Pages

Monday, October 5, 2009

Spiritual Autobiography: In the beginning....

I did it! I made it through my Spiritual Autobiography without crying, without wanting to run from the room, without my voice cracking and shaking. I suppose that's a sign of trust in my classmates as much as it is the steady hand of God helping to guide me along as I unfold pieces of myself for people. I don't share easily(Yes, believe it or not!). I used to not share at all... which, of course, was just one of the ways of guaranteeing my spot in Hell. Keep people at arm's length, remain apart from a faith community, and try to do this life alone: yeah, that was like punching a ticket for eternal death!

This is a photo of the courtyard at Christ Church in Exeter, the Episcopal Church that I belonged to for the first 39 years of my life until I changed my membership to St. John's in 2008. The altar, the crucifix, and the baptismal font are all from the church from the days when I used to serve as an acolyte and sang in the Junior choir.
I didn't go into great detail about my early church life in my autobiography since I had done so much of that last year. Instead, the theme of my Spiritual autobiography was being a person who always stands with one foot in one world, and another foot in another world... and never feeling that I am totally in one space at a time. I discussed how my parents were older, my brothers were older... and while my classmates were listening to Shaun Cassidy, I was listening to the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and Benny Goodman! (My dad believed that music died with Glenn Miller).

So, here's an excerpt of my autobiography:
When I was in kindergarten, the teachers determined that I was “emotionally not ready” for First Grade. That was code for I am an introvert, and because I was born in February, I was apparently not going to be the right age for First grade, so I was placed in a program called “Transition”… which later was called “Readiness”. So I was starting First Grade with the class of 1987.
Until I got to Third Grade.
Something happened. I was grasping concepts faster than anyone else, and now the school officials told my parents that I needed to skip a grade, and rejoin the class of 1986. Besides doing the assignments in my third grade class, I had to do extra work which included occasional forays to Mrs. Brown’s fourth grade class for the state requirement on New Hampshire geography. I also had to write a "book", an historical fiction, about co-education in my hometown. I interviewed graduates of Robinson Female Seminary and Exeter High School to write my story. And once all that was completed, I was granted the privilege of skipping Fourth grade.

After I skipped a grade, I was really messed up emotionally. It’s one thing to move to a new town and start over; I was in the same school, and everybody knew that I was that kid who skipped Fourth grade. The kids who’d been my friends in Third Grade didn’t want to be around me any more, and looked at me like I was a freak. And this new group of kids in the Fifth grade were at a point in their development where boys and girls didn’t play together, but were starting to see each other as “boys” and “girls”. That’s not where I was at, and I didn’t understand the new socialization at all. I wanted to hang with the boys, but they shunned me. So, I fell in with a clique of girls who were mean, and it didn’t take long before they turned on me… and suddenly I was very, very alone. I was a stranger, even though this was the same school that I had been in already.
Back to being “between two worlds”. I had friends whose parents worked at Phillips Exeter Academy… the local prep school…. and I had friends who were working class kids. I quickly became aware of the classism that existed among my teachers. Depending on which set of friends I was with, the teachers would treat me differently. For instance, my sixth grade English teacher was always mean, and condescending to the kids from lower-income homes… but she’d be gentle and kind toward the Academy kids. And it bothered me that depending on who I was with, I would either be accepted or rejected by a teacher.

My best friends growing up were my neighbors, Gwen and Earl. They were also “in-between” people in my town because their parents were a mixed race marriage. Whites viewed them as black; blacks viewed them as whites. I learned to view them, and their parents, as friends. Knowing their father did much to teach me not to fear blacks. As a small child, blacks scared me because I didn't understand how a person could be that dark. Then, this family moved in next door, and my friends' dad was the coolest person I had ever met, and very friendly. And it was through that relationship that I learned to see the person beyond the exterior features.
This takes you up through about the eighth grade. I'll post a segment about "the next phase: high school, college and Tallahassee tomorrow. Stay tuned!



3 comments:

  1. A very special gal, that daughter of your dad's. Will be watching for the next segments.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This was wonderful for me to read. I can't wait to read the rest of your Spiritual Autobiography. You are my "sweet little Toodie"

    Peggins

    ReplyDelete

I welcome comments on any posts that I put up here, but please make your remarks relevant to the topic of the post. You are welcome to challenge my thoughts and musings, but you are not welcome to come here to abuse me or others through the written word. And while I'm not God, and have no desire to take God's authority, I do reserve the right to delete a comment that is irrelevant to the post, or is promoting some product.