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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StraitjacketThe status quo, in its seductiveness, can trap us like a straitjacket and keep us from accomplishing
meaningful change
.
-Erie Chapman

   The hardest thing about advancing the Loving Care Movement is not people understanding what it’s about. Everyone agrees that loving care is a good thing. Loving care is like motherhood and apple pie. No one can say they oppose it. Love is an essential value. Only a fool or a deep cynic would say they’re against love.
   The problem is not in the words, but in the actions. Meaningful change, rare as it is, lies in persistent follow-through. For examples of this, consider your workplace…

   How many times have you gone off to a conference or seminar, returned with the energy of a good idea, and seen that energy evaporate along with the idea? How many Saturday or Sunday mornings have we heard messages in Synagogue, Temple, Mosque or Church and resolved to make change only to see ourselves fall back to the same patterns we have always followed.

The New Year’s Resolution Syndrome:   Although some people are baffled by this so-called "New Year’s Resolution Syndrome" the psychology is relatively simple. The status quo is seductive because it’s comfortable. The status quo also had the enormous power of inertia. It’s easier to sit in the same patterns, to follow the well worn path, then it is to strike out on a new road that may hold danger and hard work as well as the promise of important improvement.
   It requires courage to change. It also requires that we overcome our enormous tendency to defend the comfort of the status quo through rationalization. "Why bother to change?" voices will call out to us. "If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it."
   The problem is that many aspects of our healthcare work places are broken. Too many patients are not receiving the loving care they need and too many caregivers are getting inadequate support from their leaders.
   It’s easier for us to sit back and complain, and to blame others, than it is to tackle change ourselves.
  Several months back, a high level hospital leader promised me he was going to get out of his suit and follow my recommendation that he work one shift a month alongside first line employees. "Great suggestion, Erie." He said enthusiastically. "I’m definitely going to do it."
  "Really?" I challenged. "Most people back away. They’re too afraid."
  "Not me," he said. "I’m going to do it."
   A few weeks went by and I emailed  him to check his progress. "Oops, haven’t done anything yet. I’ve been too busy."
   Immediately, I was suspicious. I served as CEO of three different hospital systems over a quarter century. I know the activity patterns of top health care leaders. Every single one of them can find four to eight hours in a given month to work alongside their employess if they decide this is an important wayRiverside
to model solidarity with staff. For example, I regularly worked with first line staff myself for almost twelve straight years as CEO of Riverside Methodist, the largest hospital in Ohio.
   But the point is not that every leader should jump into a housekeeping uniform and work shifts on the front lines. Instead find what things you can do to create meaningful change. Embrace personal changes with sincerety and courageous follow through. I know the approach I used at Riverside Methodist was helpful partly because we saw: 1) significant improvements in employee morale, 2) significant jumps in patient satisfaction, and 3) we were voted one of the most employee-friendly workplaces in America by three different media sources.
   Sadly, my suspicions about my hospital colleague were correct. Five months after his promise to change, I saw this executive at a meeting. "You know what I’m going to ask," I told him. "What?" he said, looking baffled. Not only had he not spent a second working alongside his staff, he had forgotten his promise!
   "You’re never going to do it, are you?" I told him, doing my best to challenge his male ego. "Yes I am," he said defiantly when he finally realized what I was talking about. That was a month ago. He still hasn’t acted yet. He’s caught in rationalization and he’s drowning in the status quo. Like so many of us, he means well but he really has no intention to change his schedule or, for that matter, the way he leads. He’s also caught in the notion that he has to say not what is true but what he thinks someone else wants to hear.
   The point here is not to drop a guilt trip on this one fellow but to face the fact that meaningful change is always harder than we think. We need to probe what it takes to overcome the obstacles that lie in front of significant movement even though the short answer is always the same: courageous commitment wins the day.
The Touch Card Challenge:  Recently, I challenged three different hospitals and one hospice to start using the touch card Mezuzah_1
system I have discussed in the Journal (see Journal of Sacred Work, October 1) The touch card idea is simply an idea for a reminder system (sort of like a Mezuzah – left) that helps caregivers recall loving care and the patient’s humanity by pausing a second to touch some card or object on the way into a patient room as a reminder of the patient’s humanity. It’s a symbolic act intended to reawaken the inner light of love – "Sort of like the way Notre Dame football players jump up and touch something on the way out onto the field before a game," someone said to me. "Right," I said, "I guess that’s a parallel idea.
   Leaders at each of the four organizations said they loved the idea and would begin incorporating it. To my knowledge, none of them has, thus far, done so much as to even open a dialogue on the subject with their team. Accordingly, the energy that this practice might release has yet to be experienced. Ah, the dark comfort of the status quo…

