Transcript
TERRY GROSS, HOST:
This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross. Life in a cloistered Carmelite monastery in a rural area in the north of England was almost the opposite of the life my guest Catherine Coldstream had lived before that. She had grown up in London and had lived in Paris, where she studied composition, worked in experimental music, and performed on viola. At the age of 24, after her father died and she was at rock bottom, she found God. Entering the monastery meant starting a new life cut off from the outside world. Monastery life revolved around silent prayer, group prayer, singing hymns, work and obedience. This new life seemed transcendent, but eventually she chafed against the obedience and the feeling that her artistic background, her intellectualism, and her questioning, the whole reality of her outlook and personality, were rejected. She ran away, returned, and two years later went through official channels and left for good. After leaving the monastery, she studied theology at Oxford University. She's written a new memoir called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun."
Catherine Coldstream, welcome to FRESH AIR. Your book is so beautifully written. It's hard to imagine you deprived of spoken words for 10 years. I know you had a half hour each day where you were allowed to speak. But what was it like for you to not speak?
CATHERINE COLDSTREAM: Well, it's a really strange thing because we - we, when I say we, the Carmelite Order - is often described as a silent order. And of course, there's a huge amount of silence in the daily life. But if you look at it another way, words are absolutely woven through the texture of your life because you are either chanting or reading or meditating on the Psalms, for example, for hours every day and other sort of theological books. So there are a lot of words that go through your head. And in fact, you know, a lot of prayer bounces off words or has resource or recourse to words. So although we were outwardly physically silent for a great deal of our lives, there was an awful lot going on inside, and it often was referred back to or inspired by, by the liturgy or the reading we were doing. So yes, we were very silent. But in another way, internally, words were very important.
GROSS: But it's like a dialogue with God and a dialogue within yourself. It's not direct interaction with people.
COLDSTREAM: Yes.
GROSS: Why is talking considered taboo except for small amounts during the day?
COLDSTREAM: Oh, gosh, that's a very good question. It wasn't speech itself that was taboo. I think I mentioned that certain subjects were taboo when we did talk, say, in community meetings or recreations. So speech itself wasn't taboo, but there are loads of things that you weren't supposed to talk about. But there was a very strong culture of silence which could feel like it was anti-speech because the Carmelite Order originated in the hermit ideal. So this goes right back to St. Anthony of Egypt. And in the Alexandrian desert, people went out and lived in caves. And then a few centuries later, you find people living in caves on Mount Carmel. And these were people who wanted to dedicate themselves to seeking God in solitude. It's called the desert monasticism or desert spirituality, which is like a sort of a subgroup within Catholic spirituality that's very much dedicated to seeking God through silence.
GROSS: What drew you to that? I mean, just to fill in your background, you're from an artist background. Your father was a painter, an art professor, your mother an actor, an opera singer who was often on the road. And there was a 28-year difference between them. Your father was considerably older. It was a second marriage. You've called it a midlife crisis when he got married. The marriage didn't work out well. But you grew up in the arts. And you're a viola player. You were then. You are now. You've done it professionally as well as just for, you know, for the pleasure of it. So why did you feel called to live this life of isolation and silence?
COLDSTREAM: Wow, that's the million-dollar question. I mean, I did grow up in what, you know, we call it a sort of arty household. It's quite bohemian. And yeah, there was a big age gap between my parents. So I'd grown up in a very sort of expressive kind of family. I loved ballet. I loved art. I loved poetry. I loved music. I was very emotional. Yeah. I mean, people couldn't understand it when I suddenly went really kind of pious and, you know, kind of quite penitential after my father's death. I think what it was was that when my dad died, I was 24, and he had been going downhill in a really kind of very - a very, very painful decline that lasted four years. So from the age of about 20, I'd been going through an awful lot of sort of angst. And, you know, I - the word trauma is overused, but, you know, I'd been going through a very unhappy time. My family more or less disintegrated. And I think I needed something radical. I was looking for something radical.
And, you know, I was looking for it through music. At first, I was really into the whole kind of experimental music stuff - Stockhausen, John Cage, Boulez and all this sort of stuff. So I've probably always had slightly extreme tendencies. When the kind of hammer blow of bereavement came, I was utterly thrown and completely bereft, obviously, and devastated. And I think I just started another kind of radical search which took me to different kind of churches. I looked at - you know, I spent time sitting in Greek Orthodox churches. I spent time going to Catholic churches, charismatic churches, all sorts of churches. I think I'd had a sense of transcendence very strongly when my father died. And that led me on to want to get closer to the source of transcendence. And I thought, you know, religion maybe had the key.
