If you were to gather up the day’s news you would invariably come to the conclusion that the world needs saving, right? Well, I expect it will need saving tomorrow, too. And in the meantime, I am going to reflect on what it means to “do something” in the face of great suffering.
Yes, the reports from around the world are dire, but they reflect something else, too: The scale of suffering is balanced by resilience, courage, and hope.
What is Resilience?
I’m reminded of a recent article that described resilient people: they’re distinguished by the fact that after a trauma, they don’t just return to their point of departure. They cope and then get strength in the future from their experiences in the past.
Our resilience as individuals has created an extraordinarily resilient species. Without diminishing the tragedy in Haiti at all, we can predict that some people will come out of this trauma stronger for the experience.
And yet, that resilience looks like the sort of thing you’d expect from superheroes. Many of us have not even experienced that degree of trauma, much less overcome it to become stronger.
But we look at the headlines, feel our responsibility for making the world a better place, and then begin to think that we should be superheroes, that we have to be, because the suffering we see—whether in Haiti, or in our own home towns, or even in our best friends’ relationships—calls out to us to alleviate it. And many of us serve others in our work: for us, that sense of responsibility can become a chronic, debilitating condition.
Violent Striving
Of course, feeling this responsibility and acting on it every time is the fastest way to total collapse. So the next question is: Is constant striving necessary to save the world? Is it the best way to achieve our goals? Is it even the best way to do our jobs?
I sure hope not. In fact, I don’t believe it. Would it take some serious rewiring for you to think of overwork as a form of violence? It took me a little while to look at it this way—as one of the most prevalent forms of violence in the world—but I think it’s a good point and worthy of more reflection.
Thomas Merton was a 20th century American Catholic writer, a Trappist monk, a poet and a social activist. He promoted interfaith understanding and was one of the first Westerners to develop relationships with the Dalai Lama and Thich Nhat Hahn.
He was a man who saw the suffering in the world—and had dedicated himself to addressing it—but he wrote “To allow oneself to be carried away by a multitude of conflicting concerns, to surrender to too many demands, to commit oneself to too many projects, to want to help everyone in everything, is to succumb to violence.”
He proposed that unless rest, wisdom, and delight are embedded in the problem-solving process itself, the solution we patch together is not likely to offer genuine relief. Born of desperation and exhaustion, it almost guarantees that an equally perplexing problem will emerge as soon as it is put into place.
Really, what good can come from the nonstop effort? When we are working constantly, eating poorly, sleeping little, stressing and worrying, we are little good to ourselves. In this condition, how can we possibly be of service to others?
The Consequences of Overdoing
I often fear that it may be too late; that there is much to do; that there is not enough time, money, or people to do it. But I also realize that this fear itself wears me down. I believe that the overwhelm, the overwork, the over-caring that we feel actually diminishes our ability to care, our willingness to help and our effectiveness in the long run.
I can’t speak for others. I can only look at my own life and ask these questions. And so I do: Are my important relationships suffering? Am I frequently mentally fatigued and emotionally fragile? Am I experiencing an illness or pain in my body?
The answer to any one of these questions is too often yes. So I go back to Thomas Merton’s proposal for undoing all of this harm: Commit to rest, wisdom and delight. Not as a means of avoiding our work in the world, but as a means of making us stronger for the work in front of us.
Dolce Far Niente
Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love, wrote that we are at risk of losing the talent of appreciating ease. I think she’s right. Italians actually have a name for this talent - dolce far niente (which translates to “the sweetness of doing nothing”). The fact that we don’t even have an English equivalent for this lovely sentiment speaks to a certain malaise in our culture, don’t you think?
So here’s my prescription for ridding myself of the malaise and injecting some dolce far niente into my system:
Start small. Eat and drink well. Treat others as you wish to be treated. Smile and make eye contact with the people around you. Say you’re sorry simply and without defensiveness. Be a good friend. Take walks and look up often. Laugh a lot. And then, once you’re rested and ready to begin again, focus on the world—on the work—in front of you.
I’m always ready to take a dose of that medicine.
How 'bout you Pinkies? How do you cope with tragedy, disaster, stress, trauma, excessive work? Do you feel responsible, as if the weight of the world rests on your shoulders? How can you let that go? What do you need to relieve the burden and find your mojo?
Simply onward,
Stacey
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Comments
Hello Gwendolyn! I'm so
By Stacey (not verified) on Sunday, 02/07/2010 at 5:57 AMHello Gwendolyn!
I'm so glad this message resonates with you too! By living your truth you are a powerful model for your children and that benefits them *and* the world SO much!!! Much love to you!
Hi again, Emily! Ooh, yes,
By Stacey (not verified) on Sunday, 02/07/2010 at 5:57 AMHi again, Emily!
