The Art Of Caring
Spirituality & Health|September/October 2017

In Buddhism, We Often Talk About Enlightenment or Awakening, but Words Like That Feel Far Away to Me. I Speak About Intimacy.

Sam Mowe
The Art Of Caring

In his new book, The Five Invitations: Discovering What Death Can Teach Us About Living Fully, Frank Ostaseski shares the lessons he has learned through a lifetime of work with the dying. Ostaseski is the cofounder of the Zen Hospice Project and founder of the Metta Institute, and AARP has named him one of the America’s Fifty Most Innovative People. We spoke with him recently about how we might live in harmony with the truth of dying, the importance of recognizing that death is happening in every moment, and tuning in to what matters most.

In The Five Invitations you write, “We can’t be truly alive without maintaining an awareness of death.” Can you say more about that?

Life is meaningful and valuable to us because it’s precarious. Death pulls us into what matters most by clarifying, whether you’re a prince or pauper, the fact that your life is temporary. Once you realize that your life is temporary, you can begin to reflect on what you want to do with it.

The book is organized around five lessons that you have learned sitting bedside with so many dying patients. These lessons also serve as invitations to the reader to live fully. Why don’t we go through each of the invitations briefly, starting with “Don’t wait”?

First, I’d like to say that I don’t think you can approach the five invitations as bullet points or slogans to stick on your refrigerator and hope that they’ll have value for you. You have to live into them in order for them to be realized.

This story is from the September/October 2017 edition of Spirituality & Health.

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This story is from the September/October 2017 edition of Spirituality & Health.

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