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

"…the essence of love is not to use the other to make us happy but to serve and affirm the one(s) we love." – Robert A. Johnson

Fantasy series 1a copyright erie chapman 2011   "Tell me a magic story that makes me happy," my little granddaughter asked me. 

   We all know this "magic" story. It starts with "Once upon a time" and ends with "…happily ever after."

   Some part of me wishes I could create such a life story for her. But, that kind of half-toned world would rob her of the rich colors of the full spectrum of humanity.

   Adults can tell each other happy stories. But, we can't make each other happy for long unless we understand what it means to Love.

   I have a heck of a time getting this straight. Romance naturally brings joy so why avoid it?

   Indeed, perhaps Johnson's analysis is so against human nature as to be unrealistic. His quote underscores how difficult it is to practice what we know is true. How do we let go of our desire to use the world to make us happy as opposed to affirming life with gratitude?

   It's in our nature, enshrined as a right in the American Constitution, to pursue happiness. Is Johnson trying to tell us we are wrong?

   Who can resist the rapture that ensues when Cupid's love-tipped arrow releases euphoria?

   Yet I know that my humanity erodes if I objectify any kind of relationship. Seeking to remake the one we love into our idea of perfection is, by definition, a doomed pursuit.

 "Jan" told me recently that she had "completely fallen in love" with her role as a caregiver in a large organization. Wonderful as this story is, it holds a warning.

   The punishing angels of idealization and perfectionism lurk within. What if Jan super-imposes her personal fantasy onto her calling? What if she tries to convert her mission into an object of her happiness?

  Falling in love with the idea of the "perfect" job or the "perfect" person is easy. Staying in love requires so much more of us.  

   Caregiver fatigue resembles the exhaustion of lovers whose relationship is grounded solely in romance. Radical Love is made of stronger stuff.

   Unless it matures into Love, romance will fall victim to impossible expectations. Only Love can survive the doses of anger, impatience and disappointment certain to appear in any long relationship.   

   Our most sacred life encounters, the ones where we stay in Love, are the ones where the fragile fabric of infatuation is woven with respect, friendship, laughter, listening, endurance and the sure knowledge that Love never owns. It can only celebrate the other.

-Erie Chapman

Photograph – Fantasy Series 1a copyright erie chapman 2011

Posted in

5 responses to “Days 347-349 – Staying in Love”

  1. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    “The punishing angels of idealization and perfectionism lurk within”… powerful statement. Either extreme is a set up for disappointment and a tendency to pull away from love rather than to lean in. A phrase from a 38 Special song says “hold on loosely, but don’t let her go. If you cling too tightly, you’re gonna lose control.” A continual learning for me is that the essence of love is the ability to let go… We aim to hold on tight for fear of losing love. Yet in doing so, we often smother it or push it away. Letting go, and letting love embrace and exalt the other, is the higher path and the one with the most reward.

    Like

  2. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    Cool picture. 🙂

    Like

  3. candace nagle Avatar
    candace nagle

    I have always remembered an idea from Robert A.Johnson’s books “HE” and “SHE”. He talked about “stirring the oatmeal” love. When I first read his work in the early 70’s I was very invested in romantic love and discarded the idea of love being cultivated by work and effort and living in a mundane world. Afterall, being a child of the 60’s I believed in Camelot with my entire being. But, over time, with the inevitable dis-illusionments of life, I have grown very fond of ‘stirring the oatmeal”. loving. It is reliable. It is trustworthy. It is the warm glow of the embers on winter’s hearth. It stands the test of time and comes in all shapes and sizes…a cat’s purr, the warm grasp of a patient’s hand, my father’s laugh, my grand daughter’s pony prance, and the quiet listening heart of a friend. A nice piece of chocolate melts nicely in the mouth but I love oatmeal…it sticks to the ribs.

    Like

  4. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    I guess that there is a lot that love can teach us…I appreciate your insights, Erie. I want to love with my eyes wide open. To be in touch with living versus a fantasy world.
    I think we owe it to life, in reverance of the gift that we have been given.
    Marvelous analogy, Candace

    Like

  5. Marily Avatar

    I love your picture, restful feeling just as we can have at the sustaining love among us… staying in love could be difficult when we don’t find time in nurturing it, effortlessly forgetting what once there.

    Like

Leave a comment