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My expectations
of what a Catholic girls’ school would be like were formed by
repeated viewings of Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows, a sixties
movie starring
Hayley Mills as a rebellious girl who learns to stop being such a pain
in the ass and love the Lord. Plaid skirts, long hallways, good-natured
but strict nunsthe kind who will surprise you with a mean game
of softballgreen-and-white linoleum floors, red lipstick, snuck
cigarettes,
high-jinks.
But my school,
Carden, was something else entirely. It didn’t have an overtly
Catholic name. No nuns, save for one wrinkled old specimen who served
as school mascot. We had Mass once a week, but only school councilors
and goody-goodies went, so the school’s living room was big enough.
The school itself was a mansion and it was so absolutely,positively
fancy and mansiony that it was frequently used as a film set. I remember
ducking out of Spanish class one afternoon because of ‘cramps’ I
wasn’t above taking advantage of the all-female atmosphereonly to
find
Diane Keaton sprawled out on my chaise longue in the powder room. Argh!
Ever since, I have been unpleasantly jolted out of the waking dream of
many a film and TV show by recognizing the dreaded site of my gilded incarceration.
Two hundred
of Southern California’s finest young ladies attended this
school, all outfitted in summer uniforms (the preferred pastel dresses)
or winter (dorky
tweed skirts), complete with rubber-soled shoes. We couldn’t
wear loafers because we might slip and fall on the marble floors. Because
of the amounts of money involved, I think the school felt a certain,
shall we say, liability towards the stakeholders.
There were
other liabilities as well. Spelled out: girls who went to Carden didn’t
get pregnant. One girl left suddenly during our freshman year because
of a
rumored pregnancy, but it wasn’t too shockingher hair was all wrong,
and
her name was kind of countryish, and she seemed like one of the ‘organ
people’
as my friend Claire called them. You know, the kind of people who have
an organ in their living room, and live in places like Downey. Where the
Carpenters came from.
It's
Not the Sex That's the Problem
There’s a
lot of don’t-ask-don’t-telling going on in the families of the rich
and modern religious. It’s not the sex that’s the problem. The real trouble
is when there’s evidence. Perhaps your daughter is having sex, and perhaps
you even know about it, although you won’t acknowledge it, even to yourselfit
doesn't really matter as long as there isn't an unfortunate occurrence.
An accident. The kind of accident that requires you to suddenly go
on a yearlong "trip to Europe" and return pale, flabby, and
shaken to a welcome-home
party complete with a cake bearing miniature flags of many nations.
To avoid
such horrors, Carden dished out forbidden knowledge on a regular
basis in bio and chemistry. We handled diaphragms, birth control pills,
condoms, sponges. The most detailed contraception exposition happened
one day in science class. The teacher, perpetually sheepish (as are
most male teachers afloat in a sea of teenage girls,) Mr. Smitson, vanished,
only to reappear at the end of the period to remind us of an upcoming
test.
Two of my
more advanced classmates, Veronica Twohey and Lizzy Frayne, who actually
volunteered at Planned Parenthood, marched to the front of the room.
They were efficient, practiced, businesslike. They seemed much further
ahead on the curve of womanhood than the rest of us, who were still giggly
and coltish.
Veronica
held up a condom in its little square package. It fairly glowed with
mystery. We had touched the objects, but now it was time to see them in
action. She and Lizzy were a practiced two-headed beast of contraceptive
information.
While Veronica explained the outside of the condom package (check
expiration date, peel gently down the side) Lizzy was readying a canister
and a plastic syringe.
This was
something new: contraceptive foam. "It’s kind of like mousse,"
she said,
and squirted a little puff on her finger. She wiped it off with a tissue
and produced a syringe-like plastic applicator while explaining the advantages
of using both foam and a condom. Then, she inserted the nozzle of
the foam into the tip of the applicator. "You just fill it up, like
so," and
it turned white with the foam inside, "and insert it right before
you’re
going to have sex. If you have a hard time getting it in the vagina, you
might want to use a little lubricant like K-Y." She held up a tube
of jelly.
K-Y? So that’s what it was. An unknown thing previously glimpse in medicine
cabinets and inside adults’ nightstand drawers.
Another mystery
solved. The world was full of them.
Then, without
hesitation, the girls launched into the main event. The sheathing
of the mighty banana. Veronica gingerly liberated the quivering
latex
balloon from its foil prison. "It’s important to make sure you unroll
it
the right way, and you can tell by the little ridge at the bottom, which
you
want to be facing up," said Veronica, holding it up and pointing
with her
index finger. "It’s hard to see if you’re in the dark, so you might
want
to practice this beforehand." There were a few giggles and Veronica
cracked
a smile, stepping out of her official role for a second.