GROSS: I think that transcendent experience you're referring to after your father died was seeing his body. Can you describe why that was a transcendent experience?
COLDSTREAM: I think it's the sort of combination of familiarity and completely alien things at the same time. So you go into the room, and it's the dead body of your beloved parent. It was the first time I'd seen a dead body, and I think the - obviously, there were familiar things about this body. The irony was his hair was moving in the breeze. There was it might have been a ventilator system, or it might have been a window open. But his hair was moving as though he was still alive. But everything else, of course, was utterly static. And it's just the shock of seeing the complete vacancy of a body that you're used to seeing in life. And I think I just felt immediately that he couldn't possibly have died. He was somehow present in the room, and there was some sort of huge sense of presence, I suppose, divine presence that, you know, just surged through the room and that hit me at that point.
GROSS: The fundamentals of the Carmelite life revolve around total devotion to God, pretty constant prayer and reflection and total self-denial. Would you describe how that translated into daily life?
COLDSTREAM: Yes. Well, I suppose one of the big aids, as we would have called it, to self-denial and discipline and virtue and all these other things were was the structure of the rule and the constitutions. So there was this ancient document called the Rule from the 13th century, but it was supplemented in the 16th century by the constitutions of St. Teresa of Avila. So there were these kind of written texts that, you know, were meant to govern all aspects of your life. How did it translate into actual everyday life? Well, we had a very disciplined horarium, we called it, like a sort of timetable, which started at 5:15 with a matraque, which was this kind of really large rattle that shook the whole house, almost. And you jumped out of your bed. You weren't allowed to lie there. You just had to get straight up, on your knees. You washed in a bucket of cold water. You went straight down to what we call the choir, which was our monastic chapel, and you were praying 25 minutes later. And this went on throughout the day. There were bells. There were times of prayer that alternated with times of work, but it was all very strictly regulated. You had - you knew exactly where you had to go when. And you were silent most of the time and very focused on what you were doing. So there were all these kind of external structures - like the texts and the timetable and the bell - that meant you could sort of focus on your inner life and not be always needing to talk or sort of make decisions.
GROSS: It just strikes me you chose an order that was, like, the opposite of the family that you were brought up in, which - who you described as free-spirited, totally artistic. You were totally artistic. You'd been in Paris before returning to England and joining the monastery, you know. Yeah, you were reading books of philosophy. You were playing avant-garde music, (laughter) and in addition...
COLDSTREAM: (Laughter) Yeah.
GROSS: ...To a more standard repertoire of classical music. And so you chose this order where it's all about structure and all about discipline and self-denial. And the arts aren't about self-denial, they're about expressiveness...
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: ...And creativity and trying new things, and especially the avant-garde, that's about breaking the rules and seeing what life is like - what music or literature is like outside of those borders. And you entered a world that's all borders. And how did you fit yourself into that?
COLDSTREAM: Oh, yeah. Well, it's - it was difficult, obviously. But I think the key thing is that that part of me - and obviously a huge part of me, which was searching for expression or for something transcendent through the arts - that was the part of me that found a kind of freedom in the interior life. So although the outward life for a Carmelite is regulated and full of boundaries and borders and structures, the silence and the solitude that facilitates, it's actually, like, a huge expanse of freedom in your - in terms of, like, your interior life.
So basically, we'd have two hours a day of completely silent prayer and, you know, times for reading. And although our reading material was pretty restricted, you could be as free as you liked in your prayer time. And I think we focused on prayer, which sounds really uncool and really kind of weird to people, I guess, if they - if they're not used to the idea. But prayer was - I think I approached it like an art form. Well, not an art form, but I think I approached it like a philosophy.
For me, I wanted to plumb the depths of this kind of way of silent prayer, because I felt, you know, almost in a philosophical sense, that this was the answer. And so I didn't - I think I went in with a kind of quite intellectual attitude to it, thinking, you know, this will follow on from my interest in - you know, in transcendence through music or searching for the truth through reading. I would be following the same sort of search, but through prayer. But of course, once you get really deeply into it, and you're in a very confined and restricted world, it's not all plain sailing. But I think the prayer life was where we had freedom and a sort of sense of something really special going on on a personal level.
