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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Nurse station

Like the child's game,"I am thinking of a color"
I am remembering one. I won't make you guess.

The color is florescent, the 24-hour light that floods
a thousand hospital hallways as if to punish the
horizontal people made to gaze at it as they wait.

I am thinking of a place. It is a nursing station, a floor
of the first hospital I led in 1977. A current of nurses,
capped like ocean waves, swell when doctors enter,

ebb when they depart. I am thinking of a person,
a lanky nurse, my height, named Marian. Ten years
my senior, she is now unable to breathe without

a machine. I am thinking of the many hallways we
walked and the many meetings we attended together
when we lived more in hospitals than in our homes.

Those were the days when we were caregivers
surrounded by caregivers. Those were the days
when places so frightening to so many were home

for the two of us. We roamed operating rooms
near unconscious patients unable to breathe
without machines. We traveled hospital floors in

the manner of landowners surveying our fields.
We inhabited E.Rs. full of frightened patients
as fearless as veteran battlefield captains.

We took care of the people who take care of people.

Hospitals were our homes for so long that it's
difficult to think of them as foreign, hard to
know that we are no longer a part of the places

we that were "homes" for decades.

                                                 Deadre has
entered the same hospital to work on the same
ICU for more than thirty years. Soon, she will

walk out the door for the last time. She will
leave behind thousands of patients whose
skin has felt her healing hands but whose minds

have no recollection of her.

                                            In her thirty years,
Martha has smiled at tens of thousands of people
from her "home" at the front desk of a large hospital. 

In a couple more years, she will leave that home,
never to return in the same way. The jobs we live
each day, the places where we are welcomed

by familiar faces, will one day be occupied by people
who never knew we were there. Gladly, the air has its
own memory. The light recalls the time of our being.

I am thinking of a place. No blueprint can shape it.
No florescence can light it. No security cameras or
swipe card can record its existence. 

The House of Memory keeps every snapshot of our lives.
Their walls hold the shadow & light of the caregiver's home.  

-Erie Chapman

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5 responses to “Day 91 – The Caregiver’s Home”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    What I think is beautiful about your poetry is how memory’s essence is revealed in images that are three-dimensional and more.

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  2. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    This is a heart warming tribute to the many hours we spend at our places of work; where we hope to make a difference, and are soon forgotten. If we are seeking to carry out love’s work, then we have accomplished a great deal. Our names are not important over time, yet our healing presence will always be remembered.

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  3. Edwin Loftin Avatar

    Erie, thank you for this offering of Healing. The words reflect not only the world that you, Martha, Deardra, Caroline and the thousands before us have lived but also rekindle the memories of each of our individual worlds.
    I remember watching Jane with awe as she delt with five patients at one time in triage, yet had a personal presence with each. Dr. West as he made his late evening rounds and the wave of people that would gather to listen and learn from this teacher. Luther, as he applied each cast with the mastery that no other artist can repeat.
    These images, no….more, soul impressions are what allow the growth of all as we seek to provide nothing less than Loving Care at every home.

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  4. ~liz Wessel Avatar
    ~liz Wessel

    I was blessed by an unexpected encounter with a friend yesterday. Interestingly, my friend expressed feeling all wound up and that she is going through a contemplative time of life review that is not unlike my own experience. We talked about the fact that we each have lived a good portion of our life. This realization naturally leads one to reflect upon the life we have lived, our accomplishments and dreams met or not, and the difficulty of reckoning with our idealized imagined life versus reality. We acknowledged that overall, our lives have been very good but there is a wondering about the mystery and purpose of our individual lives. We talked about our attachments to people, our past, dreams, and expectations of how we perceive our lives are supposed to be. It is difficult to let go of what I hold so precious to embrace a Love that does not distinguish and is beneficent towards all. When I envision life beyond my familiar worldly attachments, to the interconnectedness of one beating heart, I know this as peace.
    I believe we cannot receive atonement in isolation; we need to bring all our brothers and sisters along with us. When I see you as guiltless, all my guilt is released, when I forgive you I am forgiven, when I see only divine light in you my joy is complete. My heart is heavy when I think of my attachments to the people I love. Yet, if I pull out of the past and stop trying to recreate it and if I am present in this moment, what is lacking? I ask myself, what am I missing in this very moment and the answer is, not a thing. This is a perfect moment. Yet, I find it hard to stay present.
    Our conversation eventually led to the topic of today’s Journal meditation. We agreed, with your revelations about how no one will know that once we were here and we struggled with these thoughts. How those who come after us will not know of the many ways in which their paths were cleared before their arrival, or how we helped change the culture of healthcare. Just as there have been so many before us who we did not know, yet, their efforts were a part of a greater good. It was a comfort to talk with someone about these less than comfortable thoughts and feelings, to experience light amidst the shadows.
    Although all on the physical realm we will pass away and all will dissipate, I believe that “every loving thought is true”(CIM) and eternal, and every Loving action real. I know that we are more than our bodies and that we are all connected through the mind of Love. Our essence is Love and in Love life is unending.
    I must say in contrast to how I express myself I find your writing, warm, down to earth, reassuring and I am thoroughly enjoying your reminiscence. Thank you! ~liz

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  5. Diane Barrows Avatar
    Diane Barrows

    I was also blessed and raised by my friend’s and my sacred encounter made visible by our ability to share our gut level raw fear, anxiety and questioning. In the Budhist tradition all suffering comes from attachment. It is fairly simple to see our attachments to people to things to ideas, beliefs and expectations – all of which are impermanent and perceived through our imperfect lenses. How hard it is to acknowledge the impermanence and imperfect perception – and then to begin the work of relinquishing, the work of letting go which is in itself the acceptance of our own mortality. This gives rise to questioning our meaning our purpose our legacy. But these concerns are built on the concepts of what we have done to somehow win God’s grace, and not on the foundation that God’s grace is given freely. I think yesterday’s encounter was grace and was the meaning. God bless you my good friend Liz.

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