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.

About

"…one moment your life is a stone in you, and the next a star." – Rainer Maria Rilke

Photo Ink Painting #1 -copyright Erie Chapman 2011    I hit the "Print" button. Instead of arriving in the tray as a clear photo of tomatoes, a fork, and cucumbers, the photo ink slurps back and forth on the paper surface. I had loaded the wrong kind of paper. A "nice" picture turns from star to stone. Or is it the reverse?

   Our mistakes may contain stars. Because of this error I am learning to paint with photo ink. 

   Neuro-Intensive Care nurse Deadre Hall leans to wash the face of a local pastor who has suddenly landed in her care. "He got up this morning, headed off to work like he always does, and suddenly ends up in my hands," she says.  

   One minute, the minster's life is a star. In a split second, a stroke lands in his life like a stone.

   This is what hospital-based caregivers see every day – people whose lives, like an occluded moon, go from star to stone, or the other way around.

   Liz Krueger, M.D., receives triplets into her care in the Neonatal Intensive Care unit at Baptist Hospital. After she examines each infant, she exudes, "They're perfect, beautiful babies."  

   A veteran, she knows things could have been much different.  What could have been an "hour of lead" became a triple set of stars.  

   The possible arrival of trauma, including our own death, is a truth we know but want to deny. To accept its certainty could paralyze us – or release us into less fearful living.

   The recent life experience of my old high school girlfriend signals the way life can pivot at the pull of a switch – or the trigger of a gun. A librarian, Robin had enjoyed three decades of fulfilling marriage to a trial lawyer.

   "One night, shortly after dinner, I was sitting reading. Suddenly, I heard a terrible explosion from upstairs," she told me.  Her husband, depressed from decades of work as a public defender, had decided his life no longer mattered. 

   We all know these stories. In fact, we hear them every day. Often they strike very close to our hearts.

   We all live on the razor's edge. But, how does the prospect of sudden disaster affect us?

   I believe we need to love all out and leave the rest to Providence.

   At the moment when I face my own end, I don't want to wonder if I should have loved more. I want to live with all the passion Love can offer. For what is a star without light?

-Erie Chapman

p.s.  "Tomatoes, Fork, Cucumbers" – photo-ink print copyright Erie Chapman, 2011

Posted in

3 responses to “Days 124-125 – Stones & Stars”

  1. Liz Avatar
    Liz

    I appreciate looking with fresh eyes and being surprised as to what is there to discover.Your photo is a star. When drawing, working with my mistakes is a part of the experience.To trust the process rather than trying to bein control.Yes, life is so fragile,and sometimes we are jolted from complacency into awareness. Every choice is about Love or fear.May we all choose to “live love.” Thank you, Erie!

    Like

  2. Barbara Mason Avatar

    So true. The amazing part to me is that we have an opportunity to care for them regardless of their status. Even more we are able, if we choose, to model loving, compassionate care for family caregivers, acknowledge their struggles, their desires, how that change in the patient had enormous impact on the quality of their life.

    Like

  3. Marily Avatar

    Stones and Stars… often they strike very close to our hearts. Will you ever not feel what has just struck you? Always there’s a sudden stop, it always catches our attention. Without fear it can easily be acknowledged, set aside, and only after we put a closure to the prior event, we come back and tend to this new delicate one. We could focus and love all out to understand and remember to leave the rest to Providence. Now can we take our body to rest and have a good night sleep? Definitely to see a new day, sunny and bright full of hope.

    Like

Leave a reply to Liz Cancel reply