GROSS: I'd like you to describe the physical building that you were cloistered in and what the grounds were like around it.
COLDSTREAM: It was what we think of as, like, a sort of grand, old manor house, really. It was a large, rambling Gothic building with loads of outbuildings and sheds. But it was like a very large, grand family house from the days when minor aristocracy lived in these kind of beautiful buildings and had lots of grounds. So it was a house that had staircases, you know, great big sweeping staircases and stained-glass windows and high ceilings and a great big hall with flagstones - black and white flagstones, and - yeah, it was a really beautiful house.
I mean, it had grown derelict after the war. And so when the nuns took it over, I think they needed to do a lot of cleaning up, and they basically would have just kept it really bare. So it was like a sort of - if you think of somewhere - not as grand as, like, "Brideshead Revisited," but on a much smaller scale - or "Downton Abbey." But it was a smaller version of that, but completely bare inside, in a very sort of stark, austere way that was actually really kind of spiritually inspiring. You know, there's a lovely sort of echo and lovely light and a sense of space.
GROSS: And cold - cold floors, cold rooms.
COLDSTREAM: Yeah. It was very cold. We didn't have central heating. It was really the far north of England - very drafty in winter. The windows rattled and the, you know, cold air would come in. But there was something really beautiful about it. It was - I think it was very - because it was very isolated, and it was in beautiful countryside - farmlands everywhere. Lakes and trees and meadows and hills in the distance. So you had a sense of being protected, actually, from the modern world. You felt like you'd gone back in time to somewhere that was sort of almost magical in its beauty.
GROSS: I want you to describe your cell, 'cause each of the nuns had a cell that was just for them. Describe the cell for us and why it was so important to have this, like, totally private space.
COLDSTREAM: OK. Well, I suppose the cell idea had come down from the caves the hermits used to live in. So the idea was you had your own space that was completely dedicated to your relationship with God and to your solitary life of being a hermit and seeking God. So each of us had - basically it was, like, a medium-size or smallish bedroom. Some monasteries have much smaller cells because they're purpose-built, but because we were using this - we had this great, big old period house. The rooms were quite big, actually.
So we had a sort of medium-sized bedroom and it was, like, you know, plain. When I first went, I think it was wood floor. And then at one point, I think they put some lino down, which seems awful today. But the walls were plain. They were, like, a creamy - we call it distemper. It was, like, a sort of creamy chalk paint, off-white. We had no images or decorations or anything like that. There was an enormous, great, black, wooden cross on the wall. When I say enormous, I mean, it was kind of about 4-foot high. I mean, it wasn't, like, a little crucifix. And there was no figure of Christ on the cross. We used to call it the corpus. There was no corpus on the cross. And this was because you yourself were meant to become the sacrificial figure on the cross. So you were meant to think all the time in terms of being crucified with Christ, offering your life as a sacrifice.
GROSS: Well, we need to take a short break here. So let me reintroduce you.
If you're just joining us, my guest is Catherine Coldstream. And her new book is called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun." We'll be right back. This is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF ANDREW BIRD SONG, "I")
GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. Let's get back to my interview with Catherine Coldstream. Her new memoir is called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun," and it's about her more than 10 years in a Carmelite monastery in Northern England.
So can you describe the first time you put on a habit and what it meant to you and if you felt transformed by it in any way?
COLDSTREAM: It was a rite of passage and taking a new name, taking new clothes - these are all sort of quite, I guess, probably universal accoutrements of major life changes or rites of passage. I mean, if you think of it, getting married is like that. So, yeah, it did trigger a sense that you were somehow changed at quite a deep level. I mean, putting on the actual physical stuff of the habit doesn't change you, but it does make you feel part of the community in a more complete way. It also makes you feel very heavy and dragged down, because there were layers and layers of stuff. The main habit was made of this brown serge, which is, like, a rough, thick wool. And we had sort of basically two layers of that - the main habit, and then what we call the scapular, which was, like, an extra sort of apron-y bit on the front. And then we had - under that, we had a tunic, which was a thick, cotton thing. And then we had four layers of linen on our heads.
So you did feel kind of really - you felt encumbered by a lot of sort of cloth at first and all these pins, which you could easily stab yourself with, and people did. You're always, by mistake, sort of scratching and sticking the pin in the wrong bit. But you felt weighed down, but quite quickly - like with all these things, we are a very adaptable species. You quite quickly get used to it and find new ways of sort of - if you've got to work in the garden, you tuck up the habit and pin it at the back.
