How Will the Children Find Peace?
My family was ahead of its time. Mine was not the idyllic late-sixties childhood. I was a latch-key kid a decade or more before there was a name for such a thing. But even before my latch-key days I was ahead of my time. I attended a unique private school in Culver City, CA which provided both before and after school care.
It began in my pre-K year. I must have been four years old. My mother and I would get up early in the morning, while it was still dark, to get me dressed in my uniform. I ate my breakfast, and then we were off to work. Mom would pull the car up to the curb in front of the school. There Mrs. Aiken was waiting to escort me through the glass double-doors of that two-story building. It all seems so ritzy in retrospect - as if I were the daughter of a president or a celebrity. At the time it felt ordinary.
Inside those doors they taught the little ones, pre-K and Kindergarten, to sing in French. They taught us to use paste, and not to eat it. They let us play, too, in the miniature wooden kitchen, and with a little wooden train set.
When we reached 1st Grade we wore different uniforms through those doors. Gone were the neat stiff blue-jeans and checked collared shirts. Big kids, we wore navy jumpers, white blouses and saddle shoes, and navy cardigans with a crest over our hearts. Now we were taught that if we were not busy with an assignment, we were to sit silent and still, hands folded and two feet on the ground.
They also taught us to dance. It was an escape for little girls like me, from sitting still, and from sports. On Monday, Tap. On Tuesday, Ballet. On Wednesday, Tap. On Thursday, Ballet. And so it alternated five days a week, every week of the school year. Ballet was the great joy of my early school years.
We also learned Spanish, and English, and Math, and spelling. I worked hard. We all did. To do otherwise was impermissible. As the hours passed we were ushered from one room to the next to learn each subject in a group organized not by grade-level but by our ability and personal progress.
I learned fast and well behind those doors. I also worked late.
This school not only provided morning supervision before classes, but after-school care, decades before such programs would become commonplace. As a result, I would arrive at school between 7 and 7:30 in the morning and remain behind those doors until 5:30 or 6, depending on how long my mom remained trapped in L.A. traffic. At certain times of the year it would be barely light when I was dropped off and dark when I got picked up to finally go home. I still remember the desolation of sometimes being the last child left, dark windows in my periphery, waiting to go home.
And so, I remember my first day at Sunday School.
It was shortly after my mom remarried and we moved to a different town. For some reason, my mom got it into her head to join the Lutheran church up the street. Perhaps we always went to church, but this is the first I remember of it.
As we got out of the car, Mom handed me a quarter, and I burst in to tears.
"What's the matter, Laurie?"
It was money for the offering plate.
But I thought it was lunch money. I thought was being sent off for another day of school, on the weekend. I was heartbroken.
Sadly, aside from felt-boards and smells, that first moment is all I remember of the years of Sunday School that would follow. I would never love it, because it would always represent for me a theft from the few precious unscheduled hours of my life.
And so, today, forty years or more later, when I see mommies and daddies rushing kids from here to there, from one scheduled, supervised activity to the next, my heart breaks a little. How will those children ever view church as anything but another thing on the already-full schedule? How will they ever recognize Christ as anything more than an add-on to an already-full life? How will they ever have the quiet moments to recognize the beauty of God's creation, to commune with their own souls, to count their blessings and reckon with their sins? When will they consider life and beauty, death and eternity?
As I consider how pressured I felt back then, how precious my unstructured down-time was to me, I think how much worse things would have been if I also had the technology available to me that kids have now. Would I have ever read a book just because I wanted to, drawn a picture just for the joy of it, or prayed in the quiet emptiness of my own room?
It began in my pre-K year. I must have been four years old. My mother and I would get up early in the morning, while it was still dark, to get me dressed in my uniform. I ate my breakfast, and then we were off to work. Mom would pull the car up to the curb in front of the school. There Mrs. Aiken was waiting to escort me through the glass double-doors of that two-story building. It all seems so ritzy in retrospect - as if I were the daughter of a president or a celebrity. At the time it felt ordinary.
Inside those doors they taught the little ones, pre-K and Kindergarten, to sing in French. They taught us to use paste, and not to eat it. They let us play, too, in the miniature wooden kitchen, and with a little wooden train set.
When we reached 1st Grade we wore different uniforms through those doors. Gone were the neat stiff blue-jeans and checked collared shirts. Big kids, we wore navy jumpers, white blouses and saddle shoes, and navy cardigans with a crest over our hearts. Now we were taught that if we were not busy with an assignment, we were to sit silent and still, hands folded and two feet on the ground.
They also taught us to dance. It was an escape for little girls like me, from sitting still, and from sports. On Monday, Tap. On Tuesday, Ballet. On Wednesday, Tap. On Thursday, Ballet. And so it alternated five days a week, every week of the school year. Ballet was the great joy of my early school years.
We also learned Spanish, and English, and Math, and spelling. I worked hard. We all did. To do otherwise was impermissible. As the hours passed we were ushered from one room to the next to learn each subject in a group organized not by grade-level but by our ability and personal progress.
I learned fast and well behind those doors. I also worked late.
