The Holy Spirit, III

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The Holy Spirit, III

 
By Melissa Tawn
 
Did Dr. Gold’s talk at the Convent of the Holy Spirit do any good at all?


 
 

NOTE: You have to read the first two parts of this story to understand what is going on here.

 
 

Dr. Gold did not expect to hear any reaction to her talk at the Convent of the Holy Spirit, except possibly from the sisters themselves. The convent was, after all, cut off from the rest of the world. She was therefore very surprised when her boss, Dr. Jayne Mautner, brought up the topic one day, while the two were eating lunch together, as they did every day, at their favorite restaurant.

“I hear that you created quite a stir at the CHS, Catherine” said Dr. Mautner. “Yes I did,” responded Dr. Gold, “but how did you know about it?” “Oh,” replied Dr. Mautner smiling, “I have my spies everywhere.”

She then went on to explain that, several years before, one of the sisters at the Convent of the Holy Spirit had actually filed a lawsuit against the surgeon who had operated on her, claiming that he turned her into a “freak”, who could no longer function in society. Dr. Mautner had been requested by the defense to serve as an expert witness. She had asked the doctor what happened, and he explained that the patient had adamantly refused all psychological counseling or any preparatory sessions with a gender specialist, and had insisted on an immediate operation.

“I told him he was a damned fool for operating under those circumstances,” she said, “and he agreed. But at the time he was caught up in a very messy divorce situation and - quite frankly - he needed the money. In any case, he was smart enough to have videotaped his meetings with the patient in which he repeatedly stressed the importance of psychological counseling in the strongest terms, and he made her sign a disclaimer saying that she had heard and understood his advice on the subject and, of her own free will, rejected it. The document specifically absolved him of all responsibilities for anything that would befall her as a result of her failure to heed his advice. He won the case, by the way.”

Dr. Mautner had insisted on physically examining the plaintiff sister involved, and the Mother Superior at the time refused, citing the order’s rules. However, Dr. Mautner was able to obtain a court order to force the issue, and so was let into the convent for that purpose and that purpose only. The Mother Superior insisted, as a condition, that one of the other sisters be present at all times during the examination.

“It turned out, quite fortuitously, that the nun she picked was in fact a former patient of mine, who was using the name Sister Serena.” “I met her there,” said Dr. Gold, “but I don’t recall her being a patient in our clinic.”

“It was during the year you were on sabbatical,” said Dr. Mautner. “Dr. Hardy, who replaced you while you were away, treated her. I will tell you her real name, and you can look up the file when we get back to the office, if you wish. Her story is a very sad one, I am afraid.”

Dr. Mautner went on to relate how Sister Serena had actually had a fairly good transition. She was no raving beauty, but was accepted as a woman by others in her surroundings and found a reasonable job as a copywriter for a local advertising agency, which fit her abilities. She seemed to be on the way to a rather humdrum but otherwise normal life. “And then,” said Dr. Mautner, “she fell in love with one of the men in her office. I mean really head-over-heels in love. All was well at first, but then the guy found out that she was a post-op transsexual and started to emotionally abuse her in the worst possible way. Within a few months, she had lost all confidence in herself and, literally, refused to leave her apartment because she was convinced the whole world was making fun of her. By the time I found out what had happened to her, and offered my help, she was already involved with the CHS people, and soon afterwards moved into the convent.”

“She is number-two honcho there now,” said Dr. Gold, “so it has apparently helped her.”

“That is not quite true,” said Dr. Mautner. “She was appointed to the position she holds because she is very articulate and makes a nice impression on outsiders. But she really has very little power. The Mother Superior, Sister Mary-Hope, is as manipulative, scheming, and power-hungry a person as she was when she was a national political figure. Some things even surgery cannot change. In fact, it is because of her feelings of ambiguity to the whole convent that Sister Serena contacted me again a few years ago.”

“She contacted you? That must have been very difficult. I gathered that the only telephone and computer link in the entire convent are in Sister Mary-Hope’s office.”

