Have these pandemic fissures left us feeling like something or someone is dying?
Suddenly, we have been arrested & imprisoned. People who love their work cannot do it. Children who want to say goodbye to dying parents end up waving through nursing home windows. Loved ones touch hands on cellphone screens.
Dr. Elizasbeth Kübler-Ross' five stages of dying become strikingly relevant. What were the range of reactions people had when news of the pandemic spread? Denial, anger, bargaining, depression & acceptance.
There is a sixth stage, the biggest of all, pointed out by a physician friend. It is meaning.
Since meaning is hope & hope fuels or our lives the subtraction of that feels like a murder. We are supposed to find new life through during traumatic events. The fact that it is so agonizingly hard to do so is what infuses tragedy with opportunity.
Holocaust survivor Victor Frankl said meaning flows from the work we offer during crises, the love we give & our ability to show courage in the face of suffering.
Millions are revaluing the rich meaning of a once matter-of-fact human encounter: a loving hug. When that practice returns so will hope.
-Erie Chapman

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