caregivers
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Days 89-93 How to Stir The Sky
Adults have magic powers. Look at the effect you have when you thank a caregiver, smile at a policemen or tell a doctor you are grateful for her work. Consider your impact when you meet a patient’s eyes with love… Continue reading
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Days 82-86 Two Reasons Why Some Crises Unite Us
Radical Loving Care calls us to love even when Fear says it makes no sense. Why? Because love is the heart of our highest humanity. Continue reading
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Days 75-79 Why BSW-Grapevine Medical Center is Golden
As this essay is published (March 16, 2020) COVID-19 crisis is omnipresent. One hospital you can count on to deliver loving care is Baylor Scott & White’s Grapevine Medical Center. And one leader I would hire to run Riverside Methodist… Continue reading
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Days 62-66 – Live Love not fear
Live Love not fear. Whenever we do we celebrate life’s highest power. Living love brings out out the best in you & others. Continue reading
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Days 55-59 – Peaceful Pictures
I hope this image brings you moments of peace as you allow this palette of colors & array of shapes to soften the rough edges of your day. Continue reading
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Days 46-50 Culture-Changing Stories – Raising The Light
Asked to deliver loving care harried caregivers often say, “I haven’t got time.” Share this story about how Martha Chapman changed lives in just seconds every day. Continue reading
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Days 357-361 – Secrets in Fog
The Queen of Morning offers a gracious gift whenever she layers a meadow with the mist we call fog. On the morning I made part one of this picture (top) she had spread her grayest robes across a golf… Continue reading
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Days 350-354 – Witness to Tears
Caregivers are tear-catchers as well as wound-menders. Day & night they bear witness to suffering, often hiding their own tears so that they may help others. Continue reading
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Days 343-347 – Pride or Gratitude?
It is nice to be proud of offspring. Yet, Love teaches that gratitude is far better than pride. Continue reading
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Days 336-340 – How Storypower Made Illness a Gift
After essayist Anatole Broyard learned he was terminally ill he made a transcendent choice: To change his life story. “All of my old trivial selves fell away and I was reduced to my essence,” he wrote. Thus, he took control… Continue reading