Tuesday, August 5, 2025

How the Awful Nuns Humiliated Little Boys

I’ve previously mentioned how little boys who had wet their bed (accidentally urinated while asleep) were punished, humiliated and subjected to ridicule by being forced to wear their urine-soaked pajama bottoms tied around their neck for an entire day. Despite this being so obvious to every nun as well as the Commandant and Coach Bill (since we all wore the same uniform) this cruel behavior continued unabated while I was there. As bad as this was, there was another way that bedwetters were humiliated by the Benedictine sisters.

I have just finished reading a book by a Linton Hall alumnus who attended during the mid-1950s, in which he mentions that when he was eight years old and in the third grade, one of his classmates was made to parade back and forth on the cement walkway outside the building while wearing a little girl’s party dress, in full view of the other boys looking out the dormitory window, as punishment for having wet the bed. The sisters had told the boy that if he was going to be behave like a sissy, he was going to have to dress like one too.

He goes on to say that the boy “was the picture of utter humiliation as he paced the cement, his head hung and shoulders hunched in an attempt to hide his face … I could see that the ordeal was devastating for him …” (Page 70 of his book)

To get a true picture of how many sisters were involved in this disgusting behavior towards little boys, keep in mind that these sisters had taken vows of adhering to the monastic life, which includes common ownership of all property, so that no individual nun should have had any of her own money to buy a little girl’s party dress, and thus the decision to buy that little dress, and the purpose to which it would be used, would have been a community decision approved at the highest level, either by the school principal or prioress. (Lucky for them, I don’t know their names.

I don’t know when or why Linton Hall Military School stopped humiliating bedwetters by making them wear a dress, but it would not be unreasonable to speculate that if a parent had complained, the nuns might have stopped doing that and come up with another way to humiliate bedwetters by making them wear their urine-soaked pajama pants around their neck all day, as they did while I was there, when the principal was Sister Doris Nolte (then known as Sister Mary David, OSB) and the prioress was Sister Ernestine Johann. (Unfortunately for them, I do know their names.)

As it says in Luke 12:2-3, “Nothing is covered up that will not be uncovered … and what you have whispered behind closed doors will be proclaimed from the housetops.” (NSRV)

I read this book because it is an autobiographical account of a LHMS alumnus, but this is all he had to say about Linton Hall.

The book’s main theme is about something else.

When he mentions the above incident, he says that he “felt both sympathy and envy” for that boy and “would have given anything to be in his place” as he was envious of his sister who “not only was allowed to live at home, but she got to wear pretty clothes.” (pages 69-70.)

He cites this as an early example of feeling uncomfortable being a boy, which eventually led him to undergo sex change surgery when he was 26 years old. (page 78)

Living as a woman did not magically change his life as he had expected, and over the next few years attempted suicide 36 times, with the final (unsuccessful) attempt in 1978, at age 33. (page 239)

He eventually found Jesus through various Christian churches, and in late 1980, when almost 36 years old, had his silicone breast implants surgically removed and resumed living as a man and using his birth name. (page 283) Presumably his body below the belt remained as it was as a result of the 1971 operation.

He died in 2019 at age 74 and was buried in Northern Virginia.

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In order to cite my source while respecting the privacy of any surviving relatives of this alumnus, I will not mention his name. The title of the book is The Agony of Deception, published in 1983.

I ask readers not to mention his name in your comments.

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Read more in my two books: Linton Hall Military School Memories: One Cadet's Memoir" and "Linton Hall Military School Memories Volume 2."

The first volume is available only from amazon.com (or for shipments to Mexico, amazon.com.mx) The second volume (either English or Spanish version is available on Amazon as well as barnesandnoble.com and walmart.com in the US. In Mexico, it's available from either amazon.com.mx or lulu.com. Prices to Mexico may be shown in Mexican pesos.

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Copyright 2024 by "Linton Hall Cadet."

Please respect copyright laws by linking to this post instead of copying and pasting. This blog is not affiliated with Linton Hall Military School and all opinions are those of the author. Comments are always welcome; please do not use your name or names of others.

Monday, February 10, 2025

Volume 2 of My Book Just Published!

Linton Hall Military School

The second volume of Linton Hall Military School Memories has just been published.

It’s crammed with interesting, sometimes shocking chapters such as:

* What Sister Mary David said just four months after we emailed each other (either unbelievable or what you’d expect her to say – take your pick) (Chapter 18)

* All the punishments that were used on us (Chapter 24, a very long chapter)

* Biographies of Father Blase, Bill, and LHMS’ Second Commandant (Chapters 23, 20 and 17)

* How and why I got unfairly bumped by Sister Mary David, and why I think that the Commandant intervened on my behalf (pages 68-69)

* In 1942, LHMS used to have cadets as young as five years old (page 66)

* Strange things that a nun taught us in Religion class (Chapter 25)

* The wisest advice we got from the Commandant, Bill and Sister Mary David (page 71)

* One time Sister Mary David really trusted me (and rightly so) and the time she didn’t (but should have) (page 72)

* When a nun didn’t care, a cadet I barely knew did me a huge favor (Chapter 27)

* How a large part of the land the Benedictine Sisters received to educate poor boys ended up being sold off to build a $11 million ‘monastery’ (with a $132,000 “prayer labyrinth”) that houses about two dozen nuns (Chapter 29)

* How the vows that Benedictine nuns take are different than the ones that other nuns take (page 79)

* Should nuns be running military schools? Food for thought in Chapter 30

* In addition to 16 new chapters never published before, the book also includes all my blog posts since my first book was published, a list of 120 nuns buried at the Linton Hall Cemetery with dates (or years) of birth and death, plus many interesting photos and copies of documents.

Now available on Amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com, walmart.com and other booksellers for just $7.77 (what it costs to print and sell the book; I don’t make a penny.) Eligible for free shipping on Amazon orders over $35.

The sooner you order, the sooner you’ll get it.

Why not do it right now, while it’s fresh in your mind?

Also available in Spanish: "Recuerdos de Linton Hall Military School Volumen 2." In addition to being available on amazon.com.mx the Spanish version is also available on lulu.com for orders shipped to the US, Mexico or elsewhere.

For those in Mexico, amazon.com.mx charges a bit more, and prices are shown in Mexican pesos (not dollars.) I don’t make any money on Mexican sales either. (UPDATE: There are various sellers on the amazon.com.website which charge more than if you buy directly from Amazon, and they do not offer free shipping.)

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Copyright 2025 Linton Hall Cadet
His book and blog reflect his experiences and opinions. He is not affiliated with Linton Hall School, Linton Hall Military School or the Benedictine Sisters of Virginia.