My aunt Bridie was a nun.
Coming from a poor, rural background in 1950s Ireland, opportunities were limited. It was not uncommon for the bright young men and women of that time, who were not going to inherit anything, who couldn’t be supported by hardscrabble farming, and who may simply have fancied a life away, to go into the church.
A couple of Bridie’s sisters emigrated to Philadelphia. Bridie took holy orders, moved to England and, becoming Sister Martina, committed her life to Christ. She worked in an orphanage in Leeds for a time before training as a teacher.
My views of nuns are slightly coloured by attending a convent school. The nuns teaching us there were not bad, but they had a rather unique way about them – you would not cross them. That said, there remain few things funnier than two nuns, in habits, in the front seat of a small car, staring ahead with focus, burning through the revs as they gain speed but refusing to change out of second gear. Thank god for that abiding image.
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I liked Bridie. She was kind and always seemed to be making gifts for me. Time with her as an adult was short. She died suddenly and prematurely, just over 20 years ago. It was an accident. She slipped and fell, banging her head on the back step of the order’s house. And that was that.