Now for a few days a week I am an occupational therapist roaming the halls of two nursing homes, helping the elderly to regain their strength and function in more circumscribed lives of agedness. I have managed to find gracious work within the "filthy rotten system" but I am still left with feelings of betrayal on some level. War taxes and a high per diem rate from Medicare dollars may be related to that feeling!
Our gardens grow in beauty and bounty despite the heavy rain and cool summer. We (Steven, Lauren, and I) are eating fresh pesto, ratatouille, sauteed green beans, and fresh milk from the neighbors. We swim in a spring fed, sun warmed pond next door, built by my brother's father-in-law 40 years ago. Ours is an idyllic summer life on the land here on this tiny Vermont farm. I thank my parents David and Tamar for finding it.
This morning I read from Granny's diaries about "materialistic Christians who deny God". I listened to Democracy Now yesterday where Jeremy Scahill talks about Eric Prince of Blackwater converting to Catholicism and going on Crusade in Iraq. And today is the 64th anniversary of the atomic destruction of the civilian city of Hiroshima. We Christians crossed a line that continues to haunt the world today. In sackcloth and ashes is where we need to sit. A form of that is to pursue the corporal works of mercy; care for the poor. And to live on the fruits of empire (driving my Saab, overeating, and having a well built house) produces such incongruity in my heart. I have to remind myself that our hard work also provides for us as well. I am hoping to share our home with Catholic Workers who need respite from their relentless labor at the various Houses of Hospitality.
July 29th, the Feast of St. Martha was also the anniversary of my baptism. I have a photo of that event, and the baptismal candles. I can't ignore the message in the fact that these artifacts are still with me. The crumbs from Granny's table lead me on in this precarious journey. I end with a quote I wrote down in a sketch pad in my twenties, I don't know the source. "Trust. That which is born in your dreams, grows in your desire, blossoms in your belief, and lives in your action inevitably, must come to pass."
Hello Martha
ReplyDeleteI have been uploading video interviews and audio lectures that DD had given, beginning in the sixties.
On the outside chance that you have not seen them they are available here:
http://www.youtube.com/user/4854derrida?feature=mhw4
I am about to add some other audio lectures and would hope--"audaciously"--to include a photo stream, i.e., three per ten-minute audio segment.
The photo of you in the early seventies with DD is just great. May I include it--with attribution? I am looking for photos of her that have not been seen (like that one).
My interest in this is SOLELY to disseminate information on DD--i.e., NO commercial interest whatsoever.
Here is a blog I set up for students of the Catholic Worker:
http://dorothydaytranscripts.wordpress.com/
and issues of related concern:
http://empireglassdarkly.wordpress.com/
Dean Taylor
p.s.
ReplyDeleteI tried sending an e-mail--no luck ("undeliverable")
Possibly a response here would work...
or, if you have a You Tube channel I could contact you there (the last time I posted my e-mail at a "comments" column I wished I didn't...)
Dean