning. I am not in a great state of mind. I am distracted by events in my life that I am not at liberty to write about, at least not here and this creates a bubble of secrecy, one you can only guess at. I have many such bubbles tucked away in my mind but usually they stay buried or hidden even from my awareness and they do not trouble me.

I have been reading Donald Kalsched, a Jungian analyst, about this process which he names dissociation. He is a Jungian analyst by predisposition and religious iconography features in his work in a way I might once have found disconcerting. But now when I read his descriptions and his thoughts about a famous painting depicting two angels. The one Lucifer on one side of a helpless and naked baby and on the other the good angel, each fighting over the baby as if to pull the baby apart, I begin to understand things I had not before understood. 

Kalsched uses an image from William Blake’s Innocence to describe the innocence of the infant torn into two by forces, one the cruel angel Lucifer, hell bent on destruction, and the other Michael, the idealising angel who promises the impossible. 

I recognise something in my own leaning towards the good angel with my past impulses to idealise. Kalsched reckons when a child is violated again and again something of what he describes as their innocence, their divine spark is taken over by one or other of these angels. By the great ‘Dis’ the dissociative process that creates a self-care system within the person to protect them from feeling further pain. 

The trouble is this system creates its own form of harm by cutting the child off from contact with others and turns the usually integrating human psyche which grows and develops under the nurturing influence of others into a cut off system, inaccessible to the benefit of help from others and it hardens into a false type of growth. 

The person so controlled within their self-care system takes on a story about their lives which Kalsched describes as a trauma narrative. A victim/perpetrator trope then dominates their thinking, caught in a state either as victim or perpetrator and to use Sandor Ferenczi’s term they ‘identify with the aggressor’ and wall themselves off in cruelty from all human help. 

We need to drop the story Kalsched argues. We need to allow ourselves to feel once again our original pain in the company of someone, other than the person or persons who inflicted it on you. When a child is violated, and Kalshed uses the example of a three-year-old girl whose father abuses her body when he is drunk and adds to the violence by insisting she stay silent. 

When this child is so angry a huge rage develops inside and she gets angrier and angrier, but cannot release this rage on to the ones who hurt her, including her mother who stands by while the father abuses and so the rage is turned inwards to form the self-care system that keeps all others out. 

I am scraping the surface of Kalsched’s ideas here. Only dancing on the edges of the lake of ideas he created. Ideas so dense and wonderful I am in awe of their complexity.

But they are new to me and whenever ideas are new but engaging I have trouble holding onto them.

I want to absorb them into my own ways of thinking but they slip away like so many birds released from my care. They are not homing pigeons. And lately I have been struggling with moments when my centre has not been able to hold the immensity of pain I witness in another. 

How much it derails me when my job is to help. But I have never been good at negotiating with tyrants, or people whose rage is disguised as benevolence whether towards them or towards others.

I grew up under the care of black robed nuns at school. Their austerity frightened me. Their faces alone visible and their brows bunched under a thick band of white that slicked across their foreheads to hide their hair, under a veil of black in winter and white in summer. The only concession to comfort the nuns enjoyed from what I saw. 

All year long those heavy robes. All year long weighed down by a uniform that tucked their bodies out of sight. Their hands too were visible at the end of long cover-all sleeves even in the flames of summer. And they were always there from the time I was tiny. Greeted with respect and deference by everyone. They travelled outside the school yard in pairs as if to protect one another and they nodded at you benignly when they passed on the footpath. Not the children though. We were invisible except as instruments under their care and instruction. 

When Mother Mary John took us for English, and we opened our readers at the various pages she instructed us towards, we took it in turns to read aloud from Clancy of the Overflow or the Village Blacksmith. She told us then to take our books home and rote learn at least ten lines each night. 

This then was the way to learn. Someone says something of significance in a book or classroom, you write it down in your best cursive handwriting, take it home and commit it to memory. You need not understand the words you write down. You need only remember the sound of those words and repeat them on demand.

It was not an efficient way to learn but I only realised this decades later when my children and grandchildren in turn loved to have the same books read to them, over and over along with explanations of what might be going on. They asked the question why?

 Did I ask this question as a child? Surely I asked. But I cannot remember any answers to my questions why and sometimes I imagine the answers were deceptive. As when my mother put down my father’s violent erratic behaviour at night to his ill health. 

I did not understand until I was in my final year of primary school that he was drunk. That he had consumed too much alcohol and the consumption of too much alcohol changed a person. Turned them from an otherwise quiet somewhat sensible person into an enraged and lawless individual who paid no attention to how things might be for another person. Other people inflamed them. 

Drunk people were scarier than the nuns.

My childhood was populated by demons and saints. The devil and the archangel Gabriel. 

And Kalsched tells the story again which I must once have rote learned as a child. When God went down to the earth in human form, Lucifer, who loved his numinous form along with that of all the angels, rebelled. He refused to cooperate in the formation of humankind through God. 

As an adult, I watched my children learn to make sense of the world, not through rote learning but through understanding. I could never hold onto all the things I had learned by rote. Better to understand the why of things or how to look up answers to questions rather than simply rote learn. We cannot hold all this information in our small human computer brains.  We need to understand more of the why of it before we can move on. 

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.