You can't study the darkness by flooding it with light. – Edward Abbey
After sixteen years of marriage her husband died of cancer. A few years later, she was diagnosed with cancer herself. What can be rich about this kind of darkness? My friend found a wealth of wisdom in her tragedies. Yet, another dark night awaited her when she was diagnosed with a "likely cancer" elsewhere in her body. Acting quickly, perhaps, as she says now, too quickly, she had the supposedly diseased gland removed only to find that it was cancer free.
Today, the phrase "rich darkness" resonates with my friend. As a chaplain, she counsels the sick. Her agonizing personal experiences enable her to be a healing presence to others who are suffering.
Perhaps most important, this chaplain understands the eloquence of wordless presence. Agony, after all, defies words just as surely as does joy. When we are drowning in the loneliness of our own suffering, it doesn't help for someone to try and flood that darkness with light. The light will come to us, if at all, through the love and compassion of someone who is caring enough to simply be near.
It is not always wise to try and force someone too quickly out of the dark chapter of their life journey. Darkness can teach so much. It may be there that we find our greatest strength. If we yank someone too quickly from trouble, they may founder when darkness returns at a later time.
This weekend, I saw two films about people who encounter darkness. The films, both of which I strongly recommend, are Revolutionary Road (with Kate Winslet, above) and Slumdog Millionaire. In one film, the hero escapes the dark, in the other, the hero does not. If you see the films, I'd be interested to know which film experience informed you more about your life of caregiving. All good art informs caregiving. These two film experiences offer us the chance to experience darkness from the safety of a movie theater. Those who chose to treat their film encounters as sacred will find that both of these movies are powerful for caregivers.
Meanwhile, the ones who learn the most from their suffering and become the best caregivers are people like my friend, the hospital chaplain, who faced her darkness and now is an angel of light for others.
What are your feelings?
-Erie Chapman
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