Journal of Sacred Work

Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.

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When you”re a healing presence, you’re an artist.  – James E. Miller & Susan C Cutshall in: The Art of Being a Healing Presence

Mom_june_06She’ll be ninety-four years old next month. She’s far from being the oldest person in the country, but she’s the most gracious one I know. Perhaps you can see this grace in my mother’s eyes in this recent photograph – the sparkle and warmth that gracious people offer to us by their presence. Whatever I knew about grace as a child, I learned from her. From whom did you learn grace?

    A new reader of the Journal of Sacred Work, Tom Sheehan, sent me his nomination for the most compassionate person he knows:

"When she walks down the hall at the nursing home, balm, serenity and comfort follow her like an aura is loose on the premises. Beth Sheehan is the old-time nurse, talented, resourceful, responsive and, most of all, deeply compassionate. In her whites she is the personification of nursing, the most compassionate woman I have ever known."

   Tom is writing about his wife. Across their decades of marriage, he has seen proof of his spouse’s deep commitment to her work as a caregiver. "Who of us knows, in the tortured or confused mind of …patients, what touch is kindest or most temperate?" Tom thinks that Beth knows – and that she is the essence of love to her patients.

   For some, the idea of healing presence is a mystery. Where does it come from? As Tom himself says in his letter: "I am never sure if it [compassion] carries her or she carries it, they are so intertwined, so interdependent."

   Tracy Wimberly, R.N., is one of the most gracious people I’ve ever met. In a quarter century of working together, as I watched her co-found Hospice at Riverside in Columbus & the Elizabeth Blackwell Center & head up Patient Care on my leadership team at Baptist Hospital System in Nashville, I often wondered about the source of her healing presence. Tracy grew up as the daughter of parents who were unable or unwilling to provide their presence to Tracy and her sister. So where did she learn her gift? She credits her grandmother. I credit Tracy. I believe she has spent her lifetime trying to develop the grace within her and to share it with others – to give others the love she may not have received  in her growing up years. Tracy’s life is proof that each of us, with commitment, can enhance our gifts of our grace.

   If, as Miller and Cutshall offer in the quote above, healing presence is an art, then caregivers may look to what artist’s do: they work on learning how to express their gift & they are constantly honing their skills. What else do they do? They study other great artists. Then they look within.

   Healers need to do the same. We all have some gift of grace within us. We need to learn about how to express this gift, to practice it every day. And we can look to the models around us, the great heros of grace that make us and others feel better whenever they enter our presence. Think of how Christians consider Jesus – one from whom some could gain healing merely by touching his clothes or hearing his voice.

  Today, I’ve introduced you to my own first model of grace – my mother. Perhaps this meditation will re-introduce you to some of the people who have brought grace into your life. They have given you a gift. Pass it on. And, like Tom Sheehan, use the space below to offer a Comment on a person who brought grace into your life.

Exercise:

  • Make a list of people you know who are your own heros of grace. They may be famous people like Mother Theresa or Martin Luther King. Or they may be people we see at work every day.
  • What are the characteristics of their presence that creates this sense of grace?
  • What do you see in their eyes, their tone of voice, their body language?
  • Do they seem to be in a hurry?
  • Going beyond their surface behaviors, what attitudes do you think lie beneath their behaviors? That is, how do you think they view others?

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7 responses to “Meditation: Heroes of Grace”

  1. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    The idea of graciousness brings me to the word “acceptance”. Providing loving care, being a healing presence, having a sense of grace, are outpourings of acceptance of other people. Some call it agape or unconditional love. This kind of love demands the most of us, yet fulfills us at the same time.
    Karen York, VP
    Alive Hospice, Nashville

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  2. Elaine Garcia, L.P.N. Avatar
    Elaine Garcia, L.P.N.

