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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Angela 38 -1978.copyright Dane Dakota 2011  "You who promised our forever now kindle the flames of despair." – Dane Dakota, Woman as Beauty (2010)

   Within the forest of God's Love lives a wild animal called romance. Romance is unpredictable. Love never ends.

   Professional caregivers have a hard time with this. Their divorce rates are unusually high. Is it the long hours? Is it that caregivers are too sensitive?   

   In the months after my son and his wife divorced, I could only imagine the despair that must have stalked his life. Eight years of marriage, including a happy wedding, a joyful birth experience, shared family and friends,  all lay wrecked on the shoals of bitterness.

   Must this be true for every broken relationships?

   How can lovers who once shared the sacred land of intimacy leap so suddenly to opposite, unbridgeable islands?  What happened to all the warm hope and sweet memory that attended the bonds of commitment? Where are Love's promises?

   The world is littered with the embers of broken hearts, the wreckage of betrayal, the frozen bones of disappointment, the ugly edges of ridiculed dreams. In our hours of lead, we walk the forest alone. Rotted limbs fall through us to an earth that no longer cares.

   Since no marriage exists in a vacuum, there is "collateral damage."  Family frets. Friends jump to ascribe blame. Work, including our caregiving, may suffer and those we care for may suffer as well. 

   Perhaps, it doesn't have to be this way. Our worst energies come to bear when we feel the glass of trust slip from our hands and hear it shatter. A once-smooth shape explodes into shards that scar our hearts.

   But, Love heals. 

   My son and his wife have each experienced a wonderful recovery. "The best advice I got," my son tells me, "was to get over the bitterness. Just imagining that helped me to move on to a much better place."

   On this new, firmer ground, he knows he will find a relationship much better suited to him. In many ways, he feels grateful to be free from a relationship where both were drowning.

   Betrayals come in many forms. Some are not to be tolerated. Others must be endured if real love is to thrive. Lovers will endure anger, disappointment, and sometimes a time of separation. They must search for their song, wait for the air that bears love's sweet scent, listen for the music only they can hear.

   "And will the world allow you to return to me, to live once more the love-filled life?" Dakota asks in his poem "Turning Still?"  His answer comes in "Postscript."

   "Love will always return, circling through every gray to pink again the world." 

-Reverend Erie Chapman

Photograph – "Angela Alone" – 1978 –  copyright Dane Dakota 2011

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4 responses to “Days 191-193 – Love & Pain”

  1. Maria Doglio Avatar
    Maria Doglio

    Wow, this really hit home. You are right–it has been my experience that Romance is unpredictable but Love IS what remains—even after many years, what comes up for this twice divorced woman is recognizing a basic Love for the two men I married and divorced; the journey through heartbreak, bitterness, anger and confusion of the meaningless of a split or WHY can take a long one. I finally recognize the love and gratitude for these two men who came into my life when they did, plus the wisdom that goes along with it that shows me the why part so I can move on. These two men are my best friends – one who together brought our children into life, and one who still shows me support and friendship inspite of everything.
    Erie, your son is very wise to recognize that he needed to let go of bitterness in order to let love in again. And with it we let go of incredible sadness that this loss creates–when we let go we heal and can forgive ourselves as well as the other person.
    When all is said and done and with time, Love only remains for the people that come and go in our life. We may start with the thrill of romance, but when it leads to a deeper love, we blossom again.

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  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    What comes to my mind, besides gratefulness for the depth of your sharing and these poignant images, Erie is this one thought, “The cracks let the light come in.” (From St. John of the Cross, The Dark Night of the Soul.)

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  3. Joelyn McNeese Avatar
    Joelyn McNeese

    Many of your posts, like perfect poems, invite several readings. Thank you for the promise you give us in the postscript and how it dark and dawns in the photograph as well.

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  4. Marily Avatar

    Could this feel like a perfect storm, love once there hit, then gone the next?… hard to understand but is happening. Only love itself can heal…

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