Subtotal: $
CheckoutIn your inbox every morning
The latest article from Plough, waiting in your inbox every morning.
Saint Roch was never supposed to touch his patients.
According to medieval legend, that’s what a hospital director tells the pilgrim and future plague saint when he arrives in Acquapendente, a village along the Via Francigena to Rome that was buckling under a wave of bubonic plague. Even in the fourteenth century, Europeans understood that the plague was contagious, and physicians advised caregivers to save themselves rather than keep a bedside vigil for the sick. But in his hagiography, Roch reprimands the hospitalist for this warning, asking “Why should we, who imitate Christ, be so sparing of life?” Then, with a frightening certainty, “Let me go to the sick!”
Saint Roch forced me to grapple with how far I might be willing to go for the patients around me.
As children we had a big sandpile where our imaginations could run wild. ...
Continue ReadingWhat Taylor Swift can teach us about making vows. . The making, keeping, and breaking of promises, oaths, and...
Continue ReadingAnne Brontë was too scandalous for the Victorians and not progressive enough for later critics.. Most avid readers can name a book they believe to...
Continue ReadingWhat parenting a child with severe disabilities has taught me about dependence.. Ankle-foot orthotics are my nemesis. Day after day, I search the...
Continue Reading