B
Bonnie
Guest
From looking at just a few pictures you assume that all Plain Catholics wear Mennonite or Amish style clothing (and there is more diversity in those styles than you might think). Based on my correspondence with other Plain Catholics, only a few dress that way. Often because that’s how they’ve always dressed, and it fits in with where they live.I’m annoyed when groups (excepting religious orders, etc.) set themselves apart and then wear the separateness like a badge. the tradly rads do this, copying amish attire seems more theatrical than a display of modesty. I live a modest life without looking like a civil war reenactor and drawing attention to myself.
Most of us wear modest clothing that would look out of place at a nightclub, but otherwise is quite “normal.” With the exception of wearing a covering, which I adopted several years ago (and is not a kapp - you can see what I wear if you go to my face book page), I wear the same type of long skirts & modest blouses that I’ve been wearing for years.
I started becoming on-line friends with Plain Catholics because my lifestyle meshed so well with theirs. Plain Catholics are scattered - none live in my area - and are not an organized group. There is no leader, no headquarters, no office, no dues.
Plain Catholics are not insular. Many Plain Catholic women work outside the home, indeed, some are single moms working & raising their families. We discuss recipes, sewing, gardens, animals, children - all sorts of things - and we support one another in prayer. We live “in the world, but not of it.” (Can’t find the citation - perhaps I’m remembering it wrong?) While I am acquainted with many people of different religions - Buddhists, Calvinists, SDA, even Pagans - my closer friends are Catholic.
