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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"The Charter will show that the voice of negativity and violence so
often associated with religion is the minority and that the voice of
compassion is the majority." – from the website: www.charterforcompasion.org (If you go to this website, be sure and click on a lovely 3 1/2 minute video featuring Karen Armstrong.)
Karen-armstrong
"We do not live in a compassionate society," says Karen Armstrong, a former Catholic nun and member of the Council of Conscience for the Charter of Compassion. Armstrong talks of speaking to numerous religious groups about the need for compassion and often noticing both resentment and resistance. People don't want to accept the imperative to live compassionately, she says, because compassionate living is hard work.                     

   Compassionate living steals from fundamentalists their ability to trumpet their version of faith as the only true way. The notion that a particular denomination or religious pathway is the only avenue to God is, she says, a deep sign of egotism.
   This sounds true to me. I have stood before so many audiences to speak of Love and compassion. The beginning is always easy. Everyone agrees that Love sounds like a good thing. But, as soon as I speak of engaging Love in the workplace, I see arms begin to cross over chests (as if to protect the heart) and executives (particularly male ones) begin to squirm.
   Compassionate living requires that senior executives and middle managers cede power and arrogance and yield to humility and loving service.
   "Compassion is hard work," Armstrong says. She's right, of course. This is why she said on Bill Moyers Journal on PBS that we need an organized initiative to engage this critical work.
   Do you live each day in a compassionate workplace? I don't mean to you see occasional acts of compassion. I mean do you think of the culture where you work as being one that is primarily informed by compassion grounded in Love?
   What I hear from too many health care workers is that they live in cultures dominated by the god of  technology and driven by ferocious  budget pressures. There is obviously a place for technology and money in charity service. But these twin gods must always be subordinate to Love, not the other way around.
   It is startling to hear how often most of us confuse compassion with pity. In many ways, they are opposites. A saying I have quoted here before goes, "Pity stops and stares. Compassion stoops and shares." Compassion is about imagining ourselves into the needs of the other. It is about living the essence of The Golden Rule. And we all know how hard that it.
   If we, as Armstrong says, "do not live in a compassionate society" than how can we change that? What can we do in each of our workplaces to help make compassionate behavior the norm rather than the exception?

-Erie Chapman   

P.S. On a personal note, today would have been my father's 104th birthday. I celebrate Erie D. Chapman, Jr., as a leader of great integrity who lived his entire career with the Y.M.C.A. and lived the creed of the "Y" in every aspect of his life.

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4 responses to “Day 75 – The Charter for Compassion”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    First, thanks for sharing your remembrance in honor of your father. He modeled a life of compassionate Loving service and it is obvious that his Love lives on in you and in the many people whose lives he touched.
    I watched the recommended video and discovered a moving vision of global unity that is uplifting and offers encouragment. The images and voices were significant and the stories of compassion momentous, inspiring a great desire to live together sharing in our common humanity. This is a message I want to embrace, live, and share, for it is the message of Love. “For wherever you are, I am there in your midst.”
    In response to your question, perhaps even showing this video as a reflection at work might be a very good springboard to share this powerful idea. That is what I plan to do. Of course, continuing to share stories of compassionate care will flame the fire of Radical Loving Care. Living these behaviors, as we teach what we believe.

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  2. George Tracy Roberts Avatar
    George Tracy Roberts

    I practice compassion by facilitating topic Circles in organizations. I ask people to tell about a time they have experienced community at work or tell a story about how justice plays out in your job. These stories about community, justice, opportunity, trust, diversity, etc… usually flow well and some appear to be well rehearsed in their sharing of these topics. But when I ask for stories about love and compassion at work, more difficult topics, there is usually a hesitation, like a sub-conscious censoring goes up with the fear of getting into a more “personal” area rather than a “professional” one. (As if community and justice aren’t personal issues!)I believe this happens for a couple of reasons, one being that we didn’t learn about love and compassion in a class room so it’s not relevant to my paycheck, right? Another is the idea that it’s not a good idea to mix your personal life with your work life; love must be separate from work and definitely not something you want to talk to your co-workers about; leave it at the front door. Plus, how would you do that anyway? And finally, love and compassion ARE practiced in workplaces, yet so many of us do not realize we are doing it because it’s called something else; an outcome or an intake or an intervention or supervision (not to infer that love and compassion are always practiced in these instances; many times love and compassion are the exceptions to the norm when handling these procedures).
    After asking about love in a Circle once, a department head looked dumb-founded and embarrassed, acknowledging the fact that their agency did not talk enough about such a universal and important subject. There was even talk of adding the word love into the mission statement! I could also see that the aspect of diving into love, with budgets and donors and grants hanging over ones head, was not something on the priority list. And, so, the conversation stayed in that one Circle, never addressed again, a distant memory of what I believe is possible in any organization.
    We do need to find ways to talk about love and compassion in the workplace. Celebrate them! We celebrate diversity, birthdays, budgets in the black, promotions and awards, why not love and compassion? Discussions need to happen and stories need to be told so love and compassion can become concrete examples rather than abstract ideas.

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  3. Carolyn Olney Avatar
    Carolyn Olney

    It is much easier to speak of compassion, than to truly live it. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this.

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  4. Victoria Facey Avatar
    Victoria Facey

    I enjoyed watching the video and to see the different people with their unique religions embrace the same message of compassion.
    I feel compassion in my workplace daily; I think it is what sometmes keeps staff from overreacting or building friction in our workplace. I wish this was a universal movement, but I am glad to see it here. I am most impressed when I feel executives in our frequent board meetings listen and sometimes share in reading our Reflections. This act puts all attendees on the same level (and that always makes me smile)…

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