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.

About

"…we will never be anything else but beginners, all our life!" – Thomas Merton

Sonia_also   Our innate wisdom tells us Merton is right. As monotonous as some tasks seem, each time we do one of them we are doing that thing for the first time. The nurse, the surgeon, and the social worker
interviewing her fifth client of the day would all do well to remember this wisdom. It may feel like the thousandth time for them, but it may be the first time for the patient.
   My granddaughter is living her first January. How many have you lived? Does each one still feel new and exciting to you? At the end of this month, we have the opportunity to reflect on how many years we have begun and what new things and new people we will encounter this year…

   I like thinking about life as beginnings. It is a great exercise in humility. For there can be nothing more potentially arrogant than a veteran talking to a new recruit. The new young nurse, nervous on her Nurse
first day of work, may encounter a twenty-year senior employee. "I remember my first day," the senior nurse may say grimly, "Don’t worry, you’ll get used to it real fast."  But is it good to "get used to it?" It may help us feel comfortable. But right next to comfort is the demon of complacency.
   Author Richard Foster says that joy is the centerpiece of the spiritual disciplines. The reason for this is that joy frees us from our painful marriage to fear and ego. I find this simple sounding notion very complicated to practice. I feel like a beginner at spirituality even though I’ve been working on it, in one way or another, since I was four years old.
   How do we celebrate joy independent of ego and self-interest? Part of the answer comes in the example of children and grandchildren. How do we love them without wanting to possess them? The desire to possess grows a garden of fear. For possession means we will be afraid of losing ownership.
Sonia_serious  We proudly call our offspring "ours." In truth, they are not. That is why, as a high school student, I was so enchanted with Gibran’s writing that begins:
     Your children are not your children.
     They are the sons and daughters of Life’s longing for itself.
     They come through you but not from you,
     And though they are with you yet they belong not to you.
   
Nothing belong to us – no thing and no one. We do not really even own our own bodies. We just live in them for awhile before our spirit moves to other planes of awareness.
   That is why we are all beginners, and we are all wise veterans of life. Why do I see wisdom in my granddaughter’s face? Could it be because she, like all babies, has come from a place of wisdom and already knows a great deal more than we think?
   Perhaps we are the beginners and she is the veteran.

-Erie Chapman

Posted in

4 responses to “Day 31 – Perpetual Beginnings”

  1. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    That line from Merton about always being a beginner has been a source of comfort to me for many years now. The idea that I ought to “know it all by now” is such a huge burden. For me, always being a beginner is a place of excitement and discovery.

    Like

  2. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    First, thank you for sharing these pictures of your granddaughter, she is a beautiful little spirit! It is a special treat to glimpse her precious image and to reflect on her new beginnings.
    As I contemplate events in my life, a big lesson that has been confronting me is learning to let go. It seems clear that letting go is a poignant, unavoidable, recurring theme in life. Recent life lessons have been painful for me to accept, yet, I realize pain is a great catalyst for change. I recall this poem of Gibran’s from my high school days too. My friend Linda chose to make these words part of her wedding ceremony. We were both seventeen and full of righteous independence! Now that I find myself on the other end of the spectrum, I have a newfound compassion for how her parents might have felt, deep in the silence of their hearts.
    As I let go of expectations and of my resistance to life ‘as it is,’ I am discovering many pleasant surprises. There is a freeing quality to this experience. Amid my struggles, I find hope in the opportunity to begin anew. As I learn to let go of past regret and future worries, I open to all the mundane and the exquisite moment’s life offers me. As I learn to let go in the surrender and give myself over so to speak, I let go of holding back from Love and I fill with blessings of peace.
    Isn’t it great that we don’t have it all figured out? It makes for such an interesting journey of exploration and mystery.

    Like

  3. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    I love the beauty and the wisdom of this entry today and that of your sweet granddaughter. I agree that as babies we possess all the insight and wisdom of the world. Somehow that gets laid aside as we impose hard structure and pathways to success on our young. Sadly, it sometimes takes us the rest of our lives to trust what we have somehow always known.
    We are born of love and live to fulfill all the bounty that love can provide.

    Like

  4. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    I could not resist posting this quote.
    “We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time.”
    T.S. Eliot

    Like

Leave a reply to Karen York Cancel reply