“That is probably true. However, Sister Serena sometimes had to leave the convent to take care of outside business. One time she had to go to Indianapolis to appear before some subcommittee of the legislature that - under pressure from the Catholic church - decided to investigate the CHS, yet again. (As usual, her appearance was extremely effective and the idea of an investigation was dropped.) She called me from there and spilled out her doubts and fears. We finally ended up conspiring together to bend the convent rule, if not actually break it.”

“What did you do?”

“I opened a cellular-phone account in my name, and gave her the phone. She smuggled it back into the convent in her habit. Since that day, she calls and texts me quite regularly. That is how I know all about what happened at your talk. You apparently opened a whole can of worms there, and the sisters talk about it constantly. They definitely find your ideas intriguing, though controversial.”

“Well, I suppose that Sister Mary-Hope can only blame herself, since she was the one who initiated the idea of outside speakers.”

“Is that what she told you? She really is a manipulative bitch! The idea actually came from several of the other nuns, and Sister Mary-Hope fought it with all of her power, but lost in a showdown at one of the weekly conclaves. I suppose that every politician uses the same trick - if you cannot stop something from happening, you co-opt it and take all the credit for it. By the way, I was the one who suggested, through Sister Serena, that you be the first speaker. I figured that you are blunt enough to stir the waters, as you surely did.”

“Well, the whole idea of that convent really ticked me off,” said Dr. Gold. “It is against everything I stand for. Separating oneself from society is never the answer.”

“Are you sure?” replied Dr. Mautner. “I thought so too at the beginning, but Sister Serena convinced me that I might be wrong. I know that the current belief among professionals is that one should not institutionalize social misfits but try to alter the norms of society to allow them to live lives as productive and normative as they can within the social milieu, and I know you believe in that strongly. But does that work all of the time? Consider the mentally weak and the nonviolent mentally ill. A generation ago, they were released en masse from institutions and asylums and set adrift in the ‘normal’ world, into which they were somehow to be integrated. Of course, they were supposed to be under constant supervision and care of counselors and doctors, but as we know there is never enough money available for adequate supervision. Many of them made it - more or less -- but a good number did not, and just drifted under the social radar and into the ranks of the homeless. Is living out of a shopping cart and sleeping in a cardboard box behind K-Mart really preferable to being incarcerated in a closed institution?

There are some people who just cannot adjust to society, even to a society which has made strides to accept them. For them, a closed environment just might be the best solution. Remember that the sisters of the Convent of the Holy Spirit were not sentenced there. They are, legally, sane and rational adults who made their decision of their own accord. They joined the convent voluntarily and can leave any time they wish. From what I understand from Sister Serena, the CHS Foundation awards a very generous amount of money to any sister who feels that her place is no longer in the convent, so that she may restart her life on the outside, and that a few sisters have actually taken this route in the past.”

“Sure they can leave, just like Sartre’s version of hell in his play No Exit,” replied Dr. Gold. “The door is open and anyone can leave hell whenever they want - but nobody does. Or maybe the Convent of the Holy Spirit should be thought of as a cloistered version of the Hotel California. Nobody leaves. Still, I can only hope that, after my talk, some will find courage to head for the door.”

“It won’t happen,” replied Dr. Mautner. “I asked Sister Serena if she would consider leaving based on your talk, and she said no. While she thought that many of the other sisters might perhaps benefit from what you said, she also felt that her case was too far gone. She could never risk trying to live a ‘normal life’ again. I asked her to sound out the others and, the next time we talked, she said that everyone she talked to felt the same way. Every sister she spoke to gave the same response: Dr. Gold’s talk was very thought-provoking and might apply to some of the others, but not to her!”

“They are all in denial,” said Dr. Gold.

“Or they are all brutally honest about the situation,” responded Dr. Mautner. “One has no way of knowing. But why, in the name of some prevailing sociological theory, deny them the opportunity to live in a way which they feel fits them or castigate them for doing so? The whole problem of a transsexual finding her place in society is a very complex one, as you know, and the more options available the better. This includes the option of dropping out of society, if she feels that she just can’t handle it.”

Since it was her turn, Dr. Gold took out her credit card to pay for the meal. She will have a lot of thinking to do, when she will get back to her office.

