In the last three chapters, I’ve shared the stories of three women who played important roles in shaping the person I would become: Mother, Auntie Katie, and Auntie Baby. In Chapter Six of my work in progress, I tell the story about the handsome, young seminarian who entered my life and changed its course: Michael (fictitious name), my first love. At thirteen years old when we first met, I had already developed a close relationship with Jesus, but it was Michael who set me on the path to the religious life.
My deepening relationship with Jesus was a well-guarded secret. To speak of my love for Jesus was out of the question. As I’ve mentioned in an earlier chapter, we were not a family of huggers and kissers. What’s more, those three little words “I love you” were not uttered among us.
For right or wrong, good or evil, truth or deception, I was shaped by the society that sustained me. During those early days of youthful innocence, our country was undergoing political, economic, and social upheavals that would later remold my self-identity.
Chapter Six: My Secret Love
Mother and Father were not church goers, nor did they share any religious beliefs with us kids. Father, though, told us stories about his encounters with the spirit world. We learned about the time a spirit sat down at the foot of his bed. Did the spirit say anything, we asked him? Was it someone he knew? He had lost both of his parents at a young age. Father didn’t see the spirit nor hear any sound. But he had seen the indentation of the bed where the spirit sat watching him. He remembered shivering with cold. My young mind was enthralled.
Several times, he told us, in the quiet of the night, a spirit would call his name. Father didn’t know why. He always took it as a warning of trouble to come. Trouble always seemed to follow him, Mother used to say. Like the day, during a cricket match with his friends, the hard cricket ball struck him in the face, breaking his nose. Distrustful of doctors, Father never got his nose fixed. It healed crooked, making his handsome face mean-looking whenever he got angry.
Was the woman we called “Grandmother” watching over us? At the time, she was the only person I knew who had passed away. Auntie Baby told us that, after her adopted mother’s death, she sometimes heard her rocking chair creak in the adjacent bedroom she occupied in life.
Stories of individual encounters with spirits of white slave owners and overseers abounded in our small world. The brutality of slavery and indentureship haunted us still. The tormented souls of our ancestors seemed to cry out to us from the earth beneath our feet.
Such experiences that we humans are also spiritual beings, with souls that live on after death, became an indisputable part of my belief system. From an early age, my soul was as real to me as my face, hands, and beating heart. My acceptance of an invisible divine being, Creator of the Universe, came as natural as breathing.
When Auntie Baby moved in with us in the tenement yard bottom flat, I began attending Sunday Mass with her. As I learned more about God our Creator at primary school run by Catholic nuns, my life changed. Belief in the divine power residing in my soul gave me the courage to face my fears and deal with the violence that was part of our everyday lives. After completing elementary school, I moved on to the high school managed by the same religious community.
I was a thirteen-year-old junior high school student when a handsome seminarian entered my life. Michael, the nineteen-year-old son of the landlord of our Queenstown bottom flat, returned home in August that year while we were on school holidays. At the time, he was studying for the priesthood at the seminary located at the Mount Saint Benedict Abbey in the Caribbean Island of Trinidad. During his first week home, my siblings and I became his captivated audience. Bible stories, like that of David and Goliath, kept my three younger brothers still and quiet, at least for a while.

On Sunday mornings, off we all went to church with Michael. He encouraged us to attend daily morning Mass, but I was the only one who prevailed after he returned to Trinidad. Witnessing his love for God set my feet firmly on the path to a devout Christian life.
My religious fervor grew in high school where, in our Religious Knowledge classes, I became acquainted with the life and teachings of Jesus. I had no doubt: Jesus loved me. His love resided in my soul, the deepest and innermost place of my being. My secret place where no one else could enter.
When my curves filled out into a blooming fifteen-year-old young lady, Michael began to see me in a different light. The morning he took me to Church on his bicycle, I was in heaven. When we got to church, he didn’t sit next to me but took the seat behind me. Before Mass, while I was seated in the pew, he knelt behind me, his head close to my right ear. “You have a beautiful neck,” he whispered.

Photo Credit: Michael Francois
That year, my admiration for the seminarian grew into infatuation. Whenever I heard the clang of the landlord’s gate, I ran to our front window to watch Michael ride by on his bicycle. My heart hammered with excitement. Mother’s keen eyes didn’t miss the new development in our friendship. During one of his conversations with Mother, with me present, Michael mentioned that, if he ever chose to marry, he would like to have a large family. I wanted no children but said nothing. Besides, marriage was not part of my plans for the future.
