Love always circles back to the lover. This truth extends to the  inanimate.

   Love the space you occupy and the space will love you. Treat your environment as sacred and you become a part of the sacred. Know that the spaces you honor are not always grand. You make a place sacred by the way you see it and treat it. 

   It was just another hay-strewn hut until Mary birthed Jesus in it. A humble log cabin in Kentucky is today hallowed as the birthplace of Abraham Lincoln. A shabby room in a French pension became famous when Vincent Van Gogh rendered it so vividly that his painting now hangs in another sacred place, the Louvre. 

   What spaces are sacred to you?

   Loving your physical space seems easy when it is a flower-drenched meadow, a forest populated with Sequoias or your own bedroom decorated with things you love. When you design a room to your taste, you pick what comforts your body and inspires your soul. 

2 mandela cell   What if your home is a prison cell? In the wake of Nelson Mandela's death millions revisit in picture and in person a stark cell (left) sanctified by Mandela's imprisonment in it for twenty-seven years. One of his greatest legacies was his refusal to pursue revenge after his release in 1990 and his 1994 ascendancy to the presidency of South Africa.

   Mandela said that if he hated his jailers he would trade one prison for another. By loving his enemies, Mandela pointed you to the truth that prison is not only a physical cell but can be built with your attitude. 

   No matter how grand or humble, can you flavor the place where you work with Love?  Can you make your job setting holy by creating sacred encounters there?

   There is no more sacred "space" than the spiritual square footage of your soul. There is no greater thing you can do than to decorate your life with Love. 

-Erie Chapman

6 responses to “Days 342-344 – Loving Your Space”

  1. julie laverdiere Avatar
    julie laverdiere

    What a beautiful reflection, and so heartfelt with the passing of a great man. We can bless that place we are in, and suddenly it becomes the place we are supposed to be. We can curse it, and then it does become our prison. Thank you so much for this wonderful reminder that grace exists in our minds always.

    Like

  2. Erie Chapman Foundation Avatar

    Thank you, Julie, for having such an open and beautiful heart. Yes, “curse the space” and it does become “our prison.”

    Like

  3. Terry Chapman Avatar
    Terry Chapman

    Love the place you’re in” is related to “Bloom where you’re planted now”. In other words, take what you are given and make the very best you can make from the givens!

    Like

  4. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    I heard it said that Gandhi’s prison guards were changed out frequently because they were influenced by his loving presence as the “enemy” who became known as a beloved friend and brother. We too can discover the light in our bother and sister’s eyes with the Light reflected back to us if we open to the experience.
    Julie’s eloquent response to your profoundly beautiful essay, Erie is a double blessing today, thanks to you both and Terry, the philosophy of bloom where you are planted is helpful to me…thank you all!

    Like

  5. Maureen McDermott rsj Avatar
    Maureen McDermott rsj

    What a tribute to all the ‘Mandelas’ of our world who have transformed their space into holy ground through their faith, hope, forgiveness, compassion, conviction and love. Inspired by your words, Erie, may be go into today full of hope and confidence because where we are God is and therefore is holy and maybe we too will be people enabling transformation. Thank you Erie.

    Like

  6. Erie Chapman Foundation Avatar

    Thank you Terry, Liz and Maureen for your lovely contributions to this essay. Each of you exemplifies exactly the spirit you compliment.

    Like

Leave a reply to julie laverdiere Cancel reply