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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Grandfather-grandson baseball june 2011"

"Happiness and vanity are incompatable." – line from the film, Dangerous Liasons

  Special thanks to each of you who sent congratulations to Liz and to me on the fifth anniversary of the Journal. We received more comments than we have ever had on a single post. 

   We hope you will stay with us and continue to tell others about the Journal – perhaps through your facebook account in which you could list the journal link: http://www.journalofsacredwork.typepad.com.

   We want the Journal to be as widely read as possible so that other caregivers can receive the same benefits you have been drawing. 

   And there are other kinds of "thank yous" each of us can celebrate this very day. After posting a sixty year old photo of myself in a baseball uniform on our fifth anniversary essay I found myself in Boston next to my grandson – who is the same age in the picture, above, as I was in the black and white photo (at right.) Chip - baseball

   What he thinks about at age seven, as I did back then, is about how well he's playing and whether he wins. For me today, as it will be for him someday, it has almost nothing to do with that. Instead it is the experience of being out there near him, cheering from the stands, watching his face as he gets a hit or tags out a runner.

   As you move through your career as a caregiver, I hope you will increasingly savor those "in-between" moments with your colleagues and patients. Not just the times you are giving medications or adjust naso-gastric tubes or offering a drink of water, but the times when you are standing there at the nurse's station enjoying the company of your co-workers or the families of a sick patient. And there are the special times when you are caregiving in a different way – looking after the needs of a family member of friend.

   As I look at myself sixty years ago and again at a photo of me with my grandson all these decades later, I can only feel gratitude for the chance I've had to be a caregiver for my son, daughter and grandchildren. 

   There are plenty of things to complain about in the hard world of caregiving. But "happiness and vanity are incompatable." Our complaining often comes from vanity – from our feeling that we have a right to more. Sometimes, that is true.

   How much wiser it is for us to follow a practice that is much more consistent with happiness – to make the choice, each day, to say a quiet "thank you" for God's Love. For we are blessed with the opportunity to live our most sacred calling – to be a caregiver.

-Reverend Erie Chapman 

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4 responses to “Days 159-160 – Thank You”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Erie,you have managed to hit another home run for us with your ability to bring a message home…to what really matters in life. I am happy to know you are spending time with your precious family. What a grand picture of you and your grandson.
    And I wish you all well, all will be well, as I say my quiet “thank you.”

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  2. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    What a sweet picture of both of you, the pride on his face and the unfettered joy on yours. The in-between moments are the most precious, whether we are directly providing hands on care, or writing procedures in the office. The doing is the extension of the caring and the calling that drives us to be our best selves.

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  3. Victoria Facey Avatar
    Victoria Facey

    Erie, I like your past photo and your grandson’s present shot with you. He seems to be following in the right footsteps!
    I’m not a clinical employee, yet I enjoy your conversations on caregiving and how your descriptions covers all of us who work in the medical field, with the goal of doing the best we can for the patient, their family and our own workplace families. Let the new year of the Journal begin!

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  4. Marily Avatar

    Thank you Rev. Erie… for yet another to ponder upon… a great reminder. “Our complaining often comes from vanity – from our feeling that we have a right to more. Sometimes, that is true”. Only sometimes… but wiser to follow the other practice, being grateful for God’s love, “blessed with the opportunity to live our most sacred calling – to be a caregiver”.

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