Another time, when the subject of cooking came up, Michael said that the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach. I fell for the bait and invited him to dinner. Father showed me how to prepare his Chinese chicken recipe, a favorite of mine. I reveled in Michael’s company as he sat across from me at our dining room table to eat what I had prepared for him. Mother showed no disapproval of my flirtation with the landlord’s son.
Father’s intentions took a different course. One of his Chinese friends, Trevor, a young man in his twenties whose family owned and operated a hardware store in downtown Georgetown, showed an interest in me. When I told Trevor about my plans to enter the convent, he tried winning me over to his church, Jehovah’s Witnesses. We often got into heated religious discussions. Their belief that only 144,000 people would enter God’s Kingdom in Heaven at the End of Days was one of my top issues of disagreement. Assured that his church held the truth, he would smile at me as I defended my position.
With the permission of Mother and Father, I accepted Trevor’s invitation for a ride on his new motorcycle. I clung to him around his waist, exhilarated with the wind in my face and hair. On another occasion, he took me to the cinema to watch a movie I had indicated an interest in seeing. No kiss occurred, much to my best friend’s disappointment.
As a senior high art student, I had Trevor pose for a portrait done in pencil. He thanked me with a box of small tubes of acrylic paints, made in China. The paints were a hit with the other two students in our advanced art class. Imported Chinese products were rare in the late 1960s. When he discovered that I liked the Chinese sour candy dried plums, he began bringing me a packet on subsequent visits.
Imagine my shock, the day he broke the news of his upcoming marriage. I refused to believe him. He had never brought any girl to our house during his visits with Father.
“I’ll believe you when I see you two at the altar,” I told him.
Trevor just gave me his usual all-knowing smile, guaranteed to irk me.
The news also surprised Father.
“When you see so,” Mother said, after Trevor had left, “it must be an arranged marriage.”
The following month, together with Mother and Father, I attended Trevor’s wedding reception held at the Chinese Association building. On observing the newlyweds together, I had to agree with Mother’s assumption. The bride was like a swan; the bridegroom was more like a rooster.
That same year, Michael was ordained to the priesthood. Other teenage girls flocked to hear him say Mass, robbing me of his sole attention. Over the next two years, before I left home to enter the convent, our paths rarely crossed as he no longer returned to his father’s house in Queenstown for the August holidays.
I could tell that Father was disappointed in not having Trevor as a son-in-law—a young man he liked and trusted and who would’ve given me financial security. What Father couldn’t see or refused to accept was that I had already made my choice. My heart belonged only to Jesus the Nazarene, my secret love.


Your father sounds a very interesting man, I’ve always thought that we are too quickly dismissive of the spirit world. So many people are too quick to laugh at what they don’t understand , and therefore fear.
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John, thanks for your kind words about my father. I was fortunate to have seen a different side of him after Mother left him.
Thank you, too, for not being dismissive about my belief in the spirit world. I stopped sharing stories of my own encounters with the “other side” after being ridiculed as being backward by an American writer in a former writing group.
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Many people are frightened of the unknown and respond, like babies, by laughing at what they don’t understand. My own supernatural encounter was in my blog……….
It’s the Witching Hour : Story Number Eleven
Please feel free to search the blog and read this really quite inexplicable tale.
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Intriguing, John. I’ll be sure to check it out on your blog.
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John, I found and read your post of October 31, 2015 but could not leave a comment. I don’t doubt that you experienced what you did.
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A very profound episode, Rosaliene
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Thanks very much, Derrick 🙂
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Rosaliene, a very interesting chapter about a very interesting chapter in your life. A person’s teen years are so intense and formative.
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Thanks very much, Dave 🙂
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Rosaliene, I thoroughly enjoyed reading this & look forward to more! In my teens, my girlfriend, eventually my wife, refused to sit on the crossbar of my bicycle, too dangerous she said! So, we walked everywhere, something we still do, now in our 70’s, my long strides shortening to hers! 🤗🙋♂️
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What joy to my ears, Ashley! It’s so difficult to know how readers will respond to my stories. In a small city built on a flat terrain, bicycles were a common means of transport during my youth. We sat on the crossbar with no thought of any danger. Your girlfriend had no idea what she was missing in having you so close and intimate while sitting on the crossbar 🙂
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Hi. A very interesting chapter. You have had a fascinating life.
