“One truth about healing presence is that the
depth to which you can go within yourself corresponds directly to the depth at
which you can connect intimately with another. This holds true for all you
experience—the pain and the joy.”
— James Miller & Susan Cutshall
Many have attempted to
differentiate empathy from sympathy, which is just a felt manifestation of compassion. Sympathy is unremarkable in that
we all have the ability to be sympathetic—to simply feel. But empathic persons
are those who are well groomed in the finery of their own suffering. They have
experienced the depths of themselves and have, therefore, the inner resources
to go deep with another. Anxieties at various points have been met and
conquered.
Depths of empathy are the minimum
attribute of the person practicing healing presence.
The empathic person has the beauty
of other-centeredness about them. They are able to journey with another person,
step for step, knowing that with each step is healing presence.
But so what. What difference
should this make?
If we are to strive to understand
people, help people, or contribute to healing them in Jesus’ name, we need to
imagine ourselves capable of going at least to the other person’s depth. If we
cannot, we cannot help them. If we can endure something similar to their pain,
we are fit to appropriately venture through the jungle of their winter of
discontent with them. And still, we must be humbled by what they bear! Theirs
is no small suffering. We may be able to endure it, as they are able to, but it
would be a struggle, as it’s a struggle for them who actually experience such a
groaning abyss.
Heights and Depths
It’s true that if we wish to bear the
shattering depths of our experiences we are equally able to access the raucous heights,
also.
Wherever there is the capacity to
endure great pain there is the capacity to experience great joy. At both poles
of the pain-joy continuum there are sweeping ironies, but only the one who
depends on Christ can endure this. There is great personal strength required to
patiently bear pain, and such forbearance delivers its own blessing by faith.
Where there are depths, there are
equivalently heights.
***
The carer’s challenge is one not
of sympathy, but of empathy; the ability to walk side by side with another,
without words, to experience their depths with them. As it’s a privilege to
care, it’s a privilege to suffer with someone, as it’s a privilege to share in
their joy. As Paul says, “Weep with those who weep; rejoice with those who
rejoice.”
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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