The actual rite of being clothed, of course, was a great sort of transition from being somebody who was hoping to become a nun to somebody who really felt she was and belonged to the community. And you often got given a new name. Mine wasn't very different. I went from being Catherine to being Sister Catherine Mary. In the book, I just say Sister Catherine as a sort of simplification. But my name didn't really radically change. But some people did want to have a new name. In the olden days, you had to have a new name and you were just given a name, often a man's name. So, yeah, you were taking on a new identity. You were putting yourself aside, in a way, and putting on this new identity with these new clothes.
GROSS: Yeah. 'Cause I was wondering - what's the point of a habit if you're cloistered? 'Cause in the outside world, the habit - when nuns wore habits in the outside world, the habit signaled certain things. It signaled a modesty. It signaled that you were a nun and were worthy of being related to that way. And...
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: ...It was a symbol of a certain amount of respect that you should just automatically give to that person.
COLDSTREAM: (Laughter) Yeah.
GROSS: So - but inside, when you're all nuns, you don't have to communicate that to each other. So what's the point?
COLDSTREAM: Yeah. That's a really intelligent point. And I've never thought of it like that. But I think you're absolutely right. It's a symbol of having been set aside - consecrated was the word we use. So you had somehow left the main body of humanity, and you're specially set aside. Why signal that when you're all doing the same thing? I think part of it is that there were strangers or visitors to the chapel, who would see you - glimpse you in the distance through the grille, and they'd see you floating around sometimes. You know, you'd catch the odd glimpse of them. So you wanted to signal that to outsiders, just as the grille signaled to outsiders that you were people living a set-apart kind of life.
But within our own world, I think it was really a powerful thing that we all wore exactly the same clothes. When I say exactly - one or two people had slightly different shades of brown, and, you know, you really notice the tiny differences. Like, some people had special shoes, you know, whatever. But basically, we were wearing the same habit. And I think that was a very powerful symbol that we were - well, the idea was we're equal. We were meant to be - differences between us were meant to be eliminated, and that extended to other areas of the life. You weren't supposed to talk about anything - about your own identity from before you'd been a nun that would be, in any way, likely to sort of set up - set yourself up as different or special or to trigger any sort of envies or rivalries. So you were subsumed into this new identity. And I think the fact that you all wear the same clothes was just a way of making everyone - trying to make everyone as equal as possible, which was a great idea. Of course, in reality, groups of people are never equal.
GROSS: So let me introduce you here. If you're just joining us, my guest is Catherine Coldstream. Her new memoir is called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun," and it's about her more than 10 years as a Carmelite nun. We'll be right back after a short break. I'm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF BRAD MEHLDAU'S "FUGE NO. 16")
GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross. Let's get back to my interview with Catherine Coldstream. Her new memoir "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun" is about her more than 10 years as a Carmelite nun in the north of England. And the Carmelites are an order that is focused on silence, prayer and song and work. It's a very disciplined order, and it's a cloistered order.
As a nun in the Carmelite order, you were married to Christ.
COLDSTREAM: Yeah. That was the idea, yeah.
GROSS: What was your interpretation of that? And did that interpretation change over the years that you were cloistered?
COLDSTREAM: That's a really good question. It certainly changed, yes. I think when you start out, it's all a matter of aspiration. You know, you wanted to be a bride of Christ. I mean, it all goes back to this thing of - before you've actually even crossed the threshold, you've somehow or other fallen in love with this whole idea of - you know, you might have fallen in love with the monastery. You might have fallen in love with the idea of monastic life. But, you know, strange though it may sound to people, on some level, you'd fallen in love with God. You know, it was an obsessive vocation. And I think that all-consuming desire to get closer to God, it goes really deep once you really sort of go with it.
