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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Today's meditation was written by Cathy Self, Senior Vice President for the Baptist Healing Trust.

    Feelie heart Dr. Rachel Remen tells a poignant story from her practice as a compassionate caregiver for those who live and die with cancer. One of her patients, a young mother of thirty-seven, had died of breast cancer. Dr. Remen had arranged to meet with the grieving husband and his young four-year-old daughter Kimmie. These are Dr. Remen's words:

     "We sat in silence watching Kimmie as she gently patted my cat. Feeling herself watched, she looked up. With a smile, she abandoned the cat and climbed into my lap. Reaching into her tiny pocket, she took something out and put it into my hand. It was a small stuffed velvet heart, obviously handmade. I looked at her father. 'It's a feelie heart,' he said. 'She never goes anywhere without it.' A friend had sent it from Bridges, a bereavement center in Tacoma, Washington, that serves children who have been touched by death. Small enough to put into a little pocket and take to school to hold and rub, these soft little hearts give children permission to hold their own hearts tenderly and to grieve. To remember that they were loved and know that they can love. Children carry them for as long as they need to, finding comfort in the softness when thoughts of their loss might otherwise overwhelm them."

     Dr. Remen continues…"Deeply moved, I held the little heart out to Kimmie. She took it and held it against her cheek for a long moment. Her mother had loved her fiercely. Perhaps that love could be a place of refuge for Kimmie now." Thousands of little hearts have been made by a group of volunteers who sew them by hand. No two hearts are exactly alike, and as Dr. Remen writes "each has a life of its own."

     Dr. Remen has a deeply loving heart for her fellow caregivers. She has written often about the burden many caregivers carry in their work, taken on in the earliest days of training. In her words, "We do not hold our own hearts tenderly. Many of us repress our losses and carry our own pain ungrieved, often for years. We have become numb, not because we don't care but because we don't grieve. Grief is the way that loss heals [italics added]. Dr. Remen has helped create communities of physicians and medical students across the country to help professional peers grieve together and give each other the permission and the courage to feel again. Perhaps this journal is a place where we can be such a community to one another.

     I suppose all of us carry a "feelie heart" of some type as we move through out the day. For some it may be a tangible reminder of hope and compassion. For others it may be a thought repeated silently or a visual reminder that stands ready to assuage the hurt or bolster the help. The practice of touch cards offers that moment of respite and renewal at the doorways of many Healing Hospitals across America. As Dr. Remen so beautifully writes, "no two hearts are exactly alike" whether made from velvet or beating in the chests of compassionate caregivers moving quietly, feeling deeply. What "feelie heart" do you carry, what gives you comfort in the midst of your giving care?

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6 responses to “Day 252 – Holding on to the Heart”

  1.  Avatar

    Today’s meditation is especially meaningful to me, as fellow caregivers with servants’ hearts take their leave, say their final goodbyes; it is a time of trmendous loss and of grief. Acknowledgement, honoring, and feelings are so necessary. Many of us have not learned to grieve. That was my experience as a young adult when my brother was suddenly killed in a car accident. Our family was not prepared for such a loss. Funny, but I had a dream early this morning. I was experiencing the pain of loss and I needed time to be with my feelings. I was walking and I just stopped, paused, and stood there, not moving, allowing their presence. I understood and seemed to accept my need to do this. Before I could move on, I awoke.
    When I am a server at church I wear my rosary around my neck. After Buds memorial service this week, I found that I did not remove the beads as I normally would, instead I tucked them under the neck of my dress and wore them the rest of the day. I guess you might say that was my “feelie heart.” I thought about my early Catholic upbringing and the scapular (little Holy cards fastened on a string) that we were instructed to wear around our neck beneath our clothing. I never could relate or find meaning in this practice, that is, until this week.
    ~liz Wessel

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  2. Barbara Mason Avatar

    I love that comment “Grief is the way loss heals” I can’t believe how that embraced me! I think that comment may become my feelie. As a caregiver I seem to always be approaching the end of life with someone, I feel blessed to be called there. I wouldn’t do it on my own. But I strongly feel I am called to that bridge specifically to let someone know, ‘grief is the way loss heals’. And it is hard, as a caregive to allow myself to experience ‘those feelings’ but as I mature, I realize the richness of the journey, regardless of the loss, a person, a job, any loss. So for those of you reading today, may you find the richness of the journey.

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  3. Kelly Roberts Avatar
    Kelly Roberts

    What a touching reflection. It is also very timely I might add. My mother, younger sister, and I celebrated my older sister’s second anniversary of her death on Labor Day. It was a time to acknowledge that we are still grieving and miss her so very much.

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  4. Victoria Facey Avatar
    Victoria Facey

    What a lovely, but somber reminder of how the loss of loved one / love affects each of us. Before reading today’s Journal, I had a different outlook on the process of grief. I hated when things happened, or I would see something to remind me of the loss of someone I cared for. I also felt guilty that if I connected with the person more, therefore the pain would be, well, less painful.
    Looking at the incident as one of healing will help me to understand the purpose of re-connecting to this memory and help me to best embrace it.. Ironically, my “feelie heart” usually regresses me back to being a small child’s age, where I felt most comfortable.

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  5. MFM Avatar
    MFM

    What a beautiful and touching meditation. It’s been just over three years since my grandmother left us to dance in heaven, and though it feels like yesterday I have found it true that through grief I am healing. Memories no longer bring tears of sorrow, but tears of joy and laughter that, and the vision of her dancing with angels.
    Currently I am experiencing a new loss, one that has caused internal confusion and left me uncertain of everything especially myself. The loss of a job is so trivial to the loss of a life, but as I am reminded it is still a loss and therefore needs to be treated like a death and mourned. I am going to try and remember everyday that it is through grief that loss heals, and allow myself to fell the emotions so I can move forward through this journey and be whole again.

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  6. julie laverdiere Avatar
    julie laverdiere

    Really nice meditation today. I love to see a persons’s heart, and be able to speak words of comfort, and remind people of the grace within each tragedy.

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