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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 “Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.” ~Leo Tolstoy

  Journalbutterfly On the cusp of implementing healthcare reform, we all anticipate change. Change requires us to shift our perspective, to innovate and to adapt. It involves taking risks and often requires that we navigate in uncharted territory without a map. Change is constant and seems to be accelerating, leaving many of us with change fatigue.

 Resistance to change is natural. Change pulls us out of our comfort zone. Healthcare places increasing demands with shrinking resources. As we juggle multiple balls, we can’t imagine adding another for fear that they will all tumble down. When asked to take on a new challenge, we may experience an immediate knee jerk reaction of, “I can’t!”

 In a recent presentation on change, Melinda Bowles encouraged we consider a different response. Rather than, "I can't", to step back and say, “How can we?”  Asking a question rather than imposing a directive on ourselves or others opens a window to possibility. Perhaps, an answer is to let go of balls that are no longer useful to receive more  helpful ones.

Always, change seeks our willingness to see differently.

 Before we can embrace change, it is helpful to honor what is ending. Unfortunately, our tendency is to just move on to the next project at hand. We seldom take time to grieve endings and reverence life's changes. One simple way to do this is with a ceremony or ritual. In an effort to acknowledge changes at my work,  we plan to offer caregivers a blessing of their hands ceremony and a values commissioning affirmation.

 A story comes to mind that was once shared on this Journal. It goes something like this, “An explorer was on an expedition in Africa. He was on a very tight schedule, so he hired a handful of local men to help him carry his equipment. He and his team hurried through the jungle. They raced onward for three days. At the end of the third day, the men sat down and would not move. The explorer urged them to get up, telling them of the time pressure he was under to reach his designation before a certain date. Still, they refused to move. He could not understand this and after much persuasion, one of the native men told him, “We have moved too quickly to reach here; now we need to wait here to give our spirits a chance to catch up with us”. ~Author Unknown

 Rather than take time to let our spirits catch up with us, we rush about hoping to get more done. The faster our pace the greater the probability we will make a mistake. We all know that it takes a great deal more energy to fix a mistake than to do it right the first time. Have you ever heard the saying, “go slow to go fast?”  We owe it to ourselves to notice our patterned behaviors. Increasing self-awareness enables us to grow and to develop our natural gifts. If we make time daily for our spirits to catch up we may find we can accomplish our work with a heightened sense of well being and peacefulness.

 Change soars on the wings of hope. Afer all, “If nothing ever changed, would there be butterflies?” ~Author Unknown

 ~liz Sorensen Wessel

 I share this video below, which illustrates nature's changing beauty.

 

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10 responses to “Days 284-285 The Unseen Sea”

  1. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    Your mandalas always take my breath away. Thank you for this piece. -erie

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  2. Woody Wessel Avatar
    Woody Wessel

    Change is in the air. I love your butterflies, the
    video was great too.

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  3. Maureen McDermott Avatar
    Maureen McDermott

    Magnificent images and words, Liz. Thank you. Your reflection leads me to focus on a great Australian who we are celebrating in a special way this week as we anticipate her canonisation next Sunday in Rome. People are rejoicing in this woman of courage, love, compassion and action. Mary believed in change and worked tirelessly for better conditions for those most disadvantaged in society. Mary was a woman of faith who trusted in the God of Providence to care for her and her undertakings. May we continue to be inspired by those around us, who enable the butterfly in us to emerge. May we be bearers of Beauty to all those we encounter. Thank you Liz.

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  4. Sue Avatar
    Sue

    What went wrong with the health care system set up in Massachusets? Did the way of universal health care for all get set up too fast that the spirits did not have time to catch up? Many doctors quit and have no intention of going back. Maybe this would be a good place to study so that the spirits have a time to catch up before it is too late.

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  5. business legal advice Avatar

    wonderful butterfly it is the spirit of peace and prosperity..looks so happy images.

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  6. xavier espinosa Avatar

    In the musical Wicked the two main characters reflect on their shared experiences and sing a song that includes the line “Who can say if I’ve been changed for the better? But because I knew you I have been changed for good ” Speaking to a friend who was bemoaning her current state and spoke longingly of a life that she would find once this part of her life was over with, was stopped short when we discussed how she was placing a competitive and comparative value on a situation that she was unsure even existed and making herself miserable in the one she currently had.
    In my quest for wisdom I have learned that everything happens in a divine order. We learn what we need to know and don’t know what we don’t know. So the change that we defer or deny or hide from holds rewards and learning that we must be fully open to and ready to embrace because the wonderment of change can only occur when we are patient while maintaining our integrity because that consistency makes us stronger. What ever hardship we may encounter in the change, it is our morals and tenacity that is key to survival, allowing us to remain calm in a vortex of turmoil.
    David Whyte writes about dealing with self doubt and compares us to the fishermen afloat in a small boat on a stormy sea and seeing the one they believe in beckoning them to step out of the boat and walk on the water to him. Like them, we don’t because we are afraid of drowning. But now after what we have lived and learned, when we are once again called to step out of the boat we do because this time although we may still are afraid of drowning we step out and walk on the water because this time we refuse to drown.
    This concept has kept me boldly looking forward to the changes that are possible, looking forward to what I can do and excited for the ride. I don’t know if I have changed for the better, all I know that refusing to drown has made me change for good.

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  7. Marily Avatar

    Awesome beauty that passes me by, when I give myself the time to pause and look up, I do see flowing clouds of marvelous shapes and peaceful touches in the sky, could daydream forever in this world of unseen sea. “Go slow to go fast”… not sleepwalking but aware of my deepest feelings, risk going for my truest desire to live love in this constant changing world. Thank you Liz.

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  8. alisa shackelford Avatar

    Erie, Thank you again – for when I seek your posts they “hit home” immediately…as did this with Tolstoy. Thank you for sharing the most beautiful reflections and thoughts for others.
    alisa shackelford
    Charleston, SC

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  9. Victoria Facey Avatar
    Victoria Facey

    Liz, I loved everything, especially the proposal to change the response of “I can’t” to “how can we”. Thank you also for the beautiful video; I let it play continuously in the background on my desktop for a little while as I worked this morning!

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  10. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    I love this line shared,”Who can say if I’ve been changed for the better? But because I knew you I have been changed for good.”
    Thank you for these wonderful comments…for surely my knowing you has changed me…for the good!

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