In human closeness there is a secret
edge...
Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966)
The complex caregiver/patient
encounter has so many facets. The more
acute the patient's need, the greater
the opportunity for the encounter to be meaningful.
Opening our hearts in patient & client encounters
means that the caregiver will feel some of the pain
of the patient. There is a cost in this. But there is
also a cost if we close the door to our soul...
The right emotional distance for caregivers is a continuing challenge to those who remain awake and sensitive to their calling. The "secret edge" of closeness can feel dangerous. Yet, as Henri Nouwen has written so eloquently, "Those who do not run away from our pains but touch them with compassion bring healing and new strength."
When caregivers retreat from a heartful openness to those in need they exchange one kind of pain for another. They may save themselves from tears, but they risk becoming unfeeling automatons.
Still, the natural inclination of so many caregivers is to run for the hills when, for example, a patient dies. "Don’t get too close to your patients," some hardened veteran will warn.

Is it possible to get too close? Of course. But the greater risk is distance. Clinical distance, a phrase often used in professional training, is often mistakenly interpreted by caregivers as a kind of cold detachment, an arrogance that casts the caregiver as a powerful monarch ruling the fate of the patient.
This is the syndrome that can birth the so-called "God-complex" in which caregivers, particularly doctors, accept a sort of deification from those who seem to idolize their performances – as if it was the doctor’s skill alone that was responsible for a patient’s recovery.
Humility calls caregivers to appreciate that every successful healing experience and every sacred encounter is a partnership of many people and many forces. That the key to great caregiving is the practice of Radical Loving Care.
May we all extend our deepest admiration to the men and women who find the courage and strength each day to share the pain of the people they treat.
The Burning House
Wanting to alleviate pain without sharing it is like wanting to save a child from a burning house without the risk of being hurt. – Henri Nouwen
Without warning,
they die, abandoning you as if to insult your
skill, your commitment, your caring
& everything you did to heal. As if to mock how close
you came to their heart. They
left you feeling that you could
be their bridge to life, their hope, their salvation
and you arrive at work to hear, "She died this
morning at 5:04 a.m." You know that you were sleeping
then, dreaming that your heroic efforts would extend
the thread of her time, and she, to whom you gave your
heart, is gone.
How hard to love, to give, to live knowing that
your heart must give & bear this burning blow,
this crimson slashing, this secret edge.
Will there be healing,
new strength?
-Erie Chapman
www.healinghospital.org

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