'72 swim team

'72 swim team
My New Tribe

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Cloakroom Caper Disaster pt 2

Okay! So, I'd have to admit that it would be kind-of-weird to find some kid (in a hand-me-down Catholic school uniform with with blood stains on the collar) wriggling on the ground in the middle of an empty hallway. I guess, what I had to realized is that Marilyn might not have been the one with the problem in this scenario. Anyway, I do think I sold the bit about how I was rehearsing my role as a shepherd, rolling around on the ground in abject fear of those celestial visitors (continued from last Blog Post).

Hopefully, she wouldn't tell all the girls at recess. I already  felt like a dirty Zombie walking among the living and didn't need any more problems than I already had. Rick Arredondo already had a mustache and I figured that I was probably about 12 years away from puberty... judging by the amount of hair in my arm pits(or lack of hair). I just didn't have a whole lot going for me and I wanted to believe that I had a chance with the ladies...one in particular.

I needed to escape school because the squealing from Sister Edith's music lesson was destined to kill me. I looked down and saw the blood on the collar of my shirt and had to feel around
my ears to make sure they weren't bleeding.  That's when I remembered that the blood was left over from the arrows I had been shot with, which my brothers had made by taping sewing needles to the tips of old bamboo they cannibalized from the curtains in the attic.


That was a relief!  Not the arrow part, but the part where my ears weren't bleeding.

I really did think about going back to the infirmary, after all those years, and assuming the "stick-bug-of-ultimate-humiliation" position - when the flash of brilliance flooded my little gray cells. "If you can't beat them, join them." I reasoned and thought about a way of bringing down the entire class. There was only one problem though...it involved the cloakroom.

Regular kids had their Snoopy and Star Trek and their cool Flying-Nun lunch boxes and brown paper bags that their mothers had packed for their lunches. You know that that meant? It meant that I would have to endure the awful smell of Liverwurst, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and smooshed bologna that had begun to ooze with bacteria - mixed together with the smell of all those kid's school sweaters and B.O. from the boys who sweated at recess, which made those "cloak-rooms" smell like the Hyperion sewage plant in El Segundo.

 "Ewww and double gross!"  

I don't even know why this thing was called a cloakroom anyway. Who wears stinking cloaks anymore? Wasn't that something people wore back at the time of Jesus. Didn't he say something about giving someone your cloak also, when that someone asked for your coat..."Gross!" that meant a cloak was like someone's underclothes...

Geezers, my brain was already on overload before thinking about the groady underwear of 12-year-olds.

The way I looked at it, the nuns probably called those coat-closets - "cloakrooms" because many of the nuns at Saint Marks were around at the time of Jesus. I mean Sister Edith probably helped 'O Mary change the diapers of baby Jesus some 2000 years ago.  She looked that old - not joking.  

Anyway, the ceiling in the classroom was very high and the cloakroom wall behind Sister's Edith's desk didn't go all the way to the top. And there I was in the "pooh-pooh recycling plant" squeezed between the lunches and the sweaters in the cloakroom BEHIND Sister Edith who was yelling "head - tones" at the squeaky mice that had forced the dogs in the neighborhood to commit Hari-Kari and drove old man Snyder criminally insane.

I climbed on up on the hook that held Terry Ballentine's sweater and towered invisibly over the top of Sister Edith.  Without her being aware of my presence, I mimicked her every move.

"Head tones"  I mouthed behind her back lifting my free hand over my head like she was doing with both of hers.

This got everyone's attention...as they were suddenly alert and looking forward to the clown doing his act behind the ambitious nun.

Sister Edith thought she had a miraculous breakthrough with the apathetic 7th graders. She was Julie Andrews (every nun's dream)! By golly, she would lead these squeaking mice in a rendition of  "Doe, Ray, Me, Fall... female dears...rays of sunshine... and names we call ourselves..." She did it! She had finally gotten through to her listless students as if stardust was falling from heaven itself.

Soon laughter broke out!  I had an audience and they loved me! I was a hero and had my own stage where people seemed to liked me. This time I wouldn't have to share the stage with Ulrich like I did at the Zoo when he took over and dance on the edge of the cage before falling in (Blog Post April 29, 2013).

No. Instead, this was all me.

