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Catholics Build Pyramids, too

by kara-rose-trojan

Crowded by the ceiling’s emptiness (the room sticky with whispers) names carved into grimy tiles, final shadows             of the footsteps now hugged in dust,                         and the ashes dulled the slapping of                         feet on the ladder’s last rung.             Huddled in the sour dimness of his shadow                         is where our parents hid the prayers                         that went undelivered – [cloistered, naïve faith off Jacob’s Ladder] He asked me questions that pricked too deeply –             that fingernail clipped too short --             as the invading hand of perversion parted words and stammers             to play shadow puppets with, what Plato called,             “three times removed” from the Truth. And when leaving the choir’s balcony, one can find the thumbtack of feeling in which the glass-saints sweat all the industrialized emotions onto one’s brow.             Does it seem like suffering? Catholic’s suffering. Giving room for error in your lapse in charity. In elementary school, we left our classrooms --             two-by-two like businessmen arguing on the sidewalk -- Every Tuesday at 2:10pm to the hidden alcove that the administration             gave             to us. Mrs. Condon, a strictly fat woman, strictly speaking, dressed in red vests and constricting black slacks, with a white binder, salted as the laughter left in her footprints, reproving us that as the Gifted and Talented, we must exercise those gifts and talents. I wrote a 256-paged novel that bought me one year of slacking off behind a wooden desk because I was 11 years old and that fact bought a bulbous beet of conditioning into the curriculum. Ms. Condon made me edit my peers’ essays, give them grades when all I wanted to do was play four square. As I perched on my stool in class, properly equipped with unforgiving, admonishing, Catholic red pens to point out other 11 year old’s punctuation and proper word usage. Like a tie to a neck, I fiddled in vernacular, phrases, and semantics as I unconsciously stacked layers of social prejudice, thicker than the walls between silent parents, between some students and I. Stacked as quaintly as words upon words – hand over hand. Mrs. Condon, Mrs. CEO, Ms. Too-Good-For-This, Bourgeois vs. Proletariats, I am the Marquis. Like hounds held by leashes, the others locked to rebel, then whimpered to trail back, tails in hand. Gifted and groomed to stack one spurned cinder block on social mobility. In a whirr of dandelions, dice, and tax breaks, I knew how it felt to remain aloft, aloof --             Mrs. Condon rewarded me with the cherry Twizzler of my spine             and patted my head like the lapdog that I had been.
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Written by
kara-rose-trojan
American
For You?
Written by
kara-rose-trojan
American
Published
May 31, 2012
Time
3m
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