-Erie Chapman

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5 responses to “The Dark Comfort of the Status Quo”

  1. Carol Elkins, R.N. Avatar
    Carol Elkins, R.N.

    Thanks for this analysis of the status quo problem. I think the main responsibility for change is on the shoulders of leaders who, in my opinion, are among the worst at getting stuck in doing things the same way and resisting change. I love the touch card idea. I know you’ve raised it before and I admit I’m guilty. I haven’t done it yet but I still hope to make it happen at our hospital.

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  2. Lucy Westwood Avatar
    Lucy Westwood

    I think that for people to break out of the status quo they need to be offered something that is extremely stronger than their current pattern. This is why I think leaders have to have visions which are very exciting because otherwise, people will just stay where they are. Our organization is a classic “status quo” hospital that makes changes only when everyone else is already doing it. For example, we’ll get new technology, but only when someone else has developed it. And we’ll bring in some consultant to help us “improve” but nothing much ever happens because the leaders are more interested in their golf games than they are in improving our work place. When the consultant leaves, the idea leaves with them. How do you change this?

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  3. Erie Chapman Avatar
    Erie Chapman

    Lucy,
    The only way an organization can change the status quo is to either have leaders that can wake up to the energy needed for positive change or…to change the leaders.
    Since I’m guessing this is hard in your own situation, I would encourage you to pursue change in your own part of the organization. Try the touch card idea in some form. Introduce the My Story plan with your patients so you can enrich your own caregiving experiences. Thanks so much for caring about this.
    Erie

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  4. liz Wessel RN, MS SJHS Home Health Network, Orange, CA Avatar
    liz Wessel RN, MS SJHS Home Health Network, Orange, CA

    I know how much you pour your heart into this loving care movement and at times, perhaps, it does not seem like much progress is being made from your vantage point. However, may you not be discouraged. Here is an update from my little corner of the world… Our ministry is currently undergoing a Values Review Process (VRP) in which teams of caregivers will evaluate how well we are living our values. During a 3 month process teams will identify what we currently do well and make recommendations for what we might do better. Findings will be presented to our leadership team in early December. An action plan will be developed and implemented based on recommendations. I have provided your touch card meditation to the three VRP facilitators to share with team members. I am hopeful that the VRP teams might make a recommendation to adopt the touch card idea at our ministry.
    In addition, I will be presenting the touch card concept to our Health System quality leaders during a scheduled telephone conference November 2nd. I will keep you posted on the outcomes of these efforts. Thanks for your ongoing challenge to healthcare leaders to venture out of the comfort zone. I sincerely believe that positive change is occurring within our Health System and will continue to improve in other organizations across the country.

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  5. Angie Bermudez, RN- Mission Hospital, Mission Viejo, CA, CSUF BSN Student Avatar
    Angie Bermudez, RN- Mission Hospital, Mission Viejo, CA, CSUF BSN Student

    Erie,
    It does take a lot of courage, and energy to come out of one’s comfort zone to initiate change. Not too long ago, we saw the CFO at Mission hospital walking down the hallways with the transport team, dressed in their uniform, and pushing gurneys. It was quite surprising and encouraging I am sure for the members of the transport team, for the patients, and for many other employees like myself to see our CFO’s walking in someone else’s shoes. I thought: Wow, he is reaching out, may be this is the beginning of a positive change! In retrospect, I wish I would have shared my comments with him. The would have probably been encouraging and re-affirming for him. Perhaps this would have encouraged other members of the executive team to do the same…
    We need a strong motivating force to achieve big goals. I admire your perseverance and eternal source of inspiration for all of us who have the priviledge to read your journal… I am trying to share this wonderful journal with others…

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