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

Claire1
"Doesn’t gentle beauty, such as the sound of harp music, sometimes make the heart ache?" – Claire Bateman (left) in Disorientations – False Ecstasy in a Red Car

   The above quote appears in Claire Bateman’s short story in the National Literary Review (www.nationalliteraryreview.org) Throughout her remarkable tale, the issue of beauty and how we encounter it comes up constantly. So many of us are surprised to discover that the rainbow of deep beauty is always shadowed by a cloud of pain. Perhaps the reverse is just as true. Beauty also shines through pain.
   Caregivers know the beauty that can appear in the midst of the painful labor of childbirth. And this phenomenon is what gave rise to some of Emily Dickinson’s most exquisite poetry…

After great pain a formal feeling comes–
The nerves sit ceremonious like tombs;
The stiff Heart questions–was it He that bore?
And yesterday–or centuries before?

   This is not a description of the beauty of a flower. Instead, Dickinson seers our hearts with language that describes deep pain and its aftermath.

The feet, mechanical, go round
A wooden way
Of ground, or air, or ought,
Regardless grown,
A quartz contentment, like a stone.

   She concludes her three stanza masterpiece with what I believe to be some of the most memorable lines in American poetry:

This is the hour of lead
Remembered if outlived,
As freezing persons recollect the snow–
First chill, then stupor, then the letting go.

   It takes enormous courage to love so much that we are willing to absorb the pain of Love as well as her joy. Recently, I shared with a hospice physician that we had completed a video that included a sequence on one of her patients, an eight-year old twin, who passed away while in her care.
   "Oh, I don’t know if I’m ready to see that yet," she told me. "Eventually, I will find the courage."
   Each day, this same physician finds the courage to deal with the heartache of the dying. This doctor is wise enough to know that she must find several more ounces of strength in order to encounter the film image of the last moments of a patient with whom she had shared so much of her Love. It takes so much courage to live Love, And it is the only worthwhile thing we do.

-Erie Chapman

p.s. Confidential to reader in Portland, Oregon: Thank you for your great loyalty to the Journal. I hope you will contribute a comment and share in this dialogue of caregivers!

Posted in

4 responses to “Day 65 – The Courage to Love”

  1. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    In spite of all the marvels and advances in medical science, the mortality rate of every generation continues to be 100%. This is the reason that real, true love goes hand-in-hand with pain. Dickinson knew this well . . . as do all of us when we stop to think about it. I believe this is the reason why most people in our society choose to have mediocre marriages . . . so it won’t hurt as bad when it’s over. Perhaps this is also one of the reasons Loving Care is so rare in healthcare . . . because it hurts too badly. I certainly agree with you, Erie, that it takes great courage to love.

    Like

  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    I appreciate your insightful comments, Tom. So true.

    Like

  3. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    I decided to escape my world for a time and hitched a ride in the back seat of Bateman’s velocity of wonder. I found I did not wish to let go the color of vividly alive. Upon my return, I stepped back into a foggy expansiveness of unknowing, trusting, I move in the direction of earth’s turning.

    Like

  4. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    I just wish to express how much I have enjoyed reading Claire Bateman’s story. Presently, I am reading Jean Vanier’s book, “Becoming Human.” He describes loneliness as an essential human quality because there is nothing in life that can wholly fulfill the needs of the human heart. He speaks to the human paradox of seeking connectedness and belonging to others amid the tension of wanting to let our deepest selves rise up, journey alone, and to free ourselves from what is accepted and comfortable. Batemen’s journey on the road reminds me of this and how keeping company with loneliness and life’s changing reveals much beauty. Her artwork radiates a vibrant creative spirit; my favorite is, “Stoneborn.” I discovered a kinship in that I too am a cloud lover.
    Thanks for sharing this jewel with us.

    Like

Leave a reply to ~liz Wessel Cancel reply