We had this idea that, you know, for us, Jesus was a real person. And he was the embodiment of perfect love, and in a sense, the answer to all our deepest desires. And we wanted to be united with him. So it was - there was a sort of analogy in romantic love that is a - there's a really ancient tradition in the Old Testament and - as well as in the New Testament, whereby God is kind of the spouse, the lover of - in the Old Testament, the lover of the people of Israel or the community of the faithful, however it's conceived. The "Song Of Songs" in the Old Testament is all about this. And of course, the "Song Of Songs" was, you know, largely based on ancient marriage ceremonies from other cultures - Assyrian or Mesopotamian or Egyptian. I can't remember, but, I mean - I think it had drawn on other ancient cultures. And it was basically, you know, a text for celebrating a marriage between man and wife. So the Carmelite sort of relationship with God was a sort of sublimated version of marriage. You were married to Christ, and he was real for you.
GROSS: So you refer to the romantic side of being married to Christ. And I want to read something from the Bible that you quote in your book. And this is from the prophet Hosea.
(Reading) I will block her way with thorns and lure her and lead her out into the desert. And you write, (reading) I think many of us felt it was quasi-erotic. And some translations went even further and said, I will seduce her and speak to her heart.
Did it feel erotic to you, or did it - do you sense that...
COLDSTREAM: (Laughter).
GROSS: ...It did to other young women...
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: ...In the order?
COLDSTREAM: I think it's not necessarily just that passage, of course. But that passage, I think, shows - in a particularly clear way and vivid way that - the extent of the sort of romance we were having with God. So in the prophet Hosea, he has a whole section where he's comparing the chosen people, as they were called - the people of Israel - to a faithless wife. And he was the loving husband pursuing her and forgiving her and all this sort of stuff. So there's a very strong sense of nuptial, we might call it, or spousal relationship. It was a sort of metaphor for the relationship with God. And - yeah, I think we felt that very strongly. We felt a very strong sense that we were in a romantic relationship with Jesus. I mean, it was very, very personal.
And just because you are wearing a habit and you're a nun and you've taken vows of chastity doesn't mean you never have erotic feelings. We were supposed to, of course, deny them and to not encourage them. And so we were very sort of controlled and very strict about all these sort of things, but I think there were involuntary feelings that might sort of arise. And it wasn't necessarily arousal in a specifically sexual sense that you might feel towards Jesus, but I think there was definitely a very strong sense of romance.
I think if you read some of Saint Teresa's writings on her relationship with Jesus in prayer, you do also get the sense that really deep prayer can actually be quite romantic. And I think - yeah, there might be a sublimated Eros going on, definitely.
GROSS: I want to ask you about the different views of an authoritarian community. One of the older sisters referred to the supernatural spirit of obedience. But then there's the question...
COLDSTREAM: Yes.
GROSS: ...Of - is that just authoritarian, or is that something that could lead to a new form of transcendence? And I suspect you saw both sides of that.
COLDSTREAM: Yeah. I mean, that's such a good question. I mean, it's a really intelligent question. I mean, the supernatural spirit of obedience was a phrase we used a lot. It was very common currency. The idea was that we weren't living lives that were merely natural. We're living supernatural lives. And the supernatural was the kind of - the effects of the Holy Spirit and the effects of our relationship with God. So obviously, you can reframe authoritarianism as - I mean, you could reframe anything, really, in supernatural terms. And we did. So was talking about a supernatural spirit of obedience, which meant we saw God through the prioress - and whatever the prioress said, we saw as coming straight from God, you know, was it supernatural or were there elements of control going on that were actually less benign? It's impossible to know.
But obviously, if you accord all power and agency and authority to one person in a group of 20, and that person is continually reelected and never challenged, never questioned, never open to discussing or reviewing things, you've obviously got a setup where, you know, it's very, very open to abuse, because you've got one person who is basically given carte blanche. And everybody else will let her do whatever she wants. And I think it is a real danger in very isolated religious communities that what starts off as something that's conceived in a spiritual way can become all too human in that, you know, human beings do - you know, when they're given power, they can abuse it. And communities can be very complicit in that, too, especially vowed communities of nuns can be - you know, can be very - in those days, very compliant and very unquestioning and timid.
So I think there was a timidity that gave free rein to one or two people. And at one point, that kind of expanded into a sort of clique. There was a sort of coterie of people who were really, like, the sort of power group who were driving everything. And their agenda was to keep everything unchanged, as it had been, and were very resistant to any suggestion that we should have more dialogue or questioning or more discussion. So - yeah, it was really difficult.
GROSS: I want to ask you about something very extreme and shocking and horrifying that happened to you, which is that the sister who had become, you know, basically the mother superior of the monastery - although the word is a prioress?
COLDSTREAM: Prioress. Yeah.
