Laundry Soap for Bad Girls

When I was a teenager I was sent to live with the Nuns.  Well, it was the 70’s, NZ, and I was a pregnant convent girl from a big Catholic family with a sick mum.  This is where bad girls ended up, they said.

The Convent I was sent to was beautiful, old, fragrant, with wide corridors and huge sash windows, high ceilings, airy rooms and verandahs,  enormous flower and vegetable gardens and was run by thrifty Nuns with jangling keys at their waists, who, as well as Bad Girls who they shuffled down the Adoption Path, took in washing from local private hospitals.

The laundry was the hub of the Convent. It was huge, with enormous tables for folding, huge wicker laundry baskets on wheels, entire rooms for stacking folded linen,  big industrial washing machines, a drying room and an enormous mangle. Busy with silent rabbit like girls at work. The mangle was so wide it could iron a full length girl from side to side. Flat as a paua fritter. But that was the warm part of the laundry, you kind of worked up to that side as your pregnancy advanced.  The side where the laundry was received,  sorted and rinsed was where we began, it was cold,  right there where the trucks pulled in and out. Always cold. And sorting the linen in the sluice room was the worst of the jobs. Some of it should have been rinsed in the hospitals. We never hardened to it.

The rinsing girls on the cold side had cracks in their hands that never healed from the cold water, nails always waterlogged, ripped and bleeding, infected cuts that never gave up and to this day they go white and numb at the threat of chilly weather.  If it is terribly cold I am left using my hands like paddles. Our shoulders were always in pain.  Don’t feel bad though, due to my .. um.. high spirits I was often sent out to work with Sister Delphina in the gardens. Sometimes I was sent to the library, where  the girls did their correspondence school work in the evenings – to think about my sins! Well that WAS a hardship.  However I am wandering off the subject.

At of the outdoor end of laundry, near where the vans brought in their loads of bloody linen, leaking hideousness through the canvas bags which we rinsed and washed as well, was a small alcove.  This is where the girls who were living at the Convent came to wash their own clothes on Saturday afternoon.  Saturday afternoon and Sunday were our days off you see. The big laundry was silent.  The nuns at prayer.  And if you wanted your washing to be dry for ironing by Sunday afternoon you washed on Saturday.

In this alcove with its cold concrete floor, and  high iron crossed windows with jasmine creeping in from the nun’s garden, divided by a short bevilled glass wall from the laundry rinsing rooms were two big spotless concrete tubs and a long stone bench. Above one tub were two taps, one copper and one steel. One hot and one cold.  Hot. The joy of it. I still love to hold my hands in a tub of hot water.  Above the other tub was one cold tap.   Between them was a small mangle. We washed our clothes by hand.  It was Saturday. We were still in one piece, our babies bobbing gently in our bellies. And we chattered a mile a minute. As disconnected as any teenagers. Hauling our fat pregnant selves up onto the benches, dropping our slippers and swinging our bare feet, helping with each others washing, pushing them all through the mini mangle between the tubs,  trying to jam each others fingers between the rollers,(watch out for your hair, watch out !) babies having babies. Dragging our heavy baskets of wrung out dresses and nighties and  aprons across to the long empty clothes lines surrounded in heady lavender hedges, and we hid amongst the washing, giggling teenage giggles, hanging our scented colourful clothes out to dry with little wooden pegs, letting our faces drift into the wet soapy smells. The colour of them an afront to the white weekday sheets. Young and strong, steeped in a sadness we never discussed.  A sadness that demanded silliness. And one of my strongest scented memories of this period was the laundry soap.

The soap was soap.

Now let me tell you about the soap.

We will digress shortly for a moment. All the housework was done by the girls as well. Only our ‘side’ mind you. The Nuns cleaned their own. We had a long wing of our own, with many bedrooms. My job was to clean and polish the endless wide beautiful corridors, the visitors parlours and the dining hall,  all wide planked native wood and brass at the doors. One of my friends who I never saw again, this often being the way of these friendships forged in hardship, had the job of cleaning the two big bathrooms. Doling out clean towels and soap (carefully counted out by the nun with the keys)  as she went.  Each bathroom had 6 toilets, 6 hand basins and 3 showers. And in the hand-basins and showers there was home-made soap.  Made by a Sister no-one ever saw. And when the soap was a slither left abandoned in a soap saucer, my friend’s job was to collect all the slithers, rinse them, pop them into a big battered tin pot, fill the pot with water, boil it for a wee while, then take the pot with its old worn ladle, down the path and across to the Laundry and set it in the Girl’s Wash House ready for Saturday afternoon. This is what we washed our clothes with. Good soap. And our clothes smelt lovely. 

