Love

“Death is not an enemy, death lives in paradise. What makes anything precious but that it ends? ”

B. J. Miller MD, Hospice and Palliative Care, extraordinary human being.

 I had the good fortune to listen to Dr. Miller share wisdom gleaned through his life experience with encountering death.  He offered many compelling thoughts about the benefits of living in awareness of the fleeting nature of life. If we lived forever, would we appreciate living? Death gives life meaning.

People often wonder how anyone could work in hospice and may think, "It must be so morbid." Yet. Dr. Miller expressed what caregivers know, is the best kept secret.  To accompany a person in the final stage of life is a trans-formative experience for all involved, for Beauty is revealed in the most intimate, profoundly human and life giving ways.  

Medicine has evolved with phenomenal technological advances that enable doctors to save lives. Yet, the system design is flawed because treatment can be impersonal and dehumanizing.  If you were to ask a patient about their hospitalization, what lingers vividly in their memory are the tender moments of connection.  Perhaps, a small act of  kindness that affirmed what matters most in caregiving. 

Dr. Miller shared a time when he was laid up in a burn unit for a few months. One day it began to snow outside and although, his room was windowless he could imagine snow falling softly to blanket the earth. A nurse smuggled a snowball into the unit for him. The sensations of the cold ice melting in his hand, reconnected him to life and it was a turning point in his journey of recovery.

Artist, Erie Chapman reveals in his transcendent writings and photography that we can experience Beauty in the ordinary as we cross a threshold into the mystery and miraculous. It requires a shift in how we see by offering the gift of our presence. 

Caregiving is reciprocal. When we share in our humanity who can say who is the giver or the receiver?  For in truth there is no defining point of a beginning or ending with Love.  

Liz Sorensen Wessel

  

 If you would like to hear more from B. J. Miller MD go to Ted Talk: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=apbSsILLh28

6 responses to “DAYS 262-263: The Best Kept Secret”

  1. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    I love the quote from Dr. Miller and the quote from you, Liz “there is no defining point of a beginning or ending with Love.” I will hope to check out the Ted Talk as well.
    Thank you for the way your artwork both encompasses love and signals its endlessness.

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  2. sbeng Avatar
    sbeng

    What a beautiful writing on the subject of love. Hospice patients needs love and tenderness in the last phase of their lives. As a Hospice nurse my colleague and I have sung hymns of love to the patients when we make our home visits. Nothing is more comforting than to bring peace and love to them in the final phase of their lives. Love your beautiful artwork.

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  3. Jolyon Avatar
    Jolyon

    Liz, the two videos are wonderful and full of grace, as well as your beautiful artwork. Which brings me to a…
    Connection.
    Holding the hand of someone near their bodies death, as their body starts to let go, the hidden soul emerges. For a brief moment in time you are holding one hand while the other is caressed by an angel. For the minutest of time…you, your loved one, their angel…are all holding hands together with God.
    Letting go is an embrace with God’s Love…

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  4. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Dr. Miller has an open heart and his message is one that you have been sharing for decades… so I hope that you will get a chance to hear his TED Talk because I think you will find him to be a kindred spirit. He had worked in the Zen Hospice Project in SF where the above video was filmed. I think the patient had an important message as well as the singers. God gives us each a little garden to tend, we all have different gifts to share.
    Thank you so much for your blessings, Erie.

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  5. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Hi Suan,
    Yes, I was inspired to sing to my family members in their final hours. I am not sure how it was received by them. I’ve heard it said that people can still hear even if they do not respond. I hope it was a comfort, I know it was for me.
    Thank you Suan, you have helped to ease the way for many; as babies entered this world and when others were leave taking, both such beautiful and sacred times.

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  6. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Thank you, Jolyon, for the tender and loving connection you have shared in the embrace and the letting go into Love, beautiful!

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