GROSS: Yeah.
COLDSTREAM: Prioress.
GROSS: She beat you. She kind of, like, dragged you out of bed, across the floor and beat you.
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: What happened?
COLDSTREAM: Yeah, well, this was not the perennial prioress. It was quite strange. We had a sort of prioress who was the sort of natural leader, who everybody was - everybody loved, basically, but had quite big problems with, as well, I think - some people did. This was another prioress. This was a relatively new prioress that - in my later years, when there had been some changes in the structure of the community. And I think she was having a breakdown. I think she was - I mean, I've often wondered why she took it out on me so physically.
But what was happening was this was an expression of a much, much wider kind of thing that was going on in the whole community. There were breakdowns happening. There were tempers flying. There were people, you know, being carted off the - to the infirmary, having had physical breakdowns. I mean, the community went through a time of sort of sickness, if you like, when there was this massive stressful eruption of disagreement about, you know, who should be prioress and how the authority of the prioress should be mediated.
And there were - basically, there were two points of view. There were two groups, and there was a sort of breakaway clique who resisted the rest of the community, so it felt like the community was split in two. And I think people were just struggling so much. This particular moment when I was beaten - I think that the prioress who did that to me was basically somebody who was experiencing such extreme frustration, and she just didn't know how - you know, she was just taking it out on me. I don't know. But when you said it was an extremely shocking thing, I know it reads as shocking when I describe it in the book. And people notice that, of course. It's a dramatic moment in the book.
In reality, I think that there were other things that were far more shocking. I think that the fact that somebody cracked up and beat me - yeah, of course, it's horrible. But I mean, basically, I felt that the psychological sort of - psychological cruelty was much more - much, much more difficult to cope with because this was something that lasted 10 minutes, when I was dragged out of bed and beaten. And nobody knew that we were alone, again, you know, behind closed doors in an infirmary cell.
And, you know, I wasn't disabled by it. I mean, I wasn't sort of - you know, I could still function afterwards. I was just a bit bruised and a bit sore and a bit shocked. But basically, psychological, sort of cruelty, I suppose, for want of a better word, is something much harder to deal with when you're very isolated, and you've got nobody to talk to about it.
GROSS: So when you talk about the psychological aspects being worse, can you give us an example of what you mean?
COLDSTREAM: Well, I think there was a sort of - a withholding of human warmth and affection. And there was also lots of deliberate little humiliations that certain people might, in authority, administer to younger sisters in order to, quote-unquote, "keep them humble" or break their spirit. This was a very traditional thing in monasticism - that you would be made to feel small, that you'd be made to feel unloved or rejected, and it was all part of sort of character formation. It sounds stark, just saying it in the cold light of day, but it was like that, and you felt terribly lonely and terribly crushed by some of these sort of things.
GROSS: My guest is Catherine Coldstream, and her new memoir is called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun." And she was a Carmelite nun for over 10 years. We'll be right back. This is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF CYRUS CHESTNUT'S "LOVE ME TENDER")
GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. Let's get back to my interview with Catherine Coldstream. Her new memoir, "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun," is about her more than 10 years as a Carmelite nun. And the Carmelites are a cloistered order. Silence is practiced and pretty constant prayer and the singing of hymns and sacred music. At some point, you decided to literally run away. So, briefly, like, was there a breaking point for you where you decided...
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: ...I can't handle it anymore?
COLDSTREAM: Well, I think the night I ran away, I'd obviously reached breaking point, but I didn't break. I think I - actually, I think I ran away to forestall breaking point. I'd seen others breaking, and I thought, why are so many people in my age group - we were the younger ones. You know, why are so many people having breakdowns? And a few people had had to go to hospital, and they had to leave 'cause they were having, you know, mental breakdowns and things. And I thought, gosh, you know, the pressure is so great. Maybe I'm going to have a breakdown. So I kind of ran away to maybe avoid reaching breaking point, actually.
Yeah, I - but I did go back after that for two years, so I hadn't reached breaking point. I don't think I did reach breaking point in the sense that, you know, I was ever made - you know, I think I always retained a sense of buoyancy and hope somehow, on some level, and maybe that's why I had to leave. I was worried that I'd be broken if I stayed.
GROSS: You explained why you ran away from the monastery, and then you returned for two more years but decided, after those two years, to leave for good and to do it, you know, the legit way. Why did you leave the second time around?
