"I'm planning to give loving care today," a caregiver told me recently. It's a noble thought and exactly the kind of thing everyone of her patients wants to experience.
There's a related thought. It's not about what we're planning to do but what we are doing right now.
Frequently, I find myself plotting new ways to live Love instead of noticing what I'm doing right now. Sitting at my computer (imagining you at yours) I just now paused to send up a prayer for a man who, now age eighty, is ill and tired of life, and another prayer for a woman who, in this moment, is suffering with cancer knowing that it may soon take her life.
We can always do more tomorrow. But, what can how can we live Love right now?
A patient hits the call button and waits for half an hour. How can the late-arriving caregiver deal with his anger? A frequent response is, "I was busy taking care of other patients" or, worse, "We're short staffed today."
The problem with this answer is that the patient can do nothing about these excuses and may well be made more uncomfortable knowing there are not enough people to care for patients.
The better response has to do with giving love NOW: "I'm so sorry to be slow responding. That must have been hard. I'm here now. How may I help you?"
The love we give now is more important and any we plan for tomorrow. Tomorrow, of course, will simply be another set of "nows."
-Erie Chapman

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