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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  Whitman  I see my soul reflected in nature,
As I see through a mist, one with inexpressible completeness, sanity, beauty...
– from "I Sing the Body Electric" in Leaves of Grass,(1855) by Walt Whitman (1819-1892)

   Do you, like Whitman, see your soul reflected in nature? If you do, and you live in a a four-season climate, you are watching the dying season. Three hundred fifteen days into this year, nature is shedding her leaves The ground is seizing up in the presence of cold nights.
   Our clothes change color as well. Pink and yellow have given way to purple, brown and black.
   What happens to our souls as the earth turns through the season? Whitman was a keen observer of this. A volunteer nurse during the Civil War, he threw his passion into loving others and into expressing his own love through transcendent poetry. Considered by many to be the father of free verse, Whitman's language was so open and unrestrained that some thought his work was obscene.
   "I sing the body electric," he wrote, "Arms and hands of love, lips of love…the body of the woman I love, the body of the man, the body of the earth."  It was all too much for conservative preachers and stiff-necked business people.
   Those folks missed Whitman's point. The poet sought to celebrate the bodies we occupy for such a short time. He wrote of pain as well as of joy. And he looked, courageously, at "The gash'd bodies on battle-fields,/ the insane in their strong-door'd rooms, the sacred idiots, the new-born emerging from gates,/ and the dying emerging from gates…" 
   You, as a caregiver, see what Whitman saw. You see pain and have the chance to relieve it, you see birth and have the chance to guide it, you see death and have the chance to ease it through "the gates."
   Caregivers, I sing your praises today and everyday. For you are the ones who offer your loving energy to meet the needs of bodies and souls who experience the pain of living in this world.
   How do Whitman's words come to you on this Monday? How do you see your soul reflected in nature as well as in the eyes of those for whom you care?

-Erie Chapman

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5 responses to “Day 315 – Singing the Body Electric”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    When I was 17, and living in Vermont a young man gave me Whitman’s book, “Leaves of Grass” as a gift. I pulled out my copy and read the poem in its entirety. I find it fascinating that Whitman was a nurse during the Civil War. I returned home from New York Saturday night after being there for a couple of weeks. I was able to experience the New England fall. The leaves were golden. My brother’s friends described him as a man with a golden soul, golden.

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  2. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    I love this meditation and thank you for reminding us of the interconnectedness of every living thing. My soul is your soul is our patients’ souls. Love knows no boundaries or limitations.

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  3. Gay Lindsey Avatar
    Gay Lindsey

    Life is the journey between two eternities. Our soul is what connects us to the past “gate” and the future “gate” – God living within us, answers to be heard in the silence there.

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  4. Diana Gallaher Avatar
    Diana Gallaher

    Yes, I see my soul reflected in nature. I was thinking the other day how I love this time of year. Which lead me to wonder if this was my “favorite” season. I started thinking about the seasons, remembering what in nature I most admired. I concluded that all the seasons were my favorite seasons. And life is good.

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  5. Jerald Smith Avatar
    Jerald Smith

    I find that I have seasons too. Perhaps “mini-seasons” is a better way of saying it. I have seasons where I am immersed in the caring for others, family life, church life…life with others. And then I find a need to have a break. A mini-season apart, alone with my self, my God, and my kayak. It is a sacred season of renewal. It is also good if a fish gets on the line occasionally.

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