COLDSTREAM: I think going back to monasticism after having done something as dramatic as running away meant it was never going to be the same again. And although there was a large part of me that was very at home in the Carmelite life in that later stage, I think I eventually realized that part of me had moved on. Part of me had developed beyond what could really be held within the cloistered life. I'd done too much questioning by then, and I felt - I think I just felt, ultimately, that it was the right thing to do. Yeah, but it was very difficult.
GROSS: When you first entered the world and you knew it was for real and it was permanent, what were some of the hardest things to adjust to and some of the most joyful things to welcome?
COLDSTREAM: Again, beautifully put question because it was dual. It was two-edged. The hardest thing was the noise. I was very used to a completely silent world, so I found noise very difficult, and I found talking to people very difficult, actually. I mean, now I don't.
GROSS: You were out of practice.
COLDSTREAM: Yeah. I disliked any sort of intrusive human contact. You know, I liked being left alone, and I was used to it. I found everything very messy and dirty and just too much going on. So that was really difficult. And I didn't like the sense of - well, obviously I'd gotten used to a very ordered and structured world that had a kind of peaceful vibe, although, of course, you know, as I described, things were simmering and seething under the surface because we were human beings. But outwardly it was a very quiet and peaceful way of life.
But there were things, of course, I hugely enjoyed. I mean, I love the feeling of just being - the physical freedom of just being able to just go wherever you wanted to. I remember the first time I went to the sea and, you know, just sort of running along the beach, hair flapping in the wind, jumping into the waves, you know? I mean, the physical freedom was wonderful. You know, I enjoyed going for a drink as well.
I mean, you know, this was - I remember I spent a bit of time in a sort of halfway house outside the monastery where I was having a bit of counselling, and there was another nun there. It was some sort of more secular type of religious order. And there was another nun from a much more outgoing sort of apostolic order. And I remember we went to the pub together, and that was brilliant. I mean, I really enjoyed having a pint, and I really enjoyed going for an Indian meal. That was amazing.
So there were things I enjoyed, like just nice food and just freedom and being able to delight in the mornings and have baths, you know, just creature comforts that I've been denied, that I was - my body was aching for relief and rest. And, you know, I hadn't had any form of - you know, pleasure was all really pared - you know, drained out of our lives. So those pleasures were great, and I really enjoyed it. But I did feel slightly overwhelmed by, yeah, a noisy, busy, messy world with so much going on.
GROSS: After you left the monastery, you eventually studied theology at Oxford. How did studying theology at one of the most prominent places of learning in the world affect your view of religion and your understanding of God?
COLDSTREAM: I really, really enjoyed studying at Oxford. I mean, it was just the right thing for me because I'd been bottling up all these questions, and I'd - you know, I had a very active mind that wanted to sort of understand things. So I - that had been very held back in the monastery. I really enjoyed studying theology, and I loved being with loads of bright, buzzy people to have lots of discussions. But the actual questions that were raised by theology, of course, were really challenging for me 'cause I did have - I'd grown into a view of religion that was very, very, very traditional Catholic and that - you know, I'd got used to accepting some very, very traditional points of view on Catholicism, and that was all turned upside down. There was a time after I'd been studying theology for about a year that I was really scared that it was going to ruin my soul, and I was going to lose my faith completely. And I did struggle with my faith for a while. I mean, I - yeah, I found the more you know about Christian history and the way the scriptures were put together and things, the more questions you've got and - the harder it is to believe in it all. And I did go through some, yeah, real challenges to faith.
GROSS: Where are you now in terms of faith?
COLDSTREAM: I think I've come through the sort of phase of feeling really worried that there was - there were loads of things that were contradictory, you know, within the Christian teachings. What faith is for me now is much more a personal holding on to the essence of what was good in that experience, 'cause there was a lot that was good within the cloister, and there was a lot that was good in that relationship with God. And because it was such a personal relationship, it's kind of always been more in the fabric of my being.
GROSS: My guest is Catherine Coldstream. Her new memoir is called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun." This is FRESH AIR.
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GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. Let's get back to my interview with Catherine Coldstream. Her new memoir is called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun," and it's about her more than 10 years in a Carmelite monastery in Northern England. Since you saw yourself as married to God, as nuns are supposed to feel, by leaving the monastery, you basically in some ways divorced God, especially now since you're actually married to a man. You're married to a human. So do you feel like if you still have a relationship with God and a personal relationship, that God is offended that you, you know, divorced him?