Lizzy held
the banana while Veronica unrolled the condom on it. Lizzy narrated:
"Make sure it's completely unrolled, down to the base, and then pinch
the tip so there's room for the ejaculate." She expertly did so,
in a way
that seemed almost cute. Those of us who had already done the deed probably
picked a up a few pointers that day, while those of us who had not ventured
into the land of "It" looked on impassively. When the future
reveals
itself to you, you greet it calmly and respectfully.
Adult
Christian Living
There was
a price to be paid for such Dutch-style levelheadedness, and that price
was a class called Adult Christian Living. This was a class about lifestyles,
Christian lifestyles, and specifically, Catholic lifestyles, your
three choices being: religious (no sex;) single (no sex;) and married
(sex,
but.) Becoming a nun seemed far off and perilous, the kind of thing that
only women who got themselves killed in Latin America ever tried to attempt
any more. I had never seen a nun who wasn’t old and grey. We didn’t spend
too much time on this, anyway, because the stakeholders wouldn’t actually
be pleased if their daughters got religion in a non-grandchildren-providing
way.
There was
a lot of discussion about the single lifestyle. Mainly about the fact
that you couldn’t have sex. And you also couldn’t masturbate. We had to
memorize a mantra about the shame of Onan which stated: "Masturbation
is an
inherently disordered act because our bodies were made to glorify God,
and
our precious sexuality can only be expressed in the full commitment of
marriage"
Repeat as necessary.
Another topic
of singledom was infatuation vs. "real" love, love that waits
until
after the wedding to get it on. Infatuation was merely lust, and lust
was,
you know, sinful and stuff. The teacher, Ms. Flather, who was herself
a single
lady, was forcefully cheerful about her own lifestylebut certainly,
she was protesting too much. I felt tired just thinking about her.
How old was she? In her 30s? And still fending off the guys? You really
just wanted to say: Oh, get it over with already, lady. There was
a "discussion"
about living together and a couple who came in to talk about how
their relationship fell apart when they lived together. Then, once they
moved
out, started dating again, and quit doing the deed until they got married
for real, things were just great. We were tested on them: "How did
Bill
and Patty’s relationship change once they made a real commitment in the
form of marriage?"
Each day
of Adult Christian Living was a little more humiliating than the next.
As we moved into the marriage unit, the contraceptives made a quick appearance,
were passed around the circle once again, and quickly ushered out.
We were going to learn about the only Church-approved form of birth control:
Natural Family Planning.
This lesson
was presented by another religion teacher, Mr. Grapwell, and his
wife, Cindy. Mr. Grapwell was the kind of teacher that you almost feel
sorry
for as you paint your nails in his class and he doesn’t stop you, or turn
in an original poem about Diet Coke for an assignment about being grateful
to God, and he still gives you a B plus despite indicating it wasn’t
exactly what he was looking for. We called him Grappy.
Grappy and
Mrs. Grappy came in and set up a large calendar on an easel. They
began to tell us about the practice in a tag-team fashion. "It isn’t
the
so-called rhythm method of yore." "It’s 99.9 percent accurate
when practiced
carefully."
"It’s
the only way to go if you want to limit your family
size and still be a good Catholic, because you’re merely abstaining from
intercouse on days when the missus is fertile, not stopping a human life
from being conceived." "It really makes us both involved in
the process."
"It's brought us even closer as a couple."
Mrs. Grappy
began to explain the process of Natural Family Planning: Every morning
she shoved
a thermometer under her tongue and made note of the temperature.
Then she examined her vaginal mucus. As she said this, she rubbed
her thumb against her index and middle fingers to indicate texture.
Mrs. Grappy's
fingernails were varnished a metallic lilac, and way longer than
you wanted them to be. We had to think about her fingernails going up
there,
and wince internally. Because we were sitting in a semicircle, there was
no place to hide, no place to look away. Everyone’s faces were blank with
the sure and terrifying knowledge that she was going to continue and there
wasn’t a damn thing we could do about it.
Mrs. Grappy
talked about the mucus. She talked about its color, fragrance and
consistency, and how it changed from day to day. Sometimes clear, sometimes
cloudy. Sometimes sweet, sometimes mustardy. Sometimes sticky, sometimes
elastic and ropy "like melted cheese." She kept rubbing her
fingers
together. Grappy stood alongside her, goonily smiling in that way that
people who are totally convinced that the Lord is on their side do.