Ooh, yes, I love that you found that parallel with "following our hearts." And I love that (thanks to Ruthie!) we have even *more* evidence to support doing just that!
Hi...this is exactly how I
By gwendolyn (not verified) on Sunday, 02/07/2010 at 12:55 AMHi...this is exactly how I feel..thanks for sharing. After 4, children, 2 divorcees, trauma in my life...I wake up every morning doing what I feel..
aw, thanks stacey! and yes, i
By Emily Simmer (not verified) on Saturday, 02/06/2010 at 4:20 AMaw, thanks stacey! and yes, i do also love ruthie's metaphor. it's an interesting parallel, in that we always talk about "following our hearts" which this metaphor suggests we do quite literally. love it!
what a community we are here!
Hi Emily! Thank you SO much
By Stacey (not verified) on Friday, 02/05/2010 at 11:04 AMHi Emily!
Thank you SO much for your comment! If you come back here I hope you will find sustenance in Ruthie's heart metaphor too!
I also love what you wrote "feeling so tempted to dive head-first into the many beautiful twinkling pools that surround me." Your words are imbued with evident delight and bring up the important point that even when we are overwhelmed with *good* things, it's still overwhelm - and it's still important to attend to our needs for rest and quiet.
Thank you again for sharing!!!
Oh Ruthie! Thank you SO much
By Stacey (not verified) on Friday, 02/05/2010 at 10:56 AMOh Ruthie!
Thank you SO much for sharing this lovely heart metaphor with us! I love it SO much and I know it will fortify me tremendously when I am facing challenging events and feeling overwhelmed!
Stacey- I somehow missed this
By Ruthie (not verified) on Friday, 02/05/2010 at 9:42 AMStacey- I somehow missed this one at MfYL!! So glad that it was reposted here.
This is dovetailing so much into my own world right now. As I strive to make sense of a world filled with need, I've been remembering the wise words of my mentor and dear friend, Robin Sale.
She often talks of the human heart as a metaphor for how to live our lives as mothers (I'd expand the metaphor to include anyone who cares for others...in other words, EVERYONE!).
When that fresh, wonderful, oxygenated blood returns from the lungs into the heart, what does the heart do? It takes the richest blood for itself. Then, strengthened and replenished, it has the power to send the rest of the life-sustaining blood to all of the other cells in the body that needs it.
We are just like our magnificent hearts. When we nurture ourselves, we have that much more to give!
ditto @danielle - that phrase
By Emily Simmer (not verified) on Friday, 02/05/2010 at 7:39 AMditto @danielle - that phrase totally struck me too!
i am currently in the throes of this exact thing so this info is so perfectly timely for me - feeling so tempted to dive head-first into the many beautiful twinkling pools that surround me, all at once. and almost literally feeling i need to remind myself to breathe. to stay grounded and balanced and focused on myself and my needs. i feel so "speedy" even writing this.... slow down, stay present, relax, enjoy, it's all gonna get done... biiig sigh.... constant reminders....
thanks everyone for the reminders/support!
Wow. Just wow. I am SO glad
By Stacey (not verified) on Thursday, 02/04/2010 at 11:13 AMWow. Just wow. I am SO glad this post resonated with so many of you. Thank you SO much for letting me know that you appreciated this piece! Please know that every one of you touched me deeply with your comments and I will just leave a brief individual message for:
@Jenn: Thanks so much for leaving the origin of the word Sabbath: I LOVE knowing it means "heart's rest."
@Lissa: Thank you so much - again - for creating this community that attracts and sustains so many lovely souls.
@Dana: I appreciate SO much that you were the first to welcome me after I joined the Pink Posse forum and that you have always provided me with SO much incredible support and encouragement!
@Danielle: Thank you SO much for letting me know that a particular phrase I wrote touched you so much! I think as a writer it just doesn't get any better than that! And I love your turn of phrase too: "Delight and fun are the very elixir we need to lift us out of overwhelm."
@Jane: Thank you SO much for sharing the line from a Robert Frost poem. So beautiful and so perfect - I had not read it in a while and I'm so glad you thought to share it here!
that is beautiful - so often
By jane (not verified) on Thursday, 02/04/2010 at 10:47 AMthat is beautiful - so often we are trained tothink of resting as selfish... this is a much more balanced view
We dance around the ring and suppose. The secret sits in the middle and knows - Robert Frost
Mr Frost obviously concurrs!!
Stacey- Thank you for
By Danielle Vieth (not verified) on Thursday, 02/04/2010 at 9:48 AMStacey- Thank you for bringing this to light. I think we get so caught up in the "important" tragedies of the world but we forget that our suffering won't (and can't) alleviate another's suffering.