COLDSTREAM: That's the hardest thing for me. I mean, I didn't really want to divorce God. I've never wanted to divorce God. And I think what it was was it is like a divorce, but I think the divorce was with the community, sadly, the community that promised me God and that I - or that I sought God through. There was a rupture and a rift in leaving that's been a source of great sadness for me, but I hope - I've just had to hope that the God that I fell in love with and who showed me such love in so many ways, is something that's bigger than the church and it's bigger than even, you know, the formal vowed life and that somehow that relationship carries on in a very sort of deep way. It's more to do with the ground of being. It's more to do with something that's really, really immovable within oneself, that - where God dwells, it's the kind of really the deepest part of you. And I think I've had to just focus more on that core of myself that I feel is in communion with God, and less on the outward things that really were proved to be very flawed through my time in a very authoritarian institution.
GROSS: Do you go to church?
COLDSTREAM: I go to church sometimes. I don't - I'm not that involved in church. I go to sing in church a lot. I go to sit in churches. I go away on retreats. I go to monastic retreat houses. But I've obviously had an experience of the institutional church that's raised questions for me and that's been disillusioning in some ways. So I don't rely primarily on going to church. I rely primarily on my inner life, where I still can have a sort of channel of prayer to God. And, yeah, I have quite a contemplative life still, 'cause I have a lot of silence in my life. I spend a lot of time in my inner world through writing, reflecting, reading, praying...
GROSS: Music.
COLDSTREAM: ...And making music. Again, music's a huge channel for me, yeah. So I've evolved, and the whole relationship's evolved.
GROSS: The things that had always defined you before you entered the monastery - loving music, reading philosophy, literature - I'm sure painting was a part of your life, you know, seeing paintings since your father was a painter...
COLDSTREAM: Yes.
GROSS: ...And an art professor. All those things had to be kind of packed up and put away when you were in the monastery. And, like, freethinking, idealism, enthusiasms - those things are all frowned upon, and...
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: ...You were not supposed to express them. But now you're able to express them again. Do you feel more whole in that respect?
COLDSTREAM: I do feel - I feel more whole in that I feel I'm living a fully human life now. There's part of me that misses the intensity of monastic life and the purity of intention and the fact that, you know, your life feels so important. It feels important that, you know, you have a vocation. But I feel it is - it's not a complete human life, in a way. And it could be, I suppose, in an ideal monastery with really wise leaders and a bit more breadth in how things are implemented. But I feel now that I've reintegrated music and writing and thinking and all these more creative things, I'm now living to the full. I'm living who - the person I'm meant to be because I need to express - you know, I need to express that side of my person. So yeah, it's a more rounded life, and it's a more fulfilled life in many ways, although I feel a sense of loss on some level.
GROSS: Thank you so much for talking with us. And I have to say, I admire your courage entering a monastery because you give up so much to do it. It's such...
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: ...A stark life. No matter how rich it is, you give up so much. So I imagine - I admire your courage in doing that. I also admire your courage in leaving and, at some point, knowing it wasn't the life you wanted to live any longer. So...
COLDSTREAM: Yeah.
GROSS: And...
COLDSTREAM: Well, I think...
GROSS: ...And I thank you for talking about all of that with us.
COLDSTREAM: Yeah. Yeah. Well, thank you, Terry. I mean, it's been fantastic having this conversation. Thank you so much for, you know, your interest in the book. And, yeah, it's been really good talking to you.
GROSS: Catherine Coldstream's new memoir is called "Cloistered: My Years As A Nun."
Tomorrow on FRESH AIR, although marijuana has been legalized in some states, there's a thriving illicit market dominated by Chinese organized crime. It's connected to China's authoritarian government, money laundering, bribery, violence and environmental damage. My guest will be Sebastian Rotella, an investigative reporter at ProPublica. I hope you'll join us.
To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on Instagram @nprfreshair.
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GROSS: FRESH AIR's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Amy Salit, Phyllis Myers, Ann Marie Baldonado, Sam Briger, Lauren Krenzel, Heidi Saman, Therese Madden, Thea Chaloner, Susan Nyakundi and Joel Wolfram. Our digital media producer is Molly Seavy-Nesper. Roberta Shorrock directs the show. Our co-host is Tonya Mosley. I'm Terry Gross.
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