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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Paper and painter   "You have not grown old, and it is not too late/ to dive into your increasing depths/ where life calmly gives out its own secret." Rainer Maria Rilke (translated by Robert Bly)

   We who seek a lot from life are insatiable. Like the painter at left (mimicked coincidentally by a piece of crumpled paper in the foreground) we are forever reaching for more.

   We keep asking the old, big questions and finding new answers every day. None of the answers seems satisfactory for long.

   Shallow water holds no mystery. We dive deeper, swim closer to the bone. Perhaps, we plunge into the gritty marrow where life holds her rawest threats and richest secrets.

   "You see, I want a lot." Rilke writes. "Perhaps I want everything…"

   We lovers of Rilke-like quests exhaust others who gave up early and live pining for the weekend or for retirement by which time their life's "own secret" may have further receded from view. 

   Exhaustion, repetitive work, and oppressive work environments can suck the energy from our days if we give in. Veteran caregivers may forget the energy they felt at the beginning.

   Do you remember your first day of work? Do you recall your anxiety-laced excitement as you entered something completely new?

   There is no exact moment when the work turns routine. Gradually, something in us collapses and we default to the easy patterns.

   A job is just a job, right? Why dive deeper? 

   The best among us follow Emily Dickinson's dictum: "We must always keep the door ajar, ready for the ecstatic experience."

   When that moment arrives, the finest among us don't just stand and watch. They wrap their souls with light and dive in.

   How does experience yield moments of light? During a lunch with two veteran obstetricians I asked each why they had chosen their specialty. "It's something I discovered I could do," the first doctor told me. His bored expression confirmed that his door to ecstacy had slammed shut.

   The second doctor said, "I've delivered hundreds of babies and I'm fascinated everytime. I love helping a new person onto the stage."

   "What if the delivery goes badly?" I asked. 

   "That's part of the tension. In hard cases, I dig deeper. It's heartbreaking…and I'm a better physician afterwards."

   Between these two doctor's dull and bright perspectives lies the half-light most people occupy. We move through our days doing the best we can, like it or not.

   One day, if our "door is ajar" we may be startled into seeing the ordinary in an extraordinary way. Driving a familiar road we may encounter an accident that jars us into rediscovering our caregiving as a calling

   Like auto accidents, epiphanies occur unexpectedly. When they do, can we find the strength to dive deeper into the secret our life holds calmly in its hands?

-Erie Chapman

Photograph – "Crumpled Paper and Painter" copyright Erie Chapman 2011

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4 responses to “Days 336-337 – Diving Into Depth”

  1. candace nagle Avatar
    candace nagle

    For me people never become routine. Yesterday I met a 97 year old man who was requesting instruction on his rowing machine and bow flex. While my agenda was his safety and fall prevention, his primary goal was to get stronger so he could work on his boat and go sailing in the bay again. He didn’t get to be 97 by sliding into a bored state of mind or by not taking risks.
    Though people never become routine for me, I find that I grow tired of my own habits, my own efforts at economy. Trying to be efficient in my daily routines instead of letting in the light of the miraculous mundane. I need to pay closer attention for the surprises…look at the shadows in a new light. Thanks for the reminder to wake up and be present to the wonder of it all! As Rumi said, “The breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you, don’t go back to sleep.”

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  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Remarkable, how the paper and artist are mirrored in such a delightful and synchronous way.
    Candace thanks for being you and for sharing your encounter with that amazing gentleman.
    Oh, how easy it is to become complacent within the daily routines. We have a false sense that we will be here forever. When we live “in the shadow of death”, we perhaps begin to really love. I read Angelica’s comment on your recent post about self-compassion vs. pity. I was so moved by her thoughts on self-compassion (which caused me to regret that I had deleted half my comment on that same post.) Living authentically starts with intention and by paying attention, (no rhyme intended, ha!) without judgment but rather to approach each day with an attitude of curiosity.
    Thanks for breathing life into these pages with your insatiable spark of mystery and wonder, Erie.
    “Make it a practice to judge persons and things in the most favorable light at all times and under all circumstances.” -Saint Vincent de Paul

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  3. candace nagle Avatar
    candace nagle

    I love the Saint Vincent de Paul quote. Liz thank you for the reminder. As we all travel along on our individual journeys, it helps so much to have others see the best in us.

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  4. Marily Avatar

    Exhaustion, repetitive work, and oppressive work environments can suck the energy from our days if only we give in, missing the extraordinary in the ordinary… but being in full attention can keep our loving intentions going 🙂 … thank you.

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