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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If we can’t take the time out of our lives to stay a moment and listen
to one of the best musicians on Earth play some of the best music ever
written; if the surge of modern life so overpowers us that we are deaf
and blind to something like that — then what else are we missing
? – Gene Weingarten, Washington Post

Joshua_bell
   The violinist stood there in Washington’s Metro subway station like any other street musician. As he played Bach, Schubert and Massenet, commuters ignored him as they might most of the wandering minstrels who haunt the ground below ground. After all, they didn’t come to listen to music. They are on their way to other things, carried along by "the surge of modern life"…

   What does it take to capture our full presence? It turns out that context is critical. The subway violinist in this true story is none other than the world renowned Joshua Bell, considered by critics to be perhaps the finest violinist on earth. Bell agreed to be part of an experiment arranged by The Washington Post and reported on, fascinatingly, by Mr. Weingarten in a must-read April 8 story which is accessible at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/04/AR2007040401721.html

   Perhaps you have already sensed the essence of the experiment. Take a world class musician out of the context of the auditorium, withdraw his $100-a-seat audience, drop him into a subway setting with his $3.5 million dollar Stradivarius, and see if anyone pays any attention.
   The answer, surprising to some, is that almost no one even hesitated, much less stopped to listen. Of the the 1071 people who passed Mr. Bell in 43 minutes, only one person recognized him, even though Bell had just performed in a sold-out concert at a nearby hall. And only one other individual, John Picarello, stopped to listen long enough to realize he he was in the presence of something quite remarkable – "a superb violinist," he immediately noticed, "I’d never heard anyone of that caliber." Picarello caught nine minutes of the performance. "It was a treat, just a brilliant, incredible way to start the day."
   Only one man had the presence to appreciate stunning beauty in the middle of subway noise without knowing the fame of the artist.
  This isn’t the story, The Emperor’s New Clothes, because Bell is gifted with astonishing talent. If anything, it is the reverse. For there was true gold in air of the Metro station and most were blind to it.
   What is our ability to perceive beauty when it’s right in front of us? We have to be paying attention.
Subway_wrapper
   Amid the photographs and painting reproductions hanging on my office wall, I have tacked up an ordinary Subway wrapper. I put it there to help me understand the notion of art. Can a lowly object be elevated in such a way? We know that it can from the works of numerous modern artists such as the remarkable Andy Warhol.
   I look at the Subway wrapper more often than I do the many other objects on my wall. Often, I wonder if people entering my office will notice the oddity of a plastic wrapper tacked to the wall. Out of politeness, or , more likely, because they are focused on a different agenda, almost no one mentions the wrapper, even though it looks as out of place as you can imagine. 
Subway_also
   The ordinary can become the extraordinary through the quality of our presence. The extraordinary can be transformed into the transcendent if we educate our hearts to notice.
   What Warhol and others did was show us that trash, or the ordinary, can be beautiful. In a different way, what Joshua Bell does is show us what music sounds like when it’s created from the highest peaks of excellence. What reporter Weingarten suggests is that context focuses our attention.
   Caregiving, like any other form of work, can involve ordinary transactions, or it can be elevated to the level of the highest art. The role of leaders is to put caregivers in context.
   Leaders can raise energy by putting a sort of frame around the calling of caregiving. In so doing, they celebrate the nobility, elegance and beauty of what to others may seem ordinary.
   Why is the film Sacred Work, produced by the Baptist Healing Trust, so successful? This film is powerful because it frames the work of caregivers truthfully and effectively. That is why so many hospitals now use it to orient new employees and to inspire veterans.
   Our lives are the sum of where we focus our attention in the moments we are granted. Weingarten quotes W. H. Davies:

             What is this life if, full of care,
             We have no time to stand and stare.

Spiritual Practice:   As a spiritual practice:

1) Consider people and things around you and how they would seem if they were highlighted in film or their best gifts were truly noticed.
2) If you haven’t already done so, go back and read Weingarten’s full story at the link, above. His story has already changed my life and I hope it will engage yours as well.

-Erie Chapman

   
   

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3 responses to “Why Context is Critical”

  1. Catherine Self Avatar
    Catherine Self

    Erie,
    Thank you for this beautifully crafted meditation. In reading the Washington Post article I am struck by a number of thoughts that are so applicable to the sacred work of caregiving.
    The reporter notes that each passerby had a choice to make – to slow down, to notice, to pay attention. He goes on to suggest that “when you play a violin piece, you are a storyteller, and you’re telling a story.”
    Isn’t every life a story, and isn’t every encounter an opportunity to slow down, to notice, to pay attention to the story unfolding before our eyes?
    You make an important point in your meditation when you suggest the value of paying attention. Two things in the Post article suggest why it may be so hard to pay attention, sometimes even in the right context: “life slowly starts to choke the poetry out of us” and sometimes our inattention may be deliberate. If I don’t notice, I don’t have to feel guilty about not responding.
    In the very spot where beautiful music soared, says the article, a homeless man once died – “and no one even stopped to see or slowed down to look.”
    My heart breaks at the thought of how many stories I have missed in my rush, in being pulled quickly past by other priorities, in my choice to not pay attention.
    We who have been given the honor and the blessing to offer care, we who carry within us the light and the hope for healing, we must pay attention. For if we do not, who will?

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  2. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Thank you for your reflections Catherine as they add deeper meaning and a chance for me to reflect further.
    I was fascinated by Weingarten’s story and amazed by the lack of responsiveness of people hurrying, scurrying, rushing hither and thither, only to miss the exquisite beauty before them. The teachings offered in today’s meditation are quite helpful, so I thank you once again Erie, and I will expand out your Loving wisdom so others may benefit too. This past week I set the context of four different meetings by reading your meditation called “Spiritual Work?” I was pleasantly surprised how it served as catalyst for spontaneous personal sharing by those who were present.
    The following are some helpful tips in educating our hearts suggested by Deepak Chopra.
    “In our busy schedules, we can often complain that we don’t have time to meditate. But if we are sincere in our desire to go inside, we can create our own moments of stillness in the midst of our activity.
    Stopped at a traffic light? Do some deep breathing. Waiting in line at the bank or grocery store? Repeat an uplifting word such as ‘love’ or ‘peace.’ Riding the bus to and from work? Value these times as an opportunity to close your eyes and go within or to say a little prayer.”
    “Wherever you go in the midst of movement and activity, carry your stillness within you. Then the chaotic movement around you will never overshadow your access to the reservoir of creativity, the field of pure potentiality.”
    May our hearts awaken to the beauty all around us so we may see, feel, and touch the sacred in the ordinary.
    Love,
    liz

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  3. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    Thank you, Erie, for the meditation today and the story about Joshua Bell. Wow! That story is pretty long and I haven’t finished it yet. I will get back to it this evening. But the thing that occured to me as I read the story is that it is a statement about the “spiritual state of the union.” I have recently read other research along these lines, but it all suggests a very different picture than the one the Washington Post offers.
    I was also reminded of what J.R.R. Tolkin does in “The Silmarillion.” This is the “prequel” to The Lord of the Rings. There, Tolkin offers a story about the creation of the universe in which God and the first holy beings are all musicians. His story suggests that all the unfolding of the history of the universe is a manifestation of the music of the gods.
    I have a lot on my plate today, but I am going to stop and listen for the music of the gods that is unfolding all around me.

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