This school not only provided morning supervision before classes, but after-school care, decades before such programs would become commonplace. As a result, I would arrive at school between 7 and 7:30 in the morning and remain behind those doors until 5:30 or 6, depending on how long my mom remained trapped in L.A. traffic. At certain times of the year it would be barely light when I was dropped off and dark when I got picked up to finally go home. I still remember the desolation of sometimes being the last child left, dark windows in my periphery, waiting to go home.
And so, I remember my first day at Sunday School.
It was shortly after my mom remarried and we moved to a different town. For some reason, my mom got it into her head to join the Lutheran church up the street. Perhaps we always went to church, but this is the first I remember of it.
As we got out of the car, Mom handed me a quarter, and I burst in to tears.
"What's the matter, Laurie?"
It was money for the offering plate.
But I thought it was lunch money. I thought was being sent off for another day of school, on the weekend. I was heartbroken.
Sadly, aside from felt-boards and smells, that first moment is all I remember of the years of Sunday School that would follow. I would never love it, because it would always represent for me a theft from the few precious unscheduled hours of my life.
And so, today, forty years or more later, when I see mommies and daddies rushing kids from here to there, from one scheduled, supervised activity to the next, my heart breaks a little. How will those children ever view church as anything but another thing on the already-full schedule? How will they ever recognize Christ as anything more than an add-on to an already-full life? How will they ever have the quiet moments to recognize the beauty of God's creation, to commune with their own souls, to count their blessings and reckon with their sins? When will they consider life and beauty, death and eternity?
As I consider how pressured I felt back then, how precious my unstructured down-time was to me, I think how much worse things would have been if I also had the technology available to me that kids have now. Would I have ever read a book just because I wanted to, drawn a picture just for the joy of it, or prayed in the quiet emptiness of my own room?
Comments
I am still so grateful for the years I spent at Genevieve Horton, and only wish I had stayed longer, rather than leaving after 3rd grade. I still draw on the lessons I learned there. I left the 3rd grade nearly ready for junior high. What a fine education!
So much to catch up on and remember, we'll have to email.
I followed you on facebook and left you a message which they said would be in your 'other' folder (or file) since we weren't connected yet.
I'm looking forward to visiting with you Laurie...hope you've had a lovely New Years weekend!
xo
Would you be willing to share you daughter's name? I and 24 Corners, both attended GH during that time. We would have been ahead of your daughter. I would have been in Kindergarten in 1970.
I still have my yearbooks from those days. I might be able to share them with you.
If you like, contact me via email. (I believe you can email me if you visit my profile.)
Laurie M....are you Laurie Pierce???
Please feel free to email me or to friend me on Facebook. Look for Laurie Pearce Mathers.
I'm sorry to be so slow to respond. This is an old post, so I didn't receive an email notification, and I haven't been attending to my blog lately.
I remember you!! I think I remember you and I playing together a lot in Kindergarten or so. I hope you are well. Please, if you are on Facebook, look me up: Laurie Pearce Mathers.
Apologies for being so slow to reply. I've been away from my blog for far too long.
How neat to hear from you after all this time (all these decades!). I looked for a Genevieve Horton page on Facebook many times. I'm surprised nobody has put one together. I'm in a Mar Vista group and a woman there drove by and took photos of the old school and posted them. All decrepit and fenced up now :-(.
I hope your life has been lovely and fulfilling. You were one of my nicest childhood friends. Why do I remember you had a horny toad or something like that?? Are you still in LA?
Looks like Jessica Mike didn't post again here. Bummer. I even remember Brent Sweet who posted here, but probably more from the little yearbooks we had. Yes I still have them, but I'm not s hoarder, I swear! Just pictures and records ;-)
Hope you write again soon. I'll look for you on FB. I know we are very different from each other, but that's ok!
Take care,
Tanya
Lance
I'm going to have to look you up in my yearbooks. Thanks for commenting!
Are you Lance O'hara?
If so I found your picture.
Susan Fisher
Tanya (Hutchison)
Thank you so much for this thread. I have deeply fond memories of going to Genevieve Horton from 1972-1977.
Ms. Blanco teaching us tap and ballet. I still have my toe shoes which never, ever fit right. Mrs. Whitacre teaching us music. Mrs. Messina and Mrs. Guerrero. Mr. Onishi and his mom, Mrs. Onishi were absolutely wonderful. I wish I had my yearbooks from there. I still have my blue sweater with the Genevieve Horton patch on it. I wish I could post a picture here! I have often wondered where everyone went. James Hecht and Derek Ego were the only other two people in my sixth grade class when we all graduated in 1977. Lisa Klafein was the only fifth grader that year. So, so many memories. Brent, I remember you. Angel, I remember your name too.
I feel really grateful for the independent learning. It's where I began my love of science which I continue to follow until this day. I wonder what became of Mrs. Horton. It would be fun to create a Facebook group for us.
I'm so glad you found us.
There is a Facebook page for our little group. I am its administrator. It doesn't get a whole lot of traffic, so I sometimes forget it's there. Search for Genevieve Horton Alumni.
In the meantime, I'll need to search for you in my yearbooks. Is Gruber your maiden name?