As it turned out, according to plan, it wasn't heavenly stardust after all, but a curse Sister began to think as the laughter swelled and she began to lose control of the class.  I was doing a good thing by saving the all the dogs within a 2 mile radius and possible changing Mr. Synder's darkened heart.  I had disrupted the singing which was the best possible thing at this moment in history! This was almost better than getting Soviet missiles out of Cuba.  This just could be one of the miracles I might be remembered for...when my name comes up for sainthood.

As Sister swung around wildly to look behind her, I stooped behind the half-wall and hid out of sight. She continued again and I popped up and continued to mimic her - which brought the class to its knees in laughter.

Think of the dogs I'm saving...think of poor 'O Mr. Synder - there is hope for him, because of this. Why, I'll be right up there with Saint Nickolaus and Saint Christopher.

She turned around again - I ducked and now the "cat and mouse" game made this entire performance even funnier as I popped up and down like a prairie dog with impeccable timing behind her back.

Yes... I brought the torturous singing to an end  - everyone was delighted except Sister Edith and Anthony and I did not have to make a trip to the dreaded infirmary.  Laughter with tears...UNTIL.

Until... my foot slipped and I fell to the floor of the cloakroom and bonked my head. Unconscious, a couple of the sweaty, bigger-boys dragged my body out from behind the wall and when Sister realized what had happened... she began to throw her chalk erasers at me -as usual. And boy let me tell you... the Dodgers should have signed her up... because she had a right arm that could strike out Pete Rose! 

Anyway, she sent me off to the infirmary and guess who was working? Yep! Mrs. Putziger. Dismayed and dazed, she didn't even wait until my two escorts left until she demanded that I grab my ankles and made me assume the "Stink-bug-of-ultimate-humiliation" position...

...whack slapped the stick from Sister Superior on my stretched out rump.  

Oh well...I guess it was all worth it, because the music stopped - dogs lived and Mr. Synder could now find kindness buried somewhere deep inside. 


God bless us all every one!



6 comments:

  1. I read the first part of this to Chelsea and I had to draw her a picture too. I remember that day so well Mark. I always thought you were so smart, clever, and funny cuz you were one of Those Dahlins. I am surprised now to hear your motivation for your antics and am so glad it's all under the blood. I think I told you Marilyn' sister Janice was a SNJM nun, so took care of Sister Edith in retirement. She said Sister Edith told her we were all good kids. So there you go. Your antics in an effort to be loved were all forgiven. You are a good man and even Sister Edith probably smiled about all this after too. Thanks for another wonderful walk down memory lane .

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    1. Julie, you were the person that reminded me of this story... so keep them coming my way, I have so much amnesia especially 8th grade... almost don't remember it happening!

      keep fuel for the stories coming

      Mark

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  2. The "cloakroom"! Yes, I, too, used to wonder about that terminology. But being a compliant sort of girl, I wasn't about to get all worked up and rebellious about it. I remember that the "Man from U.N.C.L.E." lunchboxes were popular with the boys. I had a red plaid lunchbox, believe it or not. And sometimes there were actually raincoats and rain boots in the "cloakroom". But no cloaks.

    @ Julieta7 -- Sister Edith probably had dementia when it came to remembering her "good" students. ;)

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    1. Because we grew up in that environment we just took for granted that those closets were "cloakrooms"... without giving a second thought to what a cloak really was... but we look back on fondness of those things...Jealous of your plaid lunch box...i know the exact one. I don't remember - one day bringing a lunch to school. oh well! that which doesn't kill you makes you stronger or gives you a broken leg!

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  3. Sister Edith Mary... wise and skinny and strong, and loved to get us reach those highhhhh notes....wrinkly skin, and a long skinny nose...walked really fast for being so old... the boney pointy crooked fingers... your picture was perfect showing how she'd curl the fingers upward behind her ears to get us to go higher...first nun who ever "warned us" about the "tempations" that would come our when boys and girls are "alone together"...she was honestly one of my best, and favorite teachers at St Mark...don't know why.. she was what you call a
    straight shooter..good story, again, marky d!

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    1. she was the one who said that if we thoiught we were going to die that we pray, "Lord I love you I'm sorry from my sins" and boy did i have to say that right away when i though Karl Patrick Gherhing and I were going to get killed in our little boat in a storm off the Marina! haha but she did like to throw erasers at me

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