Read A Field Guide to Awkward Silences Online
Authors: Alexandra Petri
“Thank you for that,” the pastor said.
I felt like the Emperor’s New Whistler. Everyone still sat forward with a baffled expression, like maybe if they thought it through a couple more times what I had just done would be impressive. A man got up and started leading us in prayer. He thanked the Lord for sending me to whistle “Let Freedom Ring.”
Maybe
that’s
what I whistled.
• • •
As soon as the service was over, I hightailed it out of there, breezing past congregation members who came up timidly to say, “I wish I could do what you do.”
“You can!” I tried to tell them. “Did you hear that? I’m not a whistler. I’m an impostor. You definitely can do what I did. Anyone can. All you have to do is put your lips together and blow. It’s not like I’m Alice Shaw.”
“Alice who?”
“You know, the famous lady whistler, with the decollet—”
A blank look. “I don’t know these whistler things.”
Whistler things. Oh God. Maybe I’m one of them, after all.
Once, in high school, I was Jesus.
I don’t know if it helped on my college application or not.
Then again, you can never really tell what is going to help with a college application. I once spoke to the head of the Harvard admissions department for a story and she told me that, as “supplemental material,” somebody had mailed in a taxidermied squirrel. The reason this did not help the person’s application was not, as you might expect, because it was a taxidermied squirrel, but because it was not a
well-
taxidermied squirrel. It started to fall apart in the mailroom. So the takeaway here was not, “Don’t mail a dead squirrel to the Harvard admissions department” but actually, “If you’re going to mail a dead squirrel to Harvard, make sure that you taxidermy that thing correctly.”
But people will try anything.
That wasn’t why I was Jesus, though.
I was doing it because I was in a church youth group, it was Easter season, my church was doing a tableau of Stations of the Cross—all the spots Jesus stopped on his way to getting crucified—and there were no other volunteers.
Really, that last reason was why. It wasn’t the most stringent
church youth group in the world—we were Episcopalian (as Robin Williams liked to say, “Catholic Lite—all of the pageantry, none of the guilt”), where church is really more of an excuse to wear a bow tie once a week than anything. Some people say they’re spiritual but not religious—we were religious but not spiritual. All Christ Church asked was that we show up once a week, sometimes for pizza and a movie with Spiritual Implications like
Lord of the Flies
or
Dead Poets Society
. We also sold pancakes, Super Bowl chili, and holiday wreaths—well, Christmas wreaths; I guess selling wreaths with your church group is one context where it’s definitely safe to say “Christmas” instead of “holiday”—and saved the money to go on pilgrimage. We sold a lot of pancakes, so we flew to Ireland. A previous group that had not really had their act together had gotten only as far as Canada, and I think they had to go on foot.
Among the many great facets of Episcopalianism—besides choral music and never having to feel guilt—is that women in the church can do all the things men can. You can’t be pope, but then again, neither can anyone else. So when nobody else volunteered to be in our Station (we were supposed to depict Saint Veronica wiping the face of Jesus with her handkerchief), I got the gig.
Veronica was portrayed by my friend Michaela. We were the two least cool members of youth group. During the pilgrimage to Ireland I bought books and she read them. Everyone else got sucked into a vortex of drama because one of the couples in our group had decided to break up and wanted us to take sides. Horribly complicated alliances formed and dissolved wherever you looked. It resembled the lead-up to World War I. (The fact that I suggested it resembled the lead-up to World War I tells you just how cool I was.)
When it came time to be Jesus it was a bright warm spring afternoon. I put on a white robe. Michaela and our deacon very carefully drew a thick beard on me with face paint and eyebrow pencil.
I tried to look beatific. If there was ever a time to look beatific, I reasoned, now would be it. It was harder to look beatific when I was outside toting a large wooden cross down the sidewalk, to the excitement of onlookers, but that seemed about right for the part. The good thing about being Jesus was that if people reviled you and muttered all kinds of evil against you, you could argue that you were just doing your job.
I staggered over to Michaela in what I hoped was a stately but pained manner. She wiped my face with her handkerchief. In the actual story, there was an image of Jesus left in the handkerchief and it became a sacred relic. In our rendition, there was a big brown smudge from where my beard had rubbed off. It wasn’t really the sort of object you wanted to make into a relic. Then again, people made relics out of knee bones and things, so you could never be sure. Maybe it would have been exactly the ticket.
“Bless you, my child,” I said. (That was my one line.) I might also have said, “Please, I’m thirsty.”
I handed the cross off to a member of the congregation and staggered beatifically offstage.
• • •
Being Jesus was not actually that hard. This surprised me, given all the literature. If all you had to do to make it into Heaven was walk in the footsteps of Jesus, I was going to be a shoo-in.
A few years passed.
Heaven slipped a little out of mind, to be replaced with more practical concerns. Like college.
College and Heaven seemed to have a lot in common. Everything I had heard about college suggested that it was an earthly paradise. You could drink and lie around all day, surrounded by a minimum of seventy-two virgins. Probably more, if you took advanced math. You
would never have to work again. There would be free wings, on Wednesdays, anyway.
The only trick was getting there.
Having religion had prepared me well for the college application process. There was a kind of religious warfare between different approaches. You could take the puritanical approach—make your children as miserable as possible for as long as possible by forcing them to wear drab uniforms and banning fun. In the end, it turned out that the whole process was random and the only people who were rewarded were the members of a tiny, preselected elite.
