Thursday, June 30, 2011

I live in a Catholic Worker House

While I was answering the phone, a person knocked on the door looking for Chris, who was in the shower. Another friend dropped by so I hung up the phone. As she left, the first person told me his woes and showed me his bleeding foot. I got ready to deal with it myself when I remembered that he is HIV+. Back to the drawing board. Three butterfly strips, some hydrogen peroxide, a sterile bandage or two, and a pep talk later, I drove him home with explicit instructions for home care and follow up. Tomorrow I invest in some rubber gloves so that I will be prepared for such events in the future and also promise myself to look up the protocol on dealing with potential biohazards. I also make a note to remember that this fellow prefers whole milk and drinks a gallon every three days. (because part of what was stressing him out was his concern that his diet has been lousy lately partly because he finds it difficult to transport a gallon of milk when the weather gets too warm and a whole host of other reasons that also involve the lousy health care system and his being overwhelmed with his lack of knowledge of where to go when he has a concern and maybe you can get the drift of how challenging it might have been to convince him that he could care for this wound himself and how my not having rubber gloves at my home was tantamount to the trouble with what happened at the twin towers except multiply that by seven or eight and you have what is wrong with our country)

It's days like these that remind me that I believe in personalism and that's what makes me a Catholic Worker (which is just another way of saying that I believe that my faith is dead without works). I don't really care in whose name you do the right thing; I mostly care that you just do it. And if you choose not to, I don't really care that much either. Just leave me alone to do what I believe is right, and keep your negativity to yourself.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Timeline

Zac and I first lived in a Catholic Worker house in 1996 in Rock Island, IL. The Dorothy Day CW house in Rock Island (DDCW) was established by Chuck Trapkus, his wife Kim, and Mary VandeVoorde on Christmas Eve sometime in the 1980s to provide overnight hospitality for homeless women and families. Drawn to the house by the community's dedication to simple Luddite living, Christian community, and organic gardening, I moved us and most of our possessions from Athens, Ohio in a black primered 1977 VW van (very Plain!) to a room off the kitchen and dining room. Talk about Grand Central Station! We stayed there for two and a half years before we moved to Dubuque, IA to Hope House CW to do more of the same.

In Jan. 2002 Chris, Zac, Siobhan, and I moved into the rectory of St. Joseph Catholic Church in Rock Island at the behest of Fr. Larry Morlan. The rectory had been a CW house of hospitality and continued to serve an evening meal five nights a week to anyone in need of a meal or companionship. At this time the DDCW still had an active live-in community.

We moved into our current home the week of Thanksgiving 2004 with Chris' brother and sister-in-law in the upstairs apartment and our family in the lower. Around this time the DDCW folded and became the St. Joseph the Worker House, a 501(c)3 non-profit house of hospitality for homeless women and children.

It's a long and convoluted story as to why our family declined taking over the DDCW house, but suffice it to say, we decided to embark on our own journey without the entanglement of expectations from outside.

Next up: Can you still be a Catholic Worker when you don't live in a house of hospitality with a shingle?

The Roamin' Catholic Worker

When our family was traveling around the country in a 1966 Ford Falcon van for four months visiting friends, festivals, and Catholic Worker communities, we ended up at the East Coast Catholic Worker gathering in Worcester, MA. We claimed the moniker "The Roamin' Catholic Worker" as we were not affiliated with a landed house. Now that we have been at the same address for six years, I figure it's time to hang the shingle out (at least in cyberspace) to let folks know what life looks like as a covert Catholic Worker House.