IMG_4726   "We are beasts bounding through time," Charles Bukowski wrote. The persistent question is, Can Love exalt us above the rest of God's creatures? Can what we interpret in a pair of tomatoes & an avocado differentiate us from other life beings?

   Love's seekers may briefly touch the hem of her dress. Still, earth's love is fraught with fire. Most are burned by the encounter as well as illuminated. 

   Love engages excruciating pain. If we pursue her we will be locked in conflicting desires.

   She offers the best life can give. Can we survive her challenges? 

   Pioneers push boundaries the furthest. They meddle with the alchemy of our being & sometimes, after harrowing explorations, they stumble into the secret forests we covet. Laboring to bring back hard won gifts they return scarred. 

   The same is true with our saintly caregivers. To paraphrase Henri Nouwen, caregivers rush into burning buildings to save those in need & sometimes are burned themselves. 

   This is the challenge of Radical Loving Care. Bukowski describes it as "the impossibility of being human." He lists the tragic endings some artists found,

"…the impossibility of being human
Maupassant going mad in a rowboat
Dostoevsky lined up against a wall to be shot
Crane off the back of a boat into the propeller
the impossibility
Sylvia with her head in the oven like a baked potato
Harry Crosby leaping into that Black Sun
Lorca murdered in the road by the Spanish troops…

…These champions
these mad dogs of glory

moving this little bit of light toward
us
impossibly.”

   Many risk the journey but, like some daring mountain climbers, fall from the peaks.

   Admire the seekers. Admire the caregivers who risk everything to "move this little bit of light toward/ us/ impossibly."

-Erie Chapman 

Photograph by Erie

3 responses to “Days 296-300 – The Impossibility of Love”

  1. Terry Chapman Avatar
    Terry Chapman

    I prefer the term “creatures on Planet Earth” to beasts but the metaphor is apt nonetheless. As creatures we often shy away from drawing close to another creature, to our detriment over time.
    We must reach out to engage one another at every opportunity, even those times when we lack interest, energy, or motivation to engage! Usually we come away with some small bit of positive energy gained from our effort and I believe the other feels the same. Accept the risks and the pitfalls, literally and figuratively, just as mountain and hill climbers like me do.
    Love is life at its best and love will certainly remain eternal, long after we are all returned to the dust we came from–but our essence will shine eternally bright, vivid to those we loved, and spiritually spotlighted in God’s eyes and the eyes of all whose path we intersected with during our journey on Planet Earth!

    Like

  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    These are provocative thoughts, Erie. Thank you for moving a little bit of light toward us.
    Where others may flee due to fear, Love turns towards suffering and through the light of presence may transmute pain through mutual understanding. I’ve heard there are 4 things we need to say before we die. I am sorry- please forgive me, I forgive you, thank you and I love you.
    Lately, I have been offering this silently as a prayer to loved ones I may have harmed in some way. I find it opens the door of compassion for myself and others; this the prayer of my heart.

    Like

  3. Julie Avatar
    Julie

    Thank you!

    Like

Leave a comment