"All holiness is about learning to hear the voice of your own soul." – John O'Donohue
On many occasions, I experience myself speaking and writing as if I knew more than what I know. Perhaps, what is going on is a desire, shared by all who try to remain open and alive, to discover more by seeking to express the inexpressible. The act of trying appears to nudge the door ajar. But, what of the act of listening?
This is the challenge of understanding the soul. O'Donohue, whose writing has suddenly riveted my attention, writes that the voice of the soul is "deeper and surer than all the other voices of disappointment, unease, self-criticism and bleakness." Why wouldn't we want to listen primarily to this voice?
The difficulty appears to come from the noise that arrives from the everyday world. This noise appeals to our egos. Our ego (personality) is formed in the world and may block us from appreciating the soul's voice that speaks with more serenity.
Our ego is flooded with the world's rules. Our soul is shaped and informed only by Love. Our ego demands performance and raise. Our soul lives free of fear.
Does our soul speak "surer" because it lives free from our ego's noise?
For caregivers, everyday work life is drenched in clatter. We can make sense of our daily storms only if our consciousness is informed by our souls. The soul provides serenity. To ignore the wisdom of the soul risks living a passionless and meaningless life.
The most healing caregivers sustain their focus on the needs of the patient before them. In doing this, the window to Love slides open allowing the richest light to enter and to heal.
As O'Donohue writes, "The voice of compassion is not absorbed with itself…it is imbued…with healing." This is the voice the vulnerable need to hear through us. This is the voice of Love.
-Erie Chapman
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