I LOVE this: "Commit to rest, wisdom and delight. Not as a means of avoiding our work in the world, but as a means of making us stronger for the work in front of us." YES!
I think delight and fun are the very elixir we need to lift us out of overwhelm.
xoxo
Oh I loved this when you
By Dana Theus on Thursday, 02/04/2010 at 9:47 AMOh I loved this when you posted it on the Posse! I'm so glad it's up here now for the whole world to see! ((((Stacey))))) Love, Light and Strength ~Dana
Welcome Kerrie! We're SO
By Lissa Rankin on Thursday, 02/04/2010 at 7:07 AMWelcome Kerrie! We're SO jazzed to have your beautiful self here among us. Please thank Debra for sending you here (she's lovely, isn't she?) And join us at the heart of soul of Owning Pink www.owningpink.ning.com
Yes, we all need respite in a crazy world. We're so delighted you're finding sanctuary here. ((((((((((((((((((Kerrie))))))))))))))))))
And Stacey- thank you- as always- for holding such beautiful space here so every Pinkie can get exactly what they need and walk away replenished. Blessings and love Lissa
dear Stacey this is so right
By Jenn (not verified) on Thursday, 02/04/2010 at 6:44 AMdear Stacey this is so right on, and so timely. I am one of those 'save the world or die' people, who ultimately take on too much or get wrapped up in a project to the point of not taking care of myself, eating properly etc and then get cranky and hard to live with. The stress barometer in me is on high alert these days, and feelings of overwhelm are frequent. your solutions are right on too. For myself, it's often a rest day, or morning that's needed (as well as saying no to another volunteer project). I need to fill the well, listen to soothing music, do some yoga, breathe, center, meditate longer, and be by myself with no demands from others - at least once a week. I call it Heart's Rest - from the origina term for Sabbath - Sabbatu, which means heart's rest.
Hi Kerrie! Thanks so much
By Stacey (not verified) on Thursday, 02/04/2010 at 6:00 AMHi Kerrie!
Thanks so much for your kind note! I love how you wrote that you have found a "sanctuary of support" here. Of course, that is what Owning Pink is all about, but for it to be associated with my writing, too...well, that just makes my day!
And I followed you to your blog and I was touched by your post about the "Rent Party" and I am leaving an offering - and I will spread the word, too. All the best to you!
Nice! Nice! Nice! THIS is
By Kerrie (not verified) on Wednesday, 02/03/2010 at 11:46 PMNice! Nice! Nice!
THIS is the place and I can sense that it is full-to-brimming with all the female allies that my life has needed for YEARS! Really! To not have fallen into the trap Stacey has so eloquently described; I have been beseeching heaven for this kind of sanctuary of support for so long.
Oh! I am SO glad I found you all! Thank-you, Debra O!
Aw, Lissa and Joy! You are
By Stacey (not verified) on Wednesday, 02/03/2010 at 3:08 PMAw, Lissa and Joy! You are both SO welcome. Again I thank YOU BOTH for creating this wonderful community that helps us honor ourselves *and* our connections to others!!!
Dearest Stacey, Every word
By Joy Mazzola on Wednesday, 02/03/2010 at 1:20 PMDearest Stacey, Every word of this is hitting every truth detector in every cell of my body. THANK YOU for this perspective. Are you listening, world?? Tons of love to you ... and thanks again for all of your wisdom ... Joy xoxo
Stacey, darling- thank YOU.
By Lissa Rankin on Wednesday, 02/03/2010 at 1:19 PMStacey, darling- thank YOU. You continue to be a beacon for the rest of us. Your words are so beautiful- and so TRUE! We must nurture ourselves in order to be energized enough to help others. Not that we should give up our hope to save the world, but that we can't do so at our own expense. As always, balance is key. Thank you for reminding us. xoxo
Hi Emily! Thanks SO much for
By Stacey (not verified) on Wednesday, 02/03/2010 at 10:51 AMHi Emily! Thanks SO much for letting me know that you appreciated this article! That means SO much to me!
I'm SO glad this article was published here today! It's been less than a month since the earthquake in Haiti and Ann Curry (of the Today Show) is tweeting that the networks are already resisting more coverage because of "disaster fatigue."
Of course I understand this, but I truly hope that when our own wells are full we will find that we have more than enough to give to others too.
I have to say I am heartened by an article I read by Evan O'Neil. He writes about the extraordinary success of social media campaigns in creating help and hope for Haiti : http://bit.ly/d3X7gA
Thanks again to Owning Pink for creating this wonderful community that continues to shine such a bright light in the world!
i just wanted to say i love
By Emily Simmer (not verified) on Wednesday, 02/03/2010 at 9:50 AMi just wanted to say i love this, wholeheartedly agree and thank you so much for sharing such an important and underexplored truth :)