    The person who brought me grace was my grandmother. We grew up poor, my mother worked two jobs. My grandmother was always there, quietly opening her arms and her love to me. I think of her often as I care for people – especially older patients.
    Elaine Garcia
    Miami

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  3. liz Wessel RN, MS SJHS Home Health Network Avatar
    liz Wessel RN, MS SJHS Home Health Network

    Thank you for sharing this picture of your mom, she is adorably beautiful!
    When I was 10, I became critically ill with spinal meningitis. I recall our family doctor making a home visit, and next I knew I was whisked away to the hospital via ambulance. My mom stayed by my side day and night offering me the comfort of her love. I remember they kept the hospital isolation room dark, I had to lay flat in bed and I could not drink anything. I was very uncomfortable and the headache pain was severe. It was scary. Mom said she wished she could trade places with me. It was a long time before I realized the impact this close brush with death and my mother’s loving presence had in shaping the course of my life.
    From the start of my nursing career, I seemed called to be with dying patients. As a young nurse, sure, I was scared of with being with someone who was dying, but my mother had taught me. I had learned the value of being there for people when they need you the most. I could not abandon. This then became my gift.
    My mom turned 90 in February, with the significance of this early life experience crystallized in my heart, I was able to express my gratitude to her for the many ways she has graced my life with her love and compassion.

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  4. April Downing Avatar
    April Downing

    Like Ms. Wessel, my hero is the doctor who saved my life, not only with his skill, but by the presence he gave to me in the middle of childbirth.
    He delivered my baby at home. I was only nineteen. I found his presence so powerful – both to me and to my baby daughter, that I resolved to enter the healing arts.
    That was 1976 and I thought medical school would be too much for me. So I entered nursing school. I’ve been an R.N. ever since. The doctor passed away last year. I think of his kind presence as I make rounds on my patients and know that his spirit lives on. It lives as well, in the daughter he delivered. She graduated from Ohio State Medical School two years ago and plans to practice obstetrics, just like the man who delivered her.
    April Downing, R.N.

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  5. Diane Berg Avatar
    Diane Berg

    I agree that healing presence is an art to be practiced. We’ve all had someone in our lives who taught grace by example. Thanks for sharing the example of your mother. In my case it was my father – the most gracious being I’ve ever met. He’s still a model to me in his 90th year.

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  6. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    What a great invitation to reflect on those who grace our lives. I imagine that this particular blog will continue for a long time! There are so many wonderful people who bless my life. Many outstanding clinicians come to mind this day, but let me tell you about one in particular…
    Dr. Brian Boyd our palliative care medical director comes on site weekly to participate in our palliative care conferences. What I notice about Dr. Boyd is his kind, gentle, and respectful approach. He affirms and acknowledges our clinicians for the care of our patients. He offers his clinical expertise in pain and symptom management and is sensitive to the psychosocial and spiritual needs of patients and families. I enjoy his sense of humor as we laugh a lot in between serious discussions. Recently he suggested we have a Hawaiian theme barbeque to celebrate our team. He brought his grill and we set up out on the lawn under a shade tree. Everyone experienced a relaxed atmosphere with good food, sunshine, a warm breeze, and ease of conversation. Remarkably, we even accomplished our work that day!

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  7. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Sister Madeleva CSJ (Sister of St. Joseph of Orange) spreads her seemingly ordinary, yet extraordinary love to others through her gift as artist. Each summer Sr. Madeleva teaches a weeklong evening class called “Art and Contemplation.”
    One of the first quotes you hear upon entering Madeleva’s studio is, “An artist may not be a special person but every person is a special kind of artist.”
    ~M. Eckhart
    Sr. Madeleva has one rule. You cannot throw anything away that you have started to create. She explains, “As in life, things do not always turn out the way you expect. Sometimes the colors may run together, get kind of muddy, but if you stick with it you will discover something beautiful.”
    Each session begins with Sr. Madeleva guiding participants in a contempletive meditation. She invites us to sit in the present moment as our cares and worries begin to fall away.
    I go to Sr. Madeleva’s class every year. Sometimes I think I am just too busy, but I go, not matter what. I seize the opportunity to be in the presence of one who holds such wisdom and who shares her gifts freely. Sister displays a most down to earth and easygoing manner. She knows how to make people feel comfortable and everyone has the experience of becoming a special kind of artist.
    Well, I’m off to an evening of grace with one of the worlds greats.

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