Gray pavement #1 copyright erie chapman 2012   

Caregiving, with its endless demands, holds a hidden risk. Protocols can be monotonous. Soon, spiritual atrophy may settle in. Light fades and we enter a gray life that sits right on the edge of shadows.

      “Here comes another body,” I heard
a recovery nurse say one morning as I did my rounds through her area. Indeed,
that’s what the unconscious patient looked like. Deprived of everyday reality by
anesthetics, the patient appeared almost comatose.

      I watched this nurse perform her
tasks as matter-of-factly as if she were cooking a hamburger. Her eyes were
dead as a subway rider. Her tone was flat. Since I have never been a first line caregiver, I can only sympathize with her challenges.  

      “How long have you been a recovery
nurse,” I asked.

      “Twenty years,” she responded with
a sense of fatigue rather than energy.

      “Have you ever thought about
working in another area?”

      “Not any more,” she answered. “I’m
pretty much stuck here.”

     At the age of forty-three, she
could be “stuck” in that area for another twenty-two years. Already, she may
be one who counts the minutes until her shift ends, the
days until the weekend, the months until retirement.

     It’s easy to see why anyone for
whom work has become a chore might be tired. Amid daily fatigue, generating the
energy to reignite your soul with new approaches may seem both too hard and
too complicated.

     My heart breaks for the millions of
caregivers who have fallen into this trap. What may have seemed like an
exciting challenge in its dawning has become Chinese Water Torture.

     Equally tragic are caregivers who
live in fear. Their daily lives feel threatened by anxiety over the risk of
mistakes and over worry that the boss will punish them or, worse, fire them.
Crossfire from fellow caregivers may also drain hope.

     Even at
young ages, change can be difficult. Life grabs hold of us rapidly teaching its
basic lessons: seek pleasure, avoid pain, cultivate comfort, be happy, “don’t
rock the boat.”

     The older we become, the longer we
have been in the same job, the more challenging change becomes. For those who
have chosen careers in caregiving, spiritual
atrophy
may begin as early as five years into the work.

     Caregiving roles teach protocols.
Protocols swiftly become routines. Routines can soon seem boring.

     “Christ what are
patterns for? Edna Saint Vincent Millay wrote in a poem expressing her horror of the killing in World War I.

     Daily patterns can silence our
soul’s strength. Patterned thinking can become the enemy of the kind of fresh
living that keeps compassion alive. Rote behavior can lead us to do some jobs with only ten percent of our
attention.

     “He who has a why can bear almost any how," Victor Frankl wrote in “Man’s Search for Meaning.”  It is our "why" that gives us the will to live against life's most crushing setbacks. 

    That is the reason to change. If we are "dying" in our work and in our everyday lives, we need to find a new "why."

     How do we become care lovers rather than care haters?

     Thursday's Journal offers some answers.

-Erie Chapman

Photograph – "Gray Pavement" copyright erie chapman 2012

[The above article is excerpted from the forthcoming book, Inside Radical Loving Care]

4 responses to “Days 28-30 – Living Love Not Fear”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Erie, I appreciate that you continually take us to a place of discernment to discover the deeper meaning in our work and in life. This is truly a gift to us as caregivers.
    What fuels my passion is this awareness of how dispassionate and impersonal systems can be and I think of how it might be (or has been) for my own family members when they have been ill and in need of care. I keep this is in the forefront of my mind when I listen to the voice of the patient or family member on the other end of the phone. I want to offer help as if they were my family member and after all aren’t they? When I can make a difference in the quality of a person’s life that is fantastic and it is what makes all it all worthwhile. So much of what exhausts us in Healthcare these days is not caregiving but systems that are broken and the seemingly insurmountable mountains of paperwork imposed due to over regulation. So much of it is unreasonable and beyond common sense.

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  2. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    Hi Erie, if I feel tired as I am driving to work, I know that caregiver fatigue is not far away. On those days I ask myself, “what can I look forward to today?” I love writing, so I try to make my narrative documentation as clear and concise as it can be as a way of honoring my own work, and of loving the caregiver who follows me with that patient. I am also loving the patient as I make sure that my work is complete both in the here and now, and pondering what their needs ahead might be moving forward. I also think about my colleagues, asking myself who I might enjoy having a quick exchange with. I try to stop and take in when people send positive comments my way, and to get support through prayer or friendship after work, when things don’t go as smoothly as I would like. I feel God’s energy flowing through me when I allow myself to be creative in the little things, and forgiving when the heirarchy is human and imperfect, as it always is.

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  3. candace nagle Avatar
    candace nagle

    I appreciate Victor Frankl’s quote. And these days, with the many redundant, menial, and meaningless bureaucratic obstacles crowding in on our main purpose, while we are providing loving care to our patients, holding onto the “why” is what gets me through. What also helps is to have truthful, heartfelt communication with my co workers. As the expectations and demands on our time and energy have grown more unreasonable and unrealistic over time, it is not surprising that people feel burnt out, discouraged, and have nothing left to give. What needs to change is the broken system that is burning them out. After all, we are human beings not machines. I still love my work, in spite of the ridiculous stress level and the general chaos of our health care “system”. But I have had to cut back on my expenditures of energy in many ways just to keep going. I am not surprised by the burn out and fall out…but I am deeply saddened. Working with people like Liz and Stephanie are part of what keeps me filled with hope and helps me to be willing to keep trying.

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  4. Carolyn Olney Avatar

    I remember a talk at Catholic Healthcare Association ‘s annual conference. The CEO of Medtronic told about one of his employees, a woman who assembled devices, and that she said she imagined every device going into a loved one. I am not a front line caregiver, but was a caregiver for a loved one for many years. I do know how broken our “system” is. Perhaps engaging in efforts to affect the broken system can be a useful place to focus our frustration. Candace, Stephanie, and Liz each offer ways to work through difficult situations and remain fully human.

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