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Thanks very much, Neil 🙂
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Rosaliene,
You do write from your heart. What a beautiful story.
You know there are no coincidences, and your father’s brushes with the spirit world confirm my belief that the partitions are permeable.
Your introduction to Catholicism, and to the convent also interests me, because it reminds me of Clarence Thomas, whose memoir I started re-reading last night. You probably know that he is one of the conservative justices of the US Supreme Court who is being targeted by a contingent of Congresspeople, based on a flurry of accusations that I can’t untangle.
I do know that he grew up in Savannah, in a black, riverside enclave, down the tidal creek from where I spent my childhood and to which I’ve returned now.
His memoir, “My Grandfather’s Son”, was published in 2007, and I bought it when it first came out, because of the local connection, and because of his stand against eminent domain. At the time, I was heavily involved in local politics and particularly concerned about the use of eminent domain in Savannah’s so-called “blighted neighborhoods”, largely black, run-down areas of town along the Savannah River, which was being deepened to accommodate large Panamax cargo ships from China.
This is and was supported by the Army Corps of Engineers and local US Congresspeople, like Jack Kingston, and state Senator Eric Johnson.
Long story short, the river deepening project was coordinated with local mucky mucks in real estate and government, who pushed through an increase in local sales taxes to fund public indebtedness for local housing projects by private developers to clean up “blighted neighborhoods”. A “public-private partnership”.
At that time, I happened to meet several retired engineers from the Corps of Engineers at a coffee shop near my stomping grounds, in the area where Clarence Thomas had also started out, and across town from the Savannah River. We survivors have maintained contact, mostly by e-mail, for 15 years. I recently learned from Carl, another Catholic and staunchly conservative, about the effort in DC to target conservative Supreme Court justices, like Thomas and Alito.
In the Now, Pfizer, the pharmaceutical giant and seller of the questionable mRNA “vaccine” against Covid-19, is in trouble, because of reports that these treatments are not working and may be doing great harm to those who have “taken the jab”. Clarence Thomas was a voice against Pfizer’s bid for expansion of eminent domain, in the 2007 Supreme Court’s Kelo decision. I wonder if there’s a connection.
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Katharine, I’m so glad that you’ve enjoyed reading Chapter Six 🙂 How good to know that we share something else in common: a belief in the spirit world. The partitions are more permeable than we realize.
I’m very biased in my thinking when it comes to Justice Clarence Thomas, due to Anita Hill’s accusations of sexual harassment. He lost my trust in his integrity.
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So many great details; the Chinese paints, the plum candies, the bicycle ride together. I wondered if Trevor had asked you to marry him, would you have considered it? If his marriage had not been arranged… Did he ever try to hold your hand? Such a sweet young love story.
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Rebecca, it’s interesting that you consider my friendship with Trevor as a love story since we were not dating or “going steady” as we called it in those days. He never tried to hold my hand, nor did I expect him to. As a senior high school student, I was not yet available for a marriage proposal. Besides, Trevor knew that I was very determined about entering the convent.
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Yes, Rosaliene, it felt like a chaste love story. Perhaps my own projection. When I was in high school, there was a man in his late twenties who was always kind to me. We would talk at the church social hours. He was 12 years older, I would say. He married when I was a senior and I was sad he married before I was of age. He divorced two years later, shattered.
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Rebecca, perhaps you’re right in thinking it was a chaste love story. How sad that your male friend’s marriage was short-lived! Trevor’s marriage also did not last. He and my father remained close friends over the years. I arranged to meet him when I returned to Guyana in 2001 following my father’s death. He took me on a drive along the coastline and prepared a package for me of all my favorite Chinese foods.
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Sweet end to the story too.
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🙂
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I love your writing style Rosaliene, it is very captivating! Your inner world you share is a treat, but at the same time I feel saddened by all the difficulties that you, your family and your community have gone through. Thank you for sharing!
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Tamara, I very much appreciate that you find my writing style captivating 🙂 🙂 As you well know, it’s the difficulties we overcome in life that make us strong and resilient individuals ❤
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Very well put! They do indeed, and thank goodness for that!
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I admire your writing! I always enjoy your stories that are packed with humour even though you are describing something sad. I’m also familiar with individuals who argue that eternal life belongs to the 144 000 only, who are not even members of Jehovah’s Witnesses.