Or you could try to buy your way in with costly indulgences. (“The gymnasium is named after me! And I donated this relic of a thighbone! Junior’s getting in for sure.”)
I read somewhere that the emperor Charlemagne used to be followed around at all times by a monk, ready to baptize him at a moment’s notice if he ever showed the slightest sign of being about to die, so that he could go straight to Heaven with a clean conscience. These days, this approach is called helicopter parenting. People hover just over their children’s shoulders, feeding them SAT words, shredding incautious birds in their rotating blades.
If you’re not sure your kid is amassing enough virtue just sitting at home studying for six to eight AP’s, you can always send Junior off on a children’s crusade to wage holy battles abroad. Access to lepers is preferable.
There are some doubters and heretics who don’t believe in life after high school, of course. But everyone else picks up a backpack burden and makes his pilgrim’s progress through the Slough of Deadlines and the Vanity College Fair as best he can. Then, senior fall, he stands at the gate, hearing his virtues and sins read off, trying to figure out where to get a letter of recommendation to enter
the Celestial University. (Wow,
Pilgrim’s Progress
–based puns don’t really pay off, huh? Hi, one old man just outside Phoenix laughing hysterically, alone. I’m sorry, everyone else.)
“What about all these church activities?” our college counselor asked, looking at my sheet.
I had more church activities than you would expect, which is to say, I was still engaged in any church activities at all. Youth Group had disbanded a while ago, but I was still lurking around. There were free doughnuts, and I needed something to do during the hour before children’s choir practice. I was no longer, strictly speaking, a child, but the choir director was desperate to keep me because I was one of two members of the choir who did not cry and try to eat the sheet music. The other one was the choir director’s son. And his voice was changing, a fact that she refused to acknowledge and that made us especially pleasant to listen to. It was a little embarrassing to be the only person in the choir taller than four feet, but the alternative, Mrs. Harris assured me, was too horrible to contemplate. They would have to switch entirely to handbells.
To pass the time before practice, I offered to teach Sunday school. This was a sort of futuristic Montessori hybrid Sunday school where you were supposed to let the children discover Jesus on their own initiative. My function was to sit at the edge of the room and look encouraging. In order to do this, I had to attend several training sessions. During one of these sessions the woman instructing us accidentally dropped a small toy Jesus that was made out of wood. Then she apologized to it.
After this I decided that maybe Sunday school teaching was not my line.
“Do you think you could get one of these people to write you a recommendation?” our school’s college counselor asked.
I shrugged. “I could try.”
This was how I wound up with a letter of recommendation from our church deacon that started, “Ever since I saw Alexandra take on the role of Jesus, I have been convinced that she would be a good fit for your university.” I didn’t really think my Jesus had been that memorable, but when Deacon Jane got going, she really got going. Apparently I had been the Golden Jesus Standard by which all others were to be measured. The admissions department would be lucky if I didn’t get taken up into the sky on a trailing cloud of glory before their letter reached me. Such was my commitment to the role that I was probably out right now tending to a leper.
• • •
I frowned at it. Applying to college tends to make you question your motives anyway. Here you had thought you were just studying Ancient Greek because you wanted to know Ancient Greek or being Jesus in a church pageant because, well,
someone
had to be Jesus in your church pageant. But it turned out that college had been lurking at the back of your mind all along, hadn’t it? Were you being good because you wanted to be good? Or were you being good because you hoped that you’d be rewarded? You were just as bad as the meek, sidling around being meek all the time just so they could inherit the earth away from the rest of us. Those sneaks.
It was a catch-22. The trouble was that the best way to fake genuine enthusiasm was to be genuinely enthusiastic. But then were you trapped in a long con? Were you genuinely enthusiastic because you knew that this was the best way to get what you wanted? So that you could say, “No, I’m real, not like the others. I don’t care about the point value! I’m not grubbing for indulgences.”
It was the sort of thing that probably kept John Calvin awake at night.
Why was I walking around trying to impersonate Jesus, anyway?
I began to feel some serious doubt. I couldn’t be an atheist. I don’t
like lots of bumper stickers. I couldn’t be an agnostic. I don’t like admitting there are things I don’t know. What did that leave? What was I supposed to do?
At least for college, my suspicious Jesus activity had its intended effect.
Like Heaven, college is a consequence-free zone full of robes. It does’t prepare you for life. It barely prepares you for the workforce. College actively makes you less fit for most jobs than you were during high school. You stop being required to show up in places at specific times, a skill that is useful for adults to have. Instead, you develop an uncanny ability to cook noodles in settings where, frankly, you should not be cooking anything. The workforce needs you to be able to do basic math? Nuts to you, workforce! Here is a course called “How to Befriend a Number” that counts toward your math requirement. (Seriously. I once took a science course called “Nanothings,” whose entire message was, I quote, “Small things are different.” For my final project, I wrote a play about a ray of light that could not decide if he were a particle or a wave.) The workforce wants you to be able to arrive at work at nine a.m.? Oh, Workforce, that’s cute. At college we learn to say the phrase “I do most of my best work after one a.m.” with actual conviction. Why not? There is seldom class before noon, if you pick the right major.
And then it turns out there’s a Beyond after all, outside the gates. And this time, you’re completely unprepared.
So forget life after death. I’m barely figuring out life after college.
Maybe I should get a monk to follow me around, though. Just in case.