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.

About

Life only demands from you the strength you possess. Only one feat is possible – not to have run away. – Dag Hammarskjöld – former United Nations Secretary General

Dag_1
   I’m not sure I would have believed the last sentence of the above statement if it hadn’t been written by one of the great leaders of the 20th century. Until his tragic death in a plane crash in 1961, Dag Hammarskjöld was one of the most admired men in the world. He never ran away. And in his book, Markings, he talks of our need for courage as caregivers for each other.
   Amy suffers from mental illness. Many, when subjected to physical and mental abuse like Amy was from age seven on, escape into an altered reality. By age seventeen, Amy started hearing voices. She began to mutilate herself and was institutionalized.
   What is the relationship between Hammarskjöld, a world leader, and Amy, who is so anonymous I’m not even using her full name?… 

Amy
   The quality of Amy’s life today – even its very existence – is due in many ways to the loving care of people in an organization called the Park Center. Park Center caregivers refuse to "run away." With courage and eloquence, Amy tells some of her story in the public newletter published by the Center.
   Who wants to be around a person who is depressed, hears voices, and wants to kill herself? Almost everyone ran away from Amy. Worst of all, Amy wanted to run from herself by leaving the world that had brought her nothing but torment. In so many ways, the Park Center saved her life by helping bring peace to the battle raging within this one woman.
   On the grandest scale, Dag Hammarskjöld wanted to bring to this earth the thing everyone dreams about and Miss America candidates used to say they prayed for (perhaps to please the judges.) Hammarskjöld refused to give up on his dream for world peace. During his nearly eight-year term, he immersed himself in the world’s problems rather than running from them. And he found the deep courage to interpose himself between warring parties engaged in the language of hate instead of love.
   You can lose your life when you step between combatants – especially if you bring a message of love. In fact, on the last day of his life, Dag Hammarskjöld was on a mission to bring about a cease-fire between warring factions in the Congo when his plane crashed.
   A war has been going on inside Amy since she was a child. The only difference between CEO Barbara Quinn and her fellow caregivers at The Park Center on the one hand, and the Secretary General of the UN on the other, is a question of scale. One group seeks peace for the world, the other focuses on bringing peace to the minds of individuals – one at a time.
   Gradually, Amy and her caregivers are winning their battle against the dark voices that sometimes frighten and disorient her. "When I first started at Park Center, I could not get through a full day without a panic attack," she writes in the Center’s newsletter. Along with this, she openly shares the truth of her many past attempts at suicide. "The good voices were my bears," she continues. "They kept me safe…The bad voices…told me I was the scum of the earth, fat, ugly and many other nasty, negative things."
   Fortunately, after years of treatment, Amy tells us she is now going to a community college, working part time at the Center and helping orient new members in the club-style model which Park uses. With the help of the Park staff, she is facing into the harsh winds of her "bad voices." Amy has enlisted the help of Park Center caregivers to support her in pursuing the only feat possible – not to run away from her troubles.
   Famous star or anonymous caregiver. World leader or woman living with mental illness. There is not so much distance, or difference, among us in the challenges we face.
   The question is not how hard our problems are, but whether we find the courage to face them with love, not fear. And whether we are wise enough to engage caregivers, like the angels at the Park  Center, to walk with us through our darkest forests past the demons that threaten us.

-Erie Chapman      

Posted in

5 responses to “A Tale of Two Heroes”

  1. Mary Jean Powell, MSW Avatar
    Mary Jean Powell, MSW

    Thank you for comparing the famous heroism of world leaders to the anonymous courage of patients and caregivers. It takes just as much strength and wisdom to calm schizophrenia as it does to bring peace between nations. As a side point, our country might have been wiser to trust the UN to bring peace to Iraq rather than trying to solve the problem ourselves. In any case, like Amy, we needed a strong partner to walk with us through that night, where things continue to get darker instead of brighter. I am grateful for organizations like Park Center and also for Samaritan, where I work. And for the way they help those in need.

    Like

  2. David Dunn, M.D. Avatar
    David Dunn, M.D.

    Congratulations to the Park Center for their work. I’ve also read “Markings” and it is a marvelous journal. As for Mary Jean’s comment bringing in the Iraq issue, I’m not sure that’s a relevant analogy. Iraq is a case of bad judgment and misplaced “peace-keeping.” But it was hard to see that truth in 2003. In any case, my heart goes out to “Amy” and her caregivers at Park Center. Schizophrenia is a terrifying problem wherever it occurs in the world and in whatever form.

    Like

  3. Jennifer Stanhope, R.N. Avatar
    Jennifer Stanhope, R.N.

    This is a great column. Thank you.

    Like

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

    I am encouraged to read about Amy’s inspiring story of recovery and of the good works of caregivers at Park Center. I too appreciate the analogy of sacred work offered from the vantage point of a world macrocosm in Dag Hammarskjold’s life and then a microcosm of Amy’s personal life and of the caregivers at Park Center. Each a wonderful illustration of loves journey leading to a making a beautiful difference in our world. I especially want to hold these hopeful words in awareness, “Do not run, find the courage to face our problems with love, not fear.” May I carry this wisdom with me and may this message of peace lead me to another person in need, so that it can be shared again, again, and again.

    Like

  5. Barbara Quinn Avatar
    Barbara Quinn

    Thanks Erie for your kind words about Park Center. Amy and many others who cope with a mental illness have an abundance of courage when they share their stories so that we can have a better understanding of mental illnesses.
    Thanks again for acknowledging our wonderful staff.

    Like

Leave a reply to Barbara Quinn Cancel reply