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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Anselm_kiefer_osiris_and_isis   Kinetic art moves you. Static art stops you (in your tracks.)
     -Anne Bogart, A Director Prepares

   What encounters in life truly arrest our attention? What do we experience so intensely that we are drawn into relationship with the person or thing in that moment?
   Anne Bogart writes that "Pornography…is kinetic…Advertising is kinetic – it can induce you to buy. Political art is kinetic – it can move you to political action. Static art, on the other hand, stops you. It causes arrest…it won’t let you easily walk by it." Bogart says that her encounter with the painting above, Osiris and Isis, by Anselm Kiefer, was one such experience for her. She was so compelled by the painting that she stood before it for over an hour.
   These two notions offer a perfect metaphor for caregiving. All day long, America’s caregivers must engage in countless kinetic encounters – applying bandages, changing them, inserting IVs, charting a patient’s history and progress. But which of our encounters are "static" by Bogart’s definition?…

   America’s best caregivers allow themselves to be "arrested" by a range of encounters. Something about each patient engages their passion and their Love. A heartache experienced by a fellow caregiver may cause them to offer deep presence.
   When we have full presence, we gather the various parts of ourTwiin_towers
selves that have splintered off like a search party foraging in the woods, and we summon all of them to appear at a particular place we call the present moment. All of us engages with this moment. The full power of our presence is brought to bear.
   One way to know the power of full presence is to consider any traumatic event in your life. Isn’t it remarkable how vividly we can recall where we were on the morning of September 11, 2001? The images are etched in our minds. Why? Because the drama of the event so transfixed us that we focused all of our senses and our spirits to confront what was before us. As a result, our memories recorded all of this with great power. What was before us contained not only horror, but incomprehensibility. We kept focusing and re-focusing trying to understand and absorb it all.
   Imagine if we could engage our senses with equal force to address the needs of the person before us. The good news is that we can, and sometimes do. Isn’t this how healers engage healing energy?
   If we are truly interested in engaging the power of Love, we will learn how to integrate this kind of static presence into our lives. When we do so, we, and all around us, are engaging God. For, as Paul wrote, "God is love."

-Erie Chapman

Spiritual Exercise:

  1. Recall moments in your life that riveted your attention.
  2. Why did these moments attract your attention?
  3. Practice focusing your full attention on a person or thing in your life.
  4. What does it mean to do this?
  5. How does your engagement of your senses lead to engaging your soul?
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5 responses to “What Interests Us: The Static & Kinetic”

  1. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    To me, spiritual well being arises from the internal quest for the divine. Our spirits are housed temporarily in this shell of flesh, to carry out a specific purpose. I have been spending time with Rilke in his collection entitled “Rilke’s Book of Hours, Love Poems to God”. Here then is one selection that has found its place in me.
    “All will come again into its strength:
    the fields undivided, the waters undammed,
    the trees towering and the walls built low.
    And in the valleys, people as strong
    and varied as the land.
    And no churches where God
    is imprisoned and lamented
    like a trapped and wounded animal.
    The houses welcoming all who knock
    and a sense of boundless offering
    in all relations, and in you and me.
    No yearning for an afterlife, no looking beyond,
    no belittling of death,
    but only longing for what belongs to us
    and serving earth, lest we remain unused.”
    Imagine a world like that. Perhaps each of us, in our own way, can make it so.

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  2. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    Karen your meaningful reflection and this poem speak to my heart. Thank you for this sharing.
    ~liz

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  3. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    As I took my leave from the origins of my mothers gentle kiss, I drove off alone. Aware, I breathed in the changing colors of life, grateful to be a tiny splash of color within a kaleidoscope of time.
    The leaving surges up as grief
    Swells in my throat,
    Lingers, wells up
    Misting my eyes
    Spurs me forward
    On a river of hope
    ~liz
    And here is something meaningful to me that I’d like to share with you.
    To Go Its Way in Tears: Poems of Grief by Edward Hirsch
    “We live in a superficial, media-driven culture that often seems uncomfortable with true depths of feeling. Indeed, it seems as if our culture has become increasingly intolerant of that acute sorrow, that intense mental anguish and deep remorse which may be defined as grief. We want to medicate such sorrow away. We want to divide it into recognizable stages so that grief can be labeled, tamed, and put behind us. But poets have always celebrated grief as one of the deepest human emotions. To grieve is to lament, to mourn, to let sorrow inhabit one’s very being.
    Robert Frost liked to distinguish between grievances (complaints) and griefs (sorrows). He even suggested that grievances, which are propagandistic, should be restricted to prose, “leaving poetry free to go its way in tears.” Implicit in poetry is the notion that we are deepened by heartbreaks that we are not so much diminished as enlarged by grief, by our refusal to vanish–to let others vanish–without leaving a verbal record. Poetry is a stubborn art. The poet is one who will not be reconciled, who is determined to leave a trace in words, to transform oceanic depths of feeling into the faithful nuances of art.”
    Carl Phillips said, “Reading a poem is an act of faith and that involves abandoning oneself to something irresolvable.”
    (From Poets.org website)

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  4. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    I wish to honor my brother’s memory today, as it was on this day in 1948 that Philip Peter Sorensen was born. He lived all of 29 years, served in Vietnam, the eldest son who held my fathers namesake. He helped pave the way for us younger siblings, trail blazed so to speak. I spoke with mom today and we both have a candle lit for Philip. We laughed and we reminisced and we keep the light aglow.
    Although I’m no poet, I do so Love to share what’s in my heart with you.
    ~liz

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  5. Victoria Facey Avatar
    Victoria Facey

    Right now Frank, my husband is in need of healing; my responses below relate to him.
    Practice focusing your full attention on a person or thing in your life. = This would be Frank, my husband.
    What does it mean to do this? = Much like meditating, emptying my mind and fully concentrating on him, his health and welfare.
    How does your engagement of your senses lead to engaging your soul?
    My senses are tied to my heart, my heart is linked to my soul.
    My husband is not very spritual; I know that God led me to him to care for him and help provide the spirituality that he is missing.

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