I think of compassion as the fundamental religious experience and, unless that is there, you have nothing. – Joseph Campbell
Kindness and grace are not mere “tools” of caregiving but lovely ways of expressing our being. How do you display your warmth?
When I was a little kid and got into fights with my sisters (in recent photo – left) my face would contort in anger. My mother sometimes used a little trick to snap me out of it.
“Shake hands with your sister and smile,” she would tell me.
Of course, I was not going to do any such thing. But, gradually, she would prod me until an awkward smile changed my face and, gradually, my heart.
Much as I had been fighting an apology I found my inner attitude softening. With the arrival of my smile my anger retreated.
As the great theologian and author C.S. Lewis wrote: "Do not waste your time bothering whether you "love" your neighbor, act as if you did. As soon as we do this, we find one of the great secrets. When you are behaving as if you loved someone, you will presently come to love him. If you injure someone you dislike, you will find yourself disliking him more. If you do him a good turn, you will find yourself disliking him less."
We all smile when we are feeling like scowling. You pretend to like people you don't.
Fake smiles can help in the same way politeness can smooth interactions. Pretend smiles can become genuine – as if the put-on smile somehow awakens something warmer.
But fake smiles in caregiving can be worse than no smile at all because they come from cynicism. It is exhausting if your outer behavior is constantly at odds with your inner soul.
It is the genuine smiles – either broad or modest – that illuminate relationships. That is why it is so helpful for you and I to discover things we honestly care about in others.
Love does not always mean struggling to be kind to someone who is rude. It means understanding the grief beneath the angry person's grievance.
Every time you do that, Love smiles.
-Erie Chapman

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