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SPLINTERED PIECES

Spirituality & Health

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January/February 2025

Seeing her father in the psych ward seemed all wrong—until her inner guidance helped her see it as exquisitely right.

- NANCY WILLBERN

SPLINTERED PIECES

When a tragedy hits, it’s normal to think that the actual event is what causes us pain. And of course, it does. Losing a child, or a spouse, or a home, or being diagnosed with a debilitating disease would all be life-altering events that would boggle our minds and break our hearts. The accompanying feelings of loss, grief, panic, rage, and resentment all need to be honored and held with compassion. But as a therapist and as a warrior who has experienced my own life-stopping events, I have come to realize that much of the depth of our suffering comes from how such events violate our assumptions about life and who we know ourselves to be.

This was brought home to me most poignantly the first day I went to visit my father in a geriatric psych unit. After being escorted past two security checkpoints, I heard the clicking-release of the lock. As I stepped through the door, I felt the world shift. I was familiar with a space of splintered glass. Daddy was sitting in a wheelchair next to a round table in the common area. Other patients were scattered around the room. I found a vacant chair and moved it next to Daddy. He looked up at me and smiled in recognition through his medically induced fog. As soon as he saw me, a friendly man sitting across the table offered an unexpected greeting.

“Hey, you!” he exclaimed, “Hey, you! Come over here! What kind of shoes you got, lady? I got better shoes than that,” he said, campaigning for my attention like a sideshow barker. I nodded and smiled in his direction and returned my attention to Daddy, noticing chocolate icing smeared on the front of his shirt. My stomach clenched. My heart ached. I kept reminding myself to remain calm and keep my focus on Daddy.

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IF YOU REMEMBER ONE THING from this column, remember this: Being out of harmony with your soul or with the demands of your spiritual nature is like having a rock in your shoe. It is going to bug you until you fix the situation. If you remember two things from this column, add this: Your soul is not about happiness. The rock in your shoe is not unhappiness. What our soul or spirit wants is to be fully present, innocent, and vulnerable to the vibrancy of life—to show up fully to life, whatever it brings.

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THE SMALL THINGS WE CARRY

I CAN’T REMEMBER HOW LONG I have been carrying protein bars or other snacks in my glove compartment. I do this so that when I come to a stoplight where a person is sitting with a cardboard sign in hand, sun in their eyes and shoes worn thin, I can easily pop open my glove box and offer what I have. It doesn't happen too often, yet it did the other day. I realized the position I was in and what I had stashed away. It's my chance to look someone in the eyes who likely is not used to having their humanity affirmed. For the length of a breath, we are just two people in the same world. Rarely are words exchanged, but the hands say enough. I know it's not a lot, and it is what I have.

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