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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It was probably the first time in his adult life that he had ever cried.
– from the short story "The Swimmer" by John Cheever.

The_swimmer_in_pool
   Cheever’s story (which I read and saw in movie form many years ago) has a strange opening premise. In the movie version (click on scenes from the film, left and below) a man who lives in Beverly Hills decides one sunny day that he would like to swim home through a chain of backyard pools owned by his rich friends. At each home, and in each setting, he finds himself progressively more unwelcome. By the end of the story we encounter him in the midst of a thunder storm pounding on the doors of his own mansion. Chillingly, the mansion turns out to be empty and foreboding.   
   It’s a depressing and powerful story. Among other things, I have always been haunted by this story as a metaphor for our desperate need to feel welcome and loved in the different communities of our lives…

      Think of the different homes in which you have lived. Once you move, you can never return to the Swimmer_cover
same kind of warm presence you once may have taken for granted in your old house. The home in which I grew up in Southern California was the haven of my childhood. Upon returning years later, the front door I once walked through with abandon was, of course, now locked against me.
   Think of the settings in which you have worked. Once you leave and take a different job, you can never return to your old place with the same kind of acceptance you may once have enjoyed. In more than forty years, I have worked in as many at seven different jobs, some as short as two years, some as long as twelve. I have left most by my own decision through promotion or other advancement. I have also been fired twice as the result of mergers.
   In every instance, I formed an attachment to my job and my fellow workers. Imagine how it feels for any of us to return to a setting where we may be greeted in a friendly way, but of which we are no longer a part.
   In each instance, the gain of a new house or a new job is accompanied, to some degree, by a feeling of loss for the way things were. Even a bad job or a defective home may hold happy memories.
   I have wondered how this sense of loss must feel for couples who divorce. The feeling of intimacy once so comfortable, trusting and rewarding suddenly (or gradually) turns as cold and foreboding as the empty house in Cheever’s story.
   Some people yearn for retirement. A part of me yearns to return to some of the positions I once held and to have the kind of easy accessibility to thousands of people who were once partners.
   All of this, for me, is really about acceptance – about feeling welcome and wanted. Our places of worship, at their best, give us this feeling of inclusion. At their worst, they can make us feel shunned.
   Somehow, we need to find a way to feel welcomed in the world itself.  The truth is, none of us own anything and yet we "own" everything we can sense. We don’t really own our homes because we can never occupy them for more than a lifetime and they can always be taken from us by any number of other forces.
   By the same token, our friends, our jobs, our families are never truly "ours." For us to think otherwise is what leads to stress. If we think we "own" things or people than it is likely we will try to control them. We really can’t.
Swimmer
   No one can actually give us the feeling of being welcomed in this world unless we have first learned how to accept ourselves. Our bodies are temporary spaces we occupy. As all of us know, they are ever vulnerable to breaking down – and letting us down.
   The protagonist in "The Swimmer" (played by Burt Lancaster) is not really welcome anywhere because he has not welcomed himself. The first tears he sheds at the end of the story are new for him because he has never been in touch with his truest feelings. As he searches for acceptance outside, we know he will never find it because he has never felt welcome inside his own body.
   As is always the case in the Journal. There is never a better answer to this dilemma than for each of us to align with the energy of Love.

-Erie Chapman

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6 responses to “Feeling Welcome”

  1. Edwin Loftin Avatar
    Edwin Loftin

    Well said. For if we do not accept who we are and love that existance (no matter how temporary) we can never share that love with others.
    In our noble occupations as providors or conduits for healing care this must never be lost. For those who are sick or facing life decisions are typically at the perverbial crossroads of self acceptance. They may have been the most stable in sense of self but throw in the weight of a new diagnosis of cancer or heart disease and the process must start all over. Hear is where our loving and healing care must focus. For our calling has to be partners in helping those who are physicaly, emotionally, spiratully challenged in finding their “acceptance” with themselves so healing can occur.

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  2. Mary Jean Powell, MSW Avatar
    Mary Jean Powell, MSW

    I like Edwin’s comment. I also think this is one of the most profound meditations you have written. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and your heart.

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  3. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    Our search for belonging is one of the deepest needs that never really goes away. What happens when I transgress and am no longer welcomed by the people I love? There aren’t enough charities or loving people who will open their arms to those who have taken a wayward path. Thanks to those who do.

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  4. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    How true, is your message that all we hold precious is on a temporary loan to us, except of course our souls. I desperately try to hold on to Love, wanting all to be solid and secure. Yet, I know there is a lesson for me to learn, in my own time, and in my own way, and amidst the pain of letting go I will come to know the freeing peace of acceptance.
    As I read your meditation, this quote came to mind that resonates for me.
    “We are all longing to go home to some place we have never been — a place half-remembered and half-envisioned we can only catch glimpses of from time to time. Community. Somewhere, there are people to whom we can speak with passion without having the words catch in our throats. Somewhere a circle of hands will open to receive us, eyes will light up as we enter, voices will celebrate with us whenever we come into our own power. Community means strength that joins our strength to do the work that needs to be done. Arms to hold us when we falter. A circle of healing. A circle of friends. Someplace where we can be free.” ~Star Hawk

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  5. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    This meditation strikes very close to my own heart and life circumstances these days. I find myself resonating with all that you are saying, Erie. And as I read, the word “hospitality” kept coming to my mind. There are those in my own faith tradition — Christianity — who have claimed that it is hospitality that marks the very heart of our faith tradition. I have thought this before, but never said it aloud. There has never been a time when I have walked into the Baptist Healing Trust offices that I did not feel welcomed. I have understood that as an expression of the living out of the meaning of radical loving care in the actual day-to-day operations of the Trust. That speaks volumes to me.

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  6. Lorilee Amlie Avatar

    In a seminal 1986 study, McMillan and Chavis identify four elements of “sense of community”: 1) membership, 2) influence, 3) integration and fulfillment of needs, and 4) shared emotional connection.
    Most of us want to belong and feel accepted. As a nurse, I can make every patient I have contact with feel accepted, fulfill their needs at that moment and hopefully have a shared emotional connection. This sense of community is a goal we can bring to all we have contact with.

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