Of course I still cannot bear to throw away the last slithers of soap. And now that I am making my own soap, not only do we have the slithers but I also have the endy bits  and cuttings off the soap cakes.  And wasting it would be dreadful. sops-016

It all gets tossed into my soap pot and cooked up. I often add a few extra drops of lavender as a treat. If you want a formula, maybe a pound of soap to a gallon of water.  But it is an excellent laundry liquid, especially for woolens. Best in a jar with a lid, using the ladle to dole it out. It does not pour well!

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And when it comes to dirty dogs after a day in the fields with the mud and melting snow, soap is a wonderful thing.

Both dogs are trained to stand in the shower and be hosed down, then toweled off before they can sit in front of the fire at night.  They do it. But with studied ill grace.

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You all have a wonderful day.

Your friend on the farmy,

celi

85 responses to “Laundry Soap for Bad Girls”

  1. Love it. Why is it that collies can dive and swim endlessly in muddy swamps and ditches, and leap with abandon at a garden hose sprayed in the air; but when it’s time to embrace the structured spray of a clean bath, wither in miserableness? 🙂

  2. Your writing is beautiful, C. Your life has been full and not boring. A lot to be said for that. You could write a wonderful memoir, I bet. Feeling honored you share this story with us.

  3. Like I said, I am rather new to your blog Celi and I love it. Yours is the first I open when I see it. When I began reading this spectacular post I thought you were practicing writing a novel – one of those blog “prompt” things. I soon realized the story is yours and it was making me cry for the little girl in you. You are a truly brave soul and it is a great pleasure to know you, your life, your farmy and all the people and critters there who matter.

    • That is such a kind thing to say, but none of us escape life unscathed and many of the things we endure become part of the strength we need for our lives.. c

  4. Thank you for sharing your story, hard as it was to read, harder still for you to live through. In the sharing, you awaken others to the conditions in the laundries and the plight of so many young girls – and give a sliver of hope and sense of moving on, Celi, much like those slivers of soap.

    I always save slivers of soap, remembering my grandmother making soap so many years ago.

  5. Wow. What a very well written and touching story. I am compelled to comment on this one. And though I know it helped form your character, it’s a piteous commentary on societies who punish the beautiful consequence of loving another person, whether misguided or not. Blessings, C, to your sweet frozen busy little hands. xoxo

  6. Your voice never fails to move me, dear C, and the full, adventurous, challenging, hard-knock, sweet and joyful life you’ve led never ceases to amaze me. You are gifted, and you are a great gift.
    Love to you.

  7. For all their so-called holiness, those nuns – like many I’ve encountered – are no loving Christians. More like cruel slave masters.

    Pure soap is fine so long as the water is reasonably soft, but you try rinsing it out with London hard water! When washing our hair, Mum used to put some vinegar in the final rinse.

    Hangdog perfectly describes Tonton in the shower!

  8. You are a delightful story teller. And what a story it is …. I too have a story similar … I surrendered a baby for adoption 41 years ago. I have found my birth son and our reunion has been good, feeling a need in both of us. I found him 14 years ago! That is so hard to believe, it feels almost like yesterday, the emotions, the questions, the answers. What a gift it was to find him. I wonder, did you ever find your ‘baby’? I haven’t read all your blog stories so I don’t know if that story is there. I tried to find it … read a couple of other really good stories in the process but alas I got no answers. If I am prying, I understand. You have such a positive attitude about life Celi. You have touched my heart with your words and pictures yet again. Thank you.

    • Oh faye, thank goodness you were able to get back in touch with your son. I also found my eldest boy – when he was a teenager – and he and his brothers are as thick as thieves. I always said he fell back into the family like a brick in a well and the family that raised him are still whole and hearty and involved right to the hilt, in fact I went to his wedding in canada last winter.. it was scary.. with all his other family there but ended up to be just lovely.. c

  9. This sounds like such a tale by Charles Dickens. To have been treated so not so long ago! Love this line ” A sadness that demanded silliness.” The human spirit is hard to crush. It doesn’t surprise me you were sent to the garden.
    We washed clothes by hand at the farm when I was little – and sun dried them. All those little slivers of soap were not thrown away but thrifty blended together and use. Perfectly good soap. It’s still hard to discard them…and i’ve a little pile waiting.
    Molly looks just like that in our shower – Miss Muddy Paws has to become civilized before nightfall!

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