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Comments

The can of worms

ALISON

'just got larger.This is a brilliant piece of work,well thought out and intelligent.Really excellent
and intriguing and more than plausible.Thank you ,Melissa,you have provided food for much thought on
a contentious matter.I hope it provokes discussion among your readers.

ALISON

The Holy Spirit, III

Would be interesting to delve into Doctor Gold's reasoning.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine
    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

the other side of the argument

"There are some people who just cannot adjust to society, even to a society which has made strides to accept them. For them, a closed environment just might be the best solution." wonderfully articulate approach to this dilemma - first we got Dr. Gold on why you should not try and run away from society, and now we hear the other side presented. Excellent storytelling!

DogSig.png

My Lips Are Sealed

joannebarbarella's picture

After my comments on Holy Spirit II I ain't sayin' nothin' except "well done, Melissa",

Joanne

Poor Comparison

RAMI

Comparing the mentally weak and the nonviolent mentally ill, with the inmates (and I use that term specifically) of the CHS is a doubtful comparison in my mind. Unless a specific individual suffered such a great trauma to their psyche, as Sister Serena feels(in her own mind) happened to her, that such individual could be considered to be so mentally damaged as to be unable to function on even a minimal basis outside the walls of some institution, they likely do not have to be confined there..

So my question is, “Do all of the Sisters feel the same way about themselves as apparently Sister Serena does and to such a degree that they are willing to cut themselves off from society entirely and forever”. Of course we know nothing at this time about any other sister other then Sister Serena and the Mother Superior Sister Mary-Hope, so that question is open for debate.

Obviously the other Sister talked about, who had surgery without the benefit of psychological counseling, suffered a mental trauma after the surgery, that might have made her, “mentally weak or mentally ill” that would have required her to be segregated from society. While many of BCTS readers would consider this a poor comparison, I am sure many “normal” males (with no thoughts of wanting to be a female) would suffer a significant mental trauma, perhaps enough to require hospitalization, if after some event, the lost their male genitalia.

Obviously Sister Serena, feels comfortable enough about herself and how she presents herself to venture outside the confines of the convent. Perhaps with the proper psychological or psychiatric counseling (and perhaps even medication for anxiety or depression) she could return to a normal, non-cloistered life. Did she get such counseling after the incident at work? Did the counseling she received before returning to the “real world” after surgery, prepare her for rejection? Had she lost all of her support mechanisms after SRS to prevent her from coping?

I think there is something sinister about Sister Mary-Hope. While she does not have full and complete control over the CHS, her talents as a political manipulator allows her almost complete control.
In further comparing those who had been segregated because they were mentally weak or nonviolently mentally ill, with the Sisters, it is very important to remember that those individuals had access to proper psychological care and interaction with any family that remained. The Sister of CHS do not have that. They are cut off from family, former friends, outside society and if they do receive any mental health care, it is from professionals approved by Sister Mary-Hope who most certainly screens those professionals to make sure that none of them will cure the sisters of their phobias or counsel them to leave the convent. Dr. Gold would not be on the list of approved professionals

RAMI

RAMI

mentally weak and mentally ill

I do not think that Dr. Mautner intended to imply that the sisters at CHS were mentally weak or ill, merely that that same sociological imperative -- "we must deinstitutionalize them at all costs" -- which has created so many tragedies because it ignored the fact that many former inmates of state institutions could not function in an open environment no matter how good the intentions, should not be applied to this situation as well. Dr. Gold has taken it as axiomatic that -- for her own good -- every ts MUST try to find her place in society, and Dr. Mautner disagrees.

The sisters of the CHS have decided, of their own free will, to drop out of society and live a separate life which they felt is more suited to them. This, according to Dr. Mautner, is their right. It is interesting to speculate whether Dr. Gold's objections would have been as strong if, instead of a convent in Indiana, they chose to join a hippie commune in California.

Everyone has concepts of what should be

Everyone has concepts of what should be proper behavior, or what constitutes normalcy, Dr. Gold and every other psychwhatever included. What is best for one individual is often difficult to determine in the grand scheme of things, when being "normal" depends on a standard of being "statistically average". So we rely on that and try to determine of the amount of individual variation is within the "normal" range of sane behavior.

