Sunday, October 11, 2009
Friendship Center
Project Open Hand
In the kitchen at Project Open Hand, I was isolated at the end of a long row of shiny silver worktables. There, I united over 600 wheat dinner rolls with mini butter tubs, sealing them in “whole-y” matrimony inside clear plastic baggies.
Right hand and left hand simultaneously grab roll and butter
Drop in baggy (mounted on a machine and inflated by a small fan)
Twist baggy
Whack baggy into mechanical sealer to close with obnoxious red sticky tape
Toss into large tub
I imagined the diners’ struggles to unstick the persistent sticky tape in order to access their dinner. Said sticky tape falls into that same frustrating category as the tape strip along the top edge of CD cases, which separates anxious listeners from feasting on fresh musical delights.
Roll and butter, twist, whack, toss
Roll butter twist whack toss
Rollbuttertwistwhacktoss
My hand hurts
Roll butter twist with other hand whack with other hand toss.
All the while I contemplated Industrial Revolution-era child labor, how I felt dizzy with the repetitive movements, and what it is like for the millions who do jobs like this all day every day for years. Worn out joints, frozen brains.
After creating frustration for hundreds of diners, I graduated to the meal assembly line as a
Had I been there longer, maybe we would have connected. But all I did was scoop my Brussels sprouts and pass the tray to Delores (who plopped on the veggie medley and tossed or added a few sprouts to my never perfect scoop). I felt debilitated by the awkward repetitions of roll/butter bagging and Brussels sprout scooping. If I did this every day what would I think about? Would I make the motions my own? I had an itching urge to shed all of my isolation and dance on those shiny tables, to break it down to the remixes on the radio.
Work and play in the ATL
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I am settled into my home and my volunteer placement site in
Officially, I am a YAV (Young Adult Volunteer) with the Presbyterian Church
My site placement is with a nonprofit called DOOR (Discovering Opportunities for Outreach and Reflection). This organization plans short term mission trips for youth. These youth groups come to
I live in a very purple house that happens to be an intentional Christian community called Dwell, also part of the DOOR program. There are two Dwell houses in
A typical day in the life of this YAV? Every day is different! The schedule keeps me on my toes and tests my self discipline because I am in charge of deciding when and where I will volunteer. Below is a snapshot of what might happen in a week, based on the 6 I have experienced so far.
Monday:
Volunteer at Café 458, a soup kitchen that serves its homeless clients in the style of a regular restaurant.
Paint doors for the DOOR fundraiser (Yes, 22 actual doors were used as display boards. They were heavy.)
Cook dinner for 7.
Community night discussion about hospitality to the stranger.
Tuesday Volunteer at the Open Door, an intentional community that serves brunch to homeless friends.
Play tennis with one of my housemates.
Attend volunteer orientation at Atlanta Union Mission, a shelter for over 700 men, women, and children.
Wednesday Volunteer at Central Outreach and Advocacy Center, an agency that provides IDs, birth certificates, and other services to homeless guests*
Go to a peace rally/lecture by Ann Wright marking the 8th anniversary of the war in Afghanistan.
Thursday Arts and crafts with the mentally ill at the
Pick up tools for a Dwell house repair work day.
Read and summarize Mission Trips that Matter, a book recommended for DOOR mission teams.
Go to the Atlanta Philosophical Film Festival (as weird as you might expect).
Friday Deliver meals to recipients of Project Open Hand food.
Get lost. Get stuck in traffic.
Stroll around the nearby park with our house dog, Kai.
Go to a neighborhood party with members of the other Dwell house.
Saturday Attempt to tame the weeds in the front yard.
Have dinner with homeless neighbors that live under the I-20 bridge.
Go salsa dancing.
Sunday Bike/MARTA to church with one of my housemates.
Visit with my cousins/aunts/uncles that live in
I am trying to be a sponge and I can feel myself being stretched by new ideas and experiences! Each day is a new adventure.
* Note the different language used to refer to the homeless at each different agency.