Monday, May 4, 2015

The Legend of Ugly Charlie



When I was a little kid, I was a student at St. Peter's Lutheran School on the South side of
Chicago. It was me and 200 other little black boys and girls in Navy-blue slacks and ties, or
Navy-blue tartan dresses. The school was built onto the Church building, as is the way of the
Lutherans. A honeycombed warren of dark stairways, dark wood floors, and plaster walls.

As children, we were about average. Not too bad nor too good. We did our dirt, but it was the
horrific communal dirt of children in general. But because black people used to openly admit
their social conservatism, these dirty deeds would only go so far before they were met with a
show of overwhelming force. In the case of St. Peter's Lutheran School, the force was in "Ugly
Charlie".

Ugly Charlie was the agreed upon form of punishment from on high [being the concerted
efforts of our parents, teachers and pastors to not raise us like those heathen-niglets that tore
through the South and West sides like disrespectful earth-toned tornadoes.]
Ugly Charlie was a belt. Let me rephrase that; Ugly Charlie was a BELT. Someone had chosen a
wide brown belt to be the instrument of disciplinary administration.
Someone had chosen to take a wide brown belt, fold it in half (so that it was creased on one
end) so you had double the leather to spank.
Someone had chosen to take a wide brown belt, fold it in half [(so that it was creased on one
end) so you had double the leather to spank the palm of a child's hand].
Someone had chosen to take a wide brown belt, fold it in half {[(so that it was creased on one
end) so you had double the leather to spank the palm of a child's hand] as many times as that
particular teacher felt was necessary}.
And "someone" named that brown belt, "Ugly Charlie".

Who the person was, I don't know. I do know that Ugly Charlie had been in existence when my
Father was attending St. Peter's Lutheran School, as a little kid. So this belt had the force of at
least 20 years of legend behind it.

I was a conscientious child. I tried to avoid evil, but my mind wandered. So when the black
teacher-ladies (if they had been Catholic they would have been Nuns) would say, "Idle hands
are the Devil's Workshop" my little kid mind had no problem inventing a flesh and blood
boogeyman called "Satan" to torment me for the next 30 years.

It was on one of these wanderings of mind that I didn't do my homework properly one day. I
seem to remember it as a sort of meta-situation in which I discovered a loophole to the
teachers homework algorithm, which I thereby, proudly, exploited. And seeing as how little
black children that are smarter than their black teacher-ladies are indicative of the Village of
the Damned, or at the very least are "acting smart", the indicated intellect intervention was, of
course, Ugly Charlie.
So, to BE the child that you had seen so, so many times before, as the eponymous, "Dead Man
Walking" is a reality-fractalizing proposition. I walked the runway of glaring white light,
between kids' desks, towards the hulking Miss Knott. She was nearing 30 and unmarried, so
back then you knew she was either evil or ugly or both. She was both.
1She sat impatiently at her desk, tight red and white floral-printed dress attempting to hold in
the gargantuan coffee-colored waves of fat-layered muscles. Her eyes were hooded and
unsmiling. She wore a medium-sized afro and seemed to me to be some horrible cannibal
woman. I don't know what I expected, but not this- *WHOP!*
She'd somehow grabbed my hand, holding my little fingers crushed together in her angry fist,
while her other hand sent white hot light into my soul via the palm of my hand. And again-
*WHOP!* she did it with a popping sound that seemed indecently loud. All of the other little
snot-nosed boys and girls staring at me. It was as though I were naked. And again she-
*WHOP!* slapped/whipped/beat the palm of my nine year-old hand, and she continued for
another 27 beats. And though I realized that the punishment was supposed to be the belt on
my palm, I knew that the real punishment was the passive-aggressive grinding together of my
finger bones, that rhymed too perfectly with her angry grin. But I had learned my lesson that
day, at least for a while, and didn't mention to her, or anyone else that I knew.

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