She kept
saying, "the mucus." Here was this woman, in a nondescript green
dress,
tan hose, and brown sandals, coming into our classroom, and talking about
her vaginal secretions. What could we do but cross our legs, hard, and
hope that it would end soon?
Grappy soon
got in on the act. He explained how he helped. On days when Mrs.
Grappy wasn’t fertile, he marked an X on the calendar with a pen. He demonstrated
this. On days that temperature and texture (fingers again) indicated
that conditions were favorable for conception, Grappy put a sticker
of a baby on the calendar. He demonstrated this, and explained that,
although the egg is only present for three or four days, fertility extends
to seven, because semen can wait it out it the hot and moist vaginal
environs, hoping to get lucky. He put baby stickers on an entire week.
Grappy and
Mrs. Grappy stood alongside their calendar, which, by now, was a map
of Xs surrounding a week of pink babies. The stickers scared me the most.
I felt them looking at meall seven of them. The horror. The Grappys
explained that they "abstained during Baby Week." Said Grappy,
with a
grin, "It really gives us some time to appreciate each other as people."
A brave
soul, Heather Waters, who was herself put on the pill by her family doctor
because of "cramps" and enjoyed its other benefits with her
college boyfriend,
raised her hand and asked why they couldn’t just use condoms during
that time.
Grappy chuckled.
"You could," he said, "If you punched holes in it."
Frottage,
Felching, Fisting, Whatever
Heather looked
puzzled. "No, really," he said. "That’s the Pope’s opinion.
You
see, conception is the Lord’s will, and we don’t have the right to interfere
in that process. Natural Family Planning is all about abstaining during
certain times, so as to avoid conception. It’s a nice break for both of
us. But any kind of barrier would mean that we were putting our own pleasure
above the Lord’s will. So, no, you really couldn’t do that." As if
anticipating
our thoughts, he added, "And you really have to be careful about
fooling around. Did you know that you can get pregnant without even having
sex? If ejaculate, or semen, is near the vaginal areaon the vulva,
or even, in some cases, on the inner thigh areaand there’s enough
mucus present, it can swim up and into the vagina, and bingo! You’re pregnant.
You really can’t be too careful with this stuff."
This was
a whole other side of Mr. Grapwell that I never knew existed. He was
loose, comfortable, authoritative. In his element. Calling the shots.
The
only man in a roomful of women, and talking about vaginal mucus like it
was
the most blessed topic in the world. Also, by implication, he was talking
about
his penis and its activities. We had never had to grapple, so to speak,
with the thought of anything living in those corduroy trousers, but today,
we were learning its schedule.
At such a
time, I wanted scrawl a sign and hold it up, facing skyward, in case
anyone was out there in the universe besides God: THIS WASN’T MY IDEA.
What
can a fertility-obsessed religion do in modern times, when the time between
sexual maturity and marriage (if any) stretches into decades? It’s important
to hew to your beliefs, especially if you are the Catholic Church and
holding steady at number one on the chart of Christendom. Rome hasn’t
forgotten that whole Reformation/Counter-Reformation episode, and
the Protties, although certainly outnumbered, continue to nip at the One
True Church’s heels like a yippy little pagan dog that steadfastly insists
a piece of bread is just a piece of bread. If the Catholic Church
dilutes its signature issues, it risks becoming yet another denomination,
instead of the only church in the world that rules from a unique
city-state.
But when
you have a school full of impregnable teenage girls, this is where theology
breaks down. One has to be practical: the technical information
at Carden, according to my public school peers, was far more detailed
than anything they were ever taught. I admire the school for slipping
us the info on the sly, but the counterprogramming had another effect
entirely. Preaching abstinence is a popular approach in public
schools these days; but, judging from the number of teenage girls I see
pushing strollers, it really isn’t working.
I’d like
to suggest another approach:
give the kids all the facts, and I mean all of the facts. Frottage,
felching, fisting, whatever might possibly happen between young hormonally
charged humans. Add dental dams, finger condoms and latex gloves to
the party pack. Tell them what it all means. Then, bring in the Grappys
to
put them off the idea for a few years, at least, when they will, with
any
luck, be more conscientious about using the equipment properly.
A few years
ago, on the other side of the country, I met a man who had, as an
adult, dated one of my classmates. "Oh, I know all about Carden,"
he said.
He rubbed his fingers together. "The mucus."
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