I once did a thought excercise to determine if it would be possible for an individual who was of sound body, and apparently mind, to rationally support the case for suicide - for him and him alone- to a psychiatrist. I concluded that due to the standards of mental health used by modern society, it would be difficult if not impossible. It was even hard for me to conceive of a logical argument that could be considered a reasoned philosophical approach, but then I am not especially logical since I have certain human biases. If the individual were physically ill, yes I could see the argument. But due to the standards of mental health, just the desire to end a healthy life free of duress of any sort would be seen as abnormal. I couldn't find the approach, still can't. And that is likely because I do value life, especially now, and most in the mental health field find that a basis of being sane.

So given Dr. Gold's professional views, it would be difficult for her to view the convent as a "normal" response to the insecurites of living in the "real" world, but rather see it as a withdrawal from social conflict, and not particularly healthy, though not illegal.

CaroL

CaroL

Dr. Mautner and Dr. Gold

The main difference in approach between Dr. Gold and Dr. Mautner -- which appears in several stories -- is that Dr. Gold, being an academic, tries to fit everything and everyone into theoretical frameworks whereas Dr. Mautner, being a surgeon, considers every person as a special case.

Diagnosis Fear of Rejection

Even when State Institutions were running I wouldn't think that any of the patients had a case file diagnosis "Fear of Rejection". Yes there are cloistered groups that separate themselves from society out of devotion to a god or goddess as the case may be, but to have groups separate themselves out of fear? Well all I have to say is "Don't drink the Kool-aid", we all know what happens when fear plays a factor don't we?

Dr Mautner to me sounds like a Kovorkian deciple, how she can agree with a patient who would refuse treatment to a diagnosed psychological problem is beyond my scope. Yes a patient has a choice to take treatment or not to take it, but to agree with them not taking treatment? Maybe I need a hipocratic moment, to swallow that line of thought.

Those are my thoughts on the matter as trivial as they are.

Melissa you've really started a think tank with this story, you are brilliant!

Hugs

Joanna Faith

Joanna Faith

Two sides of a double-headed coin

Thought provoking and brilliantly argued.

The Convent of the Holy Spirit appears to offer security, acceptance, and the fellowship of like-minded people - all at the expense of some loss of personal freedom.

Perhaps each sister opted for what she saw as the least stressful alternative; who's to say that she was wrong?

One size does not fit all.

Susie

I love how you keep playing Devil's Advocate

laika's picture

in this story (and we don't have to put up with Keanau Reeves)...

Dr. Mautner's drawing parallels between CHS sisters' situation and that of the "de-institutionalized" mentally ill describes only two alternatives---a locked ward or sleeping on the street---but nowadays there's also halfway houses. Not as many as they're should be, and some are better than others, but when they work they are pretty amazing; When you don't believe in yourself the encouragment from those who really get you---your fears and dreams and all that---can be incredibly healing. Peer support, peer counselling. My experience with these sorts of places had to do with addictions, but I think it could also work on phobias and alienation and crushed self-esteem. No, this isn't what the Convent was intended to be or what its goal is, and I guess I ultimately side with Dr. Gold because I think they're really missing a great opportunity, the kind of place it could be. A place to stay as long as you feel you have to, but with encouragement and lessons for those who want to rejoin the world.

Leaving the recovery home in 1984 my "graduating class" all tended to not stray very far apart, but all wound up living on the same few blocks of Dana Point California, often in the same building, always on the phone with each other, like baby birds learning to fly but knowing we weren't very strong yet, and I somehow (gee, I wonder why) wound up the only male in a social support-cell of women, an incredible community of sisters (WAY more loving and supportive than anyone in my genetic family) who taught me to do all kinds of normal things I never thought I was capable of. But this isn't going to happen at the Convent of the Holy Spirit, where the whole lesson hammered home by Sister Mary Hopeless is the world is (in effect) evil + you don't belong, will never survive out there, need to stay here forever. And that's some fucked up shit!

~~~opinionated hugs, Laika

Oh Yeah? No Keanu Reeves?

Andrea Lena's picture

...how about Keana?

"Whoa....Nuns....Lotsa Nuns!"


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Andrea Lena

  

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