"My water will be like a stream that gives eternal life." John 4:14
The ancient story of the woman at the well has been retold for centuries. Anyone who has heard this story understands except for one person. She is the Samarian woman who comes to a well for water. Jesus tells her that with his "living water" she will never be thirsty again. But she does not comprehend his message.
Do we, as caregivers, truly comprehend the power in Jesus' words? If so, why do we thirst?
Speaking only for myself, I know that I not only need, but am often desperate, for the love of others. As I age in a country where youth is king, I can feel people seeing me differently. To some, I may no longer appear like the energetic leader who once wielded a small amount of "power" for awhile. Increasingly, I may seem irrelevant.
When I find my thoughts turning this way I start feeling abandoned. In my self-pity, I search, like the woman at the well, for something I think will satisfy my worldly thirst – my need for affirmation.
This search, of course, is foolish and cannot have a good end. Love is always available to all of us – especially when we stop searching and simply receive God's gift.
This is the news Jesus offered – to know that we are always loved and can love others with no fear that the well will run dry. It is a gift those of other faiths also receive in another way. We can all know God's Love.
Caregivers, who may experience isolation on the night shift or in the middle of the day, know the sadness that rises in the heart when the dragon of abandonment appears. Where is Love at times like these? Where is the God who is supposed to comfort us in our grief?
Of course, the answer is that God's Love is always present to us. We discover this when we let go of fear.
Do you, as a caregiver, find yourself feeling "thirsty" in the middle of your work? What helps relieve this thirst?
-Erie Chapman
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