Near death and suffering from a brain tumor the great writer Raymond Carver wrote this poem, "Late Fragment" to his wife, Tess:

And did you get what 

you wanted from this life, even so?

I did.

And what did you want?

To call myself beloved, to feel myself

beloved on the earth.

   It's a lovely writing, speaking brilliantly to the criticality of Love in our lives, particularly as to whether we allow ourselves to feel "beloved on the earth."

Miles - tree July 1 2012 - baba   If we receive deep love, as has my oldest grandson (in photo at age eight) than we know we can feel beloved and love ourselves. 

   But, what happens if we are unable to accept that we are loved? I can see one answer to that question in the life of the prisoner I visit each week on Death Row.

   He has never received Love and therefore has trouble feeling beloved (not to mention calling himself such.) This may be the reason why Glen has done so many mean things in his life.

   Love breeds Love. It's absence nurtures hate and anger and gives birth to fear.

   When I first saw him two years ago, a thick piece of glass separating the two of us, one of the first things Glen told me was: "Don't expect me to trust you, Erie. No one has ever trusted me and I don't trust nobody."

   It's an understandable attitude, isn't it? 

   If Love cannot find a pathway through us how can we, as caregivers, be healers to those in need?

   If we have never found a way to love ourselves perhaps Carver's lines can point us towards the permission we need to love and feel ourselves beloved in our brief journey on this earth.

-Erie Chapman 

 

3 responses to “Days 190-194 – Do You Call Yourself Beloved?”

  1. Victoria Avatar
    Victoria

    Erie, what a tough introduction in meeting Glen! I can only imagine his pain in believing that no one would invest in him at his place in life. I hope in time that he began to see the sincerity in you as a caregiver and friend.
    Love can sometimes be a tough sale; and often when given it is taken for granted. To me, Love is the most precious gift I know of, yet it is often neglected and I don’t know why.
    That won’t stop me from giving and seeking though…

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  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    This is a lovely post, Erie. Your grandson is a lucky fellow.

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  3. candace nagle Avatar
    candace nagle

    Recently I have encountered this quote in various places: “Being deeply loved by someone gives you strength, while loving someone deeply gives you courage.” Lao Tzu
    Your beautiful grandson has been fortified and filled to the brim with love so that he shines with happiness. He will grow into a strong man. Your trust in the power of love, gives you the courage to go to hard places.
    Often I think we fortunate ones who have lived in a loving world can’t even realize our good fortune…It is just ‘how it is’. The absence of love is something we can barely fathom. When we see it we are repelled and/or frightened because it is such a horrific gaping wound.
    Thank you, Erie, for being willing to walk into that wound with the love that is needed to heal.

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