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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The trees on the hospital lawn
are lush and thriving. They too
are getting the best of care

-Mary Oliver   

Eve_lights_hospital      You can feel the light, as well as see it. It crosses away from us leaving us in colder shadows. Summer trails in the distance like an old dog left to slink off where he can die in his own way.
   Spring is not the most dramatic change of season. It’s fall. The dying time. The light begins to depart early. The lights in the hospital parking lot ostrich their plumed heads into the dark. Nurses departing at the evening shift change walk more carefully to their cars. There are too many shadows to feel safe…..

Eveninglight   The weight of summer’s heat and aridity have hurt the southern trees.
They will not dress the air as brightly this year. Orange may never
emerge between green and brown.
    We want to be able to enjoy every season. We never know which day will be our last.
   Almost everybody says that what they want from life is to be happy. As we have often discussed on these pages, it may be more of a blessing to live a rich life rather than a happy one. And more possible.
   There’s a certain mindlessness in some of the happiness plugged on television and in popular magazines. Movie stars always seem to be smiling in the photos. But then we read about their darker lives – all the drugs and depression and trips into rehab.
  Early_autumn This autumn will be the last season for many with terminal illness. It will be the last fall for Dr. Randy Pausch, who’s last lecture will live awhile longer on the internet. And it will be the first season for many more – too tiny to know, yet, what season they are living. 
   We live somewhere in between the shadows.

-Erie Chapman

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2 responses to “Early Autumn”

  1. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    The change of season . . . it hovers around the edges of my consciousness. It’s the increase in rainfall and decrease in morning temperatures. In the midst of this change I am aware of demands . . . from patients, my family, colleagues. And then there is the much bigger picture you remind me of this morning, Erie . . . the flow of life . . . the comings and goings in this world. I feel myself relax as I contemplate this bigger picture this morning. Thank you.

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  2. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Thank you for sharing the beauty that was captured in your photos. Randy Pausch’s video may fade from the internet but his legacy of Love is a gift that lives in my heart.
    Fall’s voice echoes a reminder to us that we too must die. In this season of fading light, of dying anew, I watch the luminous light of a full moon set and feel the coloring of leaves surrender. In the stillness comes release and a letting go into emptiness. When we are empty of ourselves there is room for Love to fill us.
    The lines of this poem seem to resonate…
    I am filled with the clarity of the fall day.
    And am touched by something immeasurable, transparent,
    which I cannot describe at first
    but must be everything we never said to each other.
    There are so many things I’d like to say.
    How shall I be able to speak?
    Today you are not shade, you are light.
    ~Excerpt from, “The Starlings” by Jesper Svenbro
    Translated by John Matthias and Lars-Håkan Svensson

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