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Zet Ar, how wonderful to know that my stories are “packed with humor”! I’m hopeless at telling jokes or trying to write humor. Could it be that the lightness/joyfulness in my writer’s voice comes through in my storytelling?
Crazy, isn’t it !? Just 144,000. . .
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Yea, let’s say it comes out naturally! Very crazy, they completely misunderstood.
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Zet Ar, some guys only see what they want to see.
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Your life has been, rich, difficult, painful but clearly sustained by your faith, Rosaliene. You are a woman of service and passionate opposition to those who would undermine the democracy we live in. Thank you for telling us more about your life
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My pleasure, Dr. Stein 🙂 Service and passion for the projects I undertake give meaning and joy to my life.
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Another evocative chapter, Rosaliene. The memories of those teen years remain vivid even after much time has passed because those relationships and interactions loom large in our young lives, and reading yours reminded me of some of mine. Good writing such as yours often helps the reader connect with their own life.
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Tracy, thanks so very much for your kind praise of my writing style 🙂 I’m so glad that this chapter has helped you to reconnect with your own teenage aspirations 🙂 We may come from different worlds, but we women share far more in common than we acknowledge or are aware of.
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YES to women sharing much in common, no matter where in the world we live and grow.
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Yes!
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This is a rich and interesting slice of life. I enjoyed reading about the romance, family life, and spirituality. It reminded that after my divorce, part of my healing from loneliness was to strengthen my relationship with Jesus. I would sometimes sing popular love songs when they came on the car radio substituting Jesus as the focus. It actually worked for many songs, with a little creative tweaking. It helped to know Jesus would always love me, no matter what. Jesus would/will never betray me or lead me to betray myself. Now, I’m reminded not to take that deeper, unconditional love for granted.
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JoAnna, I’m happy that you could connect in some way with my story 🙂 Thanks for sharing your own relationship with Jesus ❤ Your mention of listening to love songs and substituting Jesus as the focus brought to mind the time in the novitiate when I played one of Elvis Presley's songs during our community Morning Prayer. If I recall correctly it was his song "The Wonder of You." In the novitiate, the sisters, including we-two novices, took turns preparing the morning reflections before the celebration of Mass.
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I love that you played that Elvis song during Morning Prayer. I’m not a big fan of Elvis’s style, but he did have some powerful songs. I just listened to “The Wonder of You” and wonder if he ever thought of God or Jesus when he wrote/sang it.
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JoAnna, it’s possible that the composition of this song is tied up with his early religious upbringing. He also recorded three albums of gospel music.
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I didn’t know that. Interesting.
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Rosaliene, I thoroughly enjoy your storytelling – how you weave many elements and parallel plots into your story. Several personal connections for me as well as learning more about you. A wonderful read! Thank you.
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Thanks very much, Michele! So glad that you enjoy my storytelling and can connect in some way 🙂
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I really enjoyed this story. You describe the universal trials of being an adolescent so well.
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Thanks so much, Mara!
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Such lovely memories of your family, friends, and evolving spirituality, Ros, told with honesty and touching details. 💜
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Thanks very much, Carol ❤
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NICE POST 💚❤️💖
Blessed and Happy day from Spain 🇪🇸🫂
Greetings 👋
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Thanks very much, pk 🙂
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It’s creepy how men prey on younger women when they’re still learning about the world. It’s like how creepy men nowadays don’t want women over 25 because they have “baggage”. Um, no. We don’t have baggage. We just aren’t putting up with their s- anymore
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Thanks for sharing, Claire. I will address such “creepy men” in future chapters. I’m happy to know that today’s young women have a greater voice than we did in the 1960s.
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I certainly understand the generation gap. Women of my parents’ and grandparents’ generation didn’t have nearly as many options, and it was all swept under the rug. Those people wouldn’t have spoken out about people like Andrew Tate and the people who follow him
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Your storytelling captivated me, Rosaliene!
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Thanks very much, Crystal! What more can a writer want? 🙂
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Thank you for sharing your memories!!.. “Every single thing that has ever happened in your life is preparing you for a moment that is yet to come” (Author Unknown), and as the Chaplain told my late wife “it is what is in the heart that matters, not a name above a door”… 🙂
Hope life is all that you wish for it to be and until we meet again…
May the dreams you hold dearest
Be those which come true
May the kindness you spread
Keep returning to you
(Irish Saying)
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So true, Dutch! Thanks for adding your thoughts ❤
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