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 spark behind fear/recognized as life/leaps into flame// always this energy smolders inside/ when it remains unlit/the body fills with dense smoke. – David Whyte, from his poem "Out on the Ocean"

Fires_in_california
   As fires burn across too much of Southern California and people flee homes that have held comfort, I think of the spark beneath fear and another kind of fire. Those threatened by flames today may not appreciate, at this moment, the beauty of the fire within each of us – the fire that lives as Love on the other side of fear.
   The 15th century Indian poet, Kabir wrote: "If you make love with the divine now, in the next/ life you will have the face of satisfied desire….

   But this may ring as a very abstract thought in the lives of caregivers who have, before them many varieties of suffering and difficulty. It is the last lines (above) of Whyte’s remarkable poem that often come to me. If we don’t recognize and give vent to the fire of love within each of us, he tells us, than we may fill with "dense smoke." When our life’s passion is unrealized, the glory and hope that flickers within us may begin to die out. And we know what happens when a flame is extinguished. It is replaced with a column of dense smoke rising up to irritate our nostrils.
   The fact that we are each born with so many gifts is a cause for rejoicing. Does it also create within us a cloud of anxiety that swirls vaguely beneath our consciousness? As we age, do we become too painfully aware of gifts unwrapped – and of the fact that these gifts may never be seen? 
   I confess my own anxiety around this. I have spent so many of my waking hours trying so many different endeavors (and conjuring thousands more that can never see daylight.) People looking at my resume (see About Me below my photo on the main page of the Journal) often laugh – either surprised or dismayed. How can such an ordinary seeming fellow have done so many different things? I never know how to answer them. But perhaps Whyte answers for all of us. There is a great energy smoldering inside each one of us. I keep trying to release my energy into this world through whatever pathways it may take.
   How about you?

-Erie Chapman

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6 responses to “Smoldering Energy”

  1. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    Now that you mention it, Erie, as I look back over my life I see quite a number of things I’ve done, not because I set out to do such things, but because they were ways to express the fire burning inside of me. These days, one of the things I’ve sought to do is to find ways to help others express the fire inside of themselves. That’s one of the reasons I keep coming back here to the Journal. You keep giving ideas and encouragement for that. Thanks!

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  2. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    I guess what resonates for me is how Love’s energy begins with a spark, may smolder or change form but it never really dies. Sometimes the embers grow dim and we need a spark and oxygen to breathe life back into us and reawaken passion. I feel this is the special gift you offer caregivers in the questions you pose, the meditations you share, and the immense Love you send out into the vast unknown. Love’s energy is continually expanding out from one spark of light to another, awakening new life.

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  3. Lorilee Amlie Avatar
    Lorilee Amlie

    How appropriate this writing is as fires rage all around us here in So Calif. But,the fires currently consuming our land are much more scary than the fire inside all of us. Like Erie, I also spend many waking hours doing things that I feel a desire for, but I am ashamed to admit that I also spend too much time playing mind numbing solitaire on the computer. I do this to escape from all the stressful things I should be doing, but this leaves me very unsatisfied and feeling as though I am ‘extinguishing my flame’.

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  4. Victoria Avatar
    Victoria

    If only I could learn to channel my energies effectively to reach and achieve projects that lead to self-satisfaction.
    Erie, I applaud you for sharing your thoughts on this and reminding me not to give up, but to continue to look for my gifts.

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  5. Mareanne Fontenette-May (MFM) Avatar
    Mareanne Fontenette-May (MFM)

    Friday the 13th of March, 1992 a day that will forever be burned into the deepest part of my soul. The day I lost every worldly possession I owned, the day I truly learned that a house is just a structure, and that your family and friends are what make a home. I was a 27 year old divorced single mother with no clue how I would ever recover from such a terrifying and devestating ordeal, but on this day and in the weeks and months to follow I saw the goodness of strangers, people I had never met walking up and insisting on giving monetary donations, friends bringing home cooked meals and helping hands, neighborhood children offering up their piggy banks, local grocery stores bringing bags of food and water to the 4 families who lost their homes, the American Red Cross there in an instant providing vouchers for clothing, food, and shelter to the 3 families who were not as fortunate as my son and I to have family welcoming them with open arms.
    Friday the 13th, changed my life forever, I just didn’t know at the time all the lessons I would learn and how thankful at the end I would be for the journey. Loosing everything made me realize that material items mean nothing, and how important family, friendships and community are. It helped me make a conscious decision that I could lie down and give up or I could be a survivor making the most of my life, appreciating the love of my wonderful family, friends and colleagues. This fire created a flame deep inside of me, a commitment to advocate for those less fortunate and to care deeply for my caregivers always remembering they are the heart and soul of what keeps all of us in the healthcare profession employed.

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  6. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    I was looking for something else and found this…and I thought perhaps it was meant to be shared.
    The Spark of God
    There are some persons whose great gift, in a dark age is simply to maintain a candlelight of humanity and so to guarantee that darkness should not have the final word.
    ~Robert Ellsberg
    Spark of God, Spirit of life!
    I remember and celebrate your dwelling within me.
    Divine Fire, you never waver in your faithful presence.
    Amid the seasons of life, you are my inner illumination.
    Ever-present light, the spark of your inspiration has been with me
    In every moment of my life, always available to lead and
    guide me.
    Eternal Joy, the dancing flames of your joy are reflected
    in my happiness and in the many ways that I delight in life.
    Spirit of God, your fiery presence gives me passion
    For what is vital and deserving of my enthusiasm.
    Blazing Love, the radiant glow of your compassion fills me
    with awareness, kindness and understanding.
    Purifying Flame, your refining fire transforms me
    As I experience life’s sorrows, pain, and discouragement.
    Radiant Presence, your steady flame of unconditional love
    kindles my faithful and enduring relationships.
    Luminous One, you breathed love into me at my birthing
    And your love will be with me as I breathe my last.
    Thank you for being a shining Spark of Life within me.
    ~Joyce Rupp

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