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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What we are really afraid of is facing the ugly darkness in ourselves that limits our ability to love freely.   – Karen York

   In the December 8 "Comment" section of the Journal, Karen York, a Vice President with Alive Hospice of Nashville, wrote lines of such direct eloquence that I wanted to lift them up again for your consideration.
  Italian_miles_2
What kind of inner darkness blocks our love? My thirty-five month old grandson (every month counts when you’re that age) doesn’t know that darkness yet. Miles expresses his love freely to anyone he encounters. Their race, religion, country of origin or age are not things to which he attaches judgment (although their size may intrigue him.) He hugs strangers (if they get close enough) and will share his latest activities with anyone he meets….

   He also has complete faith in magic. This Christmas, he will accept the
idea that Santa will Miles_presence_1magically make his way into his house to deliver
the spirit of Christmas.
   The rest of us have been educated by the world – and knocked around by it as well. Our lives, as well as our holiday seasons are different now than they were when we were children. We measure our words and calculate our actions based on a sophisticated mix of thoughts, wants, biases, analyses and the cues we pick up from those around us.
   I don’t generally tell strangers that I love them (although, in a brotherly sense, I do). We’re not expected to tell strangers we love them because adults aren’t supposed to make such important declarations until they have more information. Right?
   Isn’t this odd? The whole process suggests that after I get to know you, I might not love you if I decide you don’t meet my personal standards! What about unconditional love? What about love of neighbor?
   Perhaps this was part of the darkness to which Karen York alludes. Earlier in her comment, she writes, "We are afraid to look into the eyes of an immigrant who crossed an
imaginary line between despair and hope. We are afraid to embrace a
brother who worships his God in a different rhythm."
   Why are her statements so painfully true? We fear the despair of an immigrant because we fear despair itself. It’s as if we imagine despair is contagious and, of course, it can be if we choose to let it control us.
Roosevelt
   Franklin Roosevelt’s oft-quoted line that "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself," was not only true about the Depression era of which he spoke, but about our fears today. Too many Christians and too many Muslims now look at each other with distrust instead of love. The darkness inside us has become an unreasoning fear.
   This is the challenge caregivers face everyday. It’s a challenge solved at places like the Siloam Clinic , a faith-based charity where all staff are taught to "see the face of Christ" in every patient. How powerful this thinking can be and how central it is to loving care. We can best deliver loving care when we see the humanity in the other. Once we have stereotyped someone as an object belonging to a class we think of as distasteful then we have harmed our ability to love.
   This does not mean that we become blind to exercising discretion. It means that we learn to see beyond the surface to the spirit within.
   In order to do this, we must do as Ms. York suggests: first come to terms with the darkness within. We need to accept our biases and then overcome them by replacing them. We need to love that which we once feared.
   Soon, my grandson will accumulate his own array of biases. Soon enough, he will discover that the Santa Claus at Macy’s doesn’t come down chimneys. Hopefully, he will learn, at the same time, the power of the invisible – the love which does travel through walls and between people. It is this love which turns back the darkness and opens the door to life’s greatest gift.

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5 responses to “What We Fear”

  1. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    Thank you for honoring my comments. Living love, not fear is much more difficult than it sounds because it requires us to question those visceral reactions we have when we observe people in need. Do we judge based on our fear or do we love based on our openness? This is truly something that I am challenging for myself.
    Karen

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

    Thanks for sharing your grandson Mile’s pictures with us. He is so adorable I just wanted to reach out to hug and tickle him! Saturday night we hosted a family Christmas dance at church. I experienced the childlike love that you describe when I met 5-year-old Brandon. Upon his arrival, he immediately engaged several of us as he chattered away sharing his beautiful free spirit unabashedly. Brandon seemed unaware that life had already struck such a heavy blow on his sweet short life, and that of his baby sister. You see, Brandon’s dad died tragically in August (age 40) of a heart attack while playing hockey. His mom talked with me about how resilient children can be. Yet, on an intuitive level I wondered if Brandon’s physical gestures of leaning up against, sitting on laps, and holding hands, amidst his running and playing was not his way of reaching out for love and comfort.
    I agree, as we mature fears of being hurt cause us to feel threatened and in turn we begin to erect walls around our tender hearts for protection. It seems the more we isolate ourselves in self-made fortresses our perceptions distort with growing mistrust of anyone who appears different. I believe a way back to our humanity and out of darkness is to gently and kindly lean into, get to know, and befriend our fears without judgment or condemnation. A first step is to be present in open kind awareness understanding there is nothing we need to do or change. In this ending process, where there is no place to arrive at, we can begin to relax and trust that divine love will do the rest.

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  3. Mary Jean Powell, MSW Avatar
    Mary Jean Powell, MSW

    I think Karen is very insightful and I’m glad you quoted her comment. Her Post today is another good one. She seems to have the humility and the insight to challenge herself and that is what we all need to do. Openness as a caregiver is hard because of the vulnerability it brings. But I guess that’s true of openness in all relationships. It takes courage and, as you have previously written, some “letting go of ego.”

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

    Karen,
    I would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge your great commitment and work in hospice and for your ongoing insightful contributions to the Journal. It has been a wonderful journey the past several months reading the sharing of thoughts and feelings in response to the meditations. I appreciate the honest perspective that you offer us. Although I have not met you I feel I have come to know you a little in a meaningful way. I often share more of my inner self on the Journal than I do with others in daily life and I am greatful for the kinship.
    Thank you!
    liz

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  5. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    Thank you Mary Jean and Liz for your kinds words. I enjoy hearing from YOUR experiences as well, and am enriched by your comments daily.
    Karen

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