The nuns' living quarters were in a tiny  house beside the two-room school, which was attached to the church building  itself. The three nuns (two teachers plus a housekeeping nun) lived on the upper  floor of the tiny house. The main floor had an entrance hall, a largish room to  the left, and, farther down the hall, the door to a small chapel. Although the  chapel was just for the nuns, at some point during our eight-year attendance at  the little school we students were allowed to visit the chapel. Perhaps it was  only seventh and eighth graders. 
I know we were allowed in there  occasionally, because I remember one thing about that little chapel: it  contained a statue of the Little Infant of Prague. Some day I'll look it up and  discover the true story of the Little Infant of Prague. As a church artifact, it  seems always to be a real doll dressed in sumptuous, hand-sewn garments. Ours  wore a red velvet cloak trimmed in white fur and gold braid. He held an orb in  his hands and wore a gold crown on his head. I don't know whether you could go  to a Catholic outfitters' shopthe kind where they sell fancy rosaries and  beautiful prayer books and plaster of paris statues of the Black Madonna or  Saint Joseph (which you bury in your yard to facilitate selling a house)and buy  ready-to-display Little Infants of Prague, or whether you bought a naked plaster  doll (probably not anatomically correct) and took him home to dress in hand-sewn  silks and velvets.
But I loved the Little Infant of Prague  that was in the nuns' chapel, with its real clothes. 
The year I was in the eighth grade, the  front room of the nuns' house was made into a "rec room" for the eighth graders  (the oldest kids in the two-room school). Being given our own, separate space  was a big deal. I guess they'd noticed that we were too old for Red Rover. They  (and who were "they"?) put a record player in the room and even seeded it with a  few records. We were allowed to go into the rec room at recess time and during  the 
Now, why didn't I learn to dance in that  room? The two 
So if the 
Had I learned it, would my high school  career have been more pleasant? Would it have made any difference at all? Would  I have become a dancing fool and abandoned all my other interests in order to  pursue the swing dancing that we called jitterbug?
If I had learned to fast-dance to "Opus  One" in the rec room in the nuns' house, who know what would have become of me?  Whenever I hear "Opus One" now, I'm reminded of how my life did unfold,  progressing along its path to end up in unlikely  
Copyright 2010 Ann Tudor
 
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