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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Rachel Remen m.d. "Fixing is too small a strategy to deal with loss." – Rachel Remen, M.D.

   Dr. Remen (in photo at left) should know. She lost her health to Crohn's disease as a very young person. She was told by her doctor (as was I with the same diagnosis) that she might not live to age forty.

   Our health is so precious to us that the loss of it sends us racing to doctors to "fix" what's wrong. As Dr. Remen so accurately states, "fixing is too small a strategy" for such a loss.

   Reverend Marcy Thomas' adult life story is pockmarked with cancer and other serious health problems. Her husband died of cancer. One dark day, her doctors told her that she, too, had the dreaded disease.. She has survived that diagnosis and much more.

   Recently, she awoke in severe pain – the kind of toxic mix of all-over and specific pain that causes most people to dial 911. Marcy managed to drive herself to the same hospital where she tends the sick.

   Over the next days, doctors struggled to diagnose her problem, to "fix" her. Finally, one physician serving a senior fellowship, chose to review some possible diagnoses in Marcy's presence. "It could be a lesion or a mass," the doctor intoned.

   "The blood drained from my face," Marcy told me. The horrors of all her past troubles flooded in upon her heart, bring with them fear and dread. Marcy's daughter is close to delivering her first child. Would Marcy live to grandparent this child?

   Suddenly, the physician, noticing Marcy's concern, did something all too unusual among medical professionals. She actually got down on her knees, so as to be at Marcy's eye level, and said, "I'm so sorry. I know your history. What I just said must have been so frightening to you." 

   Touched by this eye-level compassion from a doctor (the kind of thing Rev. Thomas thought only chaplains might do) Marcy said she actually began to feel better. Kind words helped healing.

   The doctor showed she could hear the fear in Marcy's heart. She went beyond words. Living Love, she knelt down to meet the deeper need of another. 

   Perhaps you feel otherwise, but it seems important to me that the doctor kneeled instead of leaning down. Leaning down can signal pity. Kneeling to the eye level of a prostrate patient demonstrates, in this case, compassion. For a moment, the doctor surrendered her commanding position as a powerful, healthy, upright, highly trained, stethoscope-draped professional and became a vulnerable human sharing Love with another weakened by illness.

   Of course, the delivery of compassion is an art, not something to be learned from an instruction book. There is always the risk of melodrama that can embarrass the patient instead of healing. My sister, a little person, hates it when people bend down to talk to her. It not only causes her to feel like a child, but draws unwanted attention to her difference from others.

   How do we know what to do and when? Love, if we are tuned to her voice, always offers the right answer.

   Fortunately, no lesion was found. Marcy is in the process of writing thank you notes to her caregivers. She intends, as well, to track down the physician who went from accidentally scaring her to intentionally loving her. Reverend Thomas wants to be sure this doctor knows how healing compassion can be.

-Rev. Erie Chapman

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4 responses to “Days 216-218 Compassion at Eye Level”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Rev. Thomas’s encounter with her physician is a wonderful illustration of a healing presence. I used to worry about what I could possibly say to bring comfort to someone suffering. I learned that it is not as much about what we do or say…but how we show up for people. To offer a listening heart is the greatest gift we can offer another human being. Saturday’s reflection “The Wounded Healer” offers additional insights by Henri Nouwen. I appreciate this sharing of Rev. Thomas’s personal experience because it makes your teachings practical and so real.
    I am glad things turned out so well for Rev. Thomas!

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  2. ann kaiser Avatar
    ann kaiser

    Compassion, was the topic of my children’s story at church on Sunday!!!We always have all the children come foward about 15 min into the service for a lesson and then they are dismissed to sunday school. I had them pull hats out of a bag and describe how the hat reflects compassion…they described a fireman, policeman, a doctor, a military person , a professor, and the funniest was the nurses cap..since they are no longer worn, the children did not know what it was. I had no idea how many uses that cap had !! I spoke to the children that compassion starts with them, even though they are little, their hearts are big!. That they can share their hearts everyday! Listening to a friend, sitting with a friend that has a hurt knee or sharing of a toy, giving some one a hug randomly. I asked them who has been hugged by a nurse..and several said yes..I asked them who has been hugged by their doctor..and no one said yes.I asked them the next time they see their doctor, ask them for a hug first and tell them you learned about the word compassion . Thank you Erie, we all need “little reminders ” in our lives!!

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  3. Marily Avatar

    It’s wonderful to find a world full of health care workers in tuned to Love’s voice… may this journal continue to come enlightening and empowering our minds, hearts and souls. May we see compassion at eye level.

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  4. Victoria Facey Avatar
    Victoria Facey

    What an intense beginning of a story of pain and uncertainty. God bless caregivers and those with faith in God, there is always a happy ending…

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