Photo by Bonnie Kittle on Unsplash
On the heels of a royal commission into institutional responses
to child sexual abuse there is a royal commission mooted for the widespread
problems in the aged care sector. Just as not every institution let children
down, not every aged care facility is derelict in their discharge of their duty
of care.
But the issues are broad enough. There are tens of thousands of
people genuinely grieving for the plight of their elderly relative, just as
there are tens of thousands of people who have in some way suffered abuse,
either as a child or adult or both. For many, they endure within hellish
environs.
It’s hard to determine whether the abuse is worse than ever or
whether it’s just better reported these days; possibly both amongst other
factors. And these issues, although they are incredibly grave, are the tip of
the iceberg. There are refugees, the lost and stolen generations, the methamphetamine
epidemic, the crisis surrounding mental health and suicide, and a silent grief
suffered in myriad ways winning the scope of millions of voiceless lives.
This article is not intended to depress you,
I just ask a simple question:
why is there so little care?
I just ask a simple question:
why is there so little care?
Why is it that those we have come to rely upon have so sorely
let us down? How is it that we have slipped so far in terms of care and
protection for the vulnerable? If the problems are genuinely systemic, why are
so many complicit to silence?
Well, it is debatable whether we have ever cared for the
vulnerable as we should have? Now, thanks to investigative journalism and
social media, we know we don’t. At least we know. We should wonder how bad any
of these issues were 20 or 30 or 40 years ago. Oh, that’s right, the issues
were just as bad back then, and in many ways, we are only finding out now! All
those decades of the abused suffering in silence. And it’s only those who are in
the immediacy of suffering who truly have some grasp of the state we’re in.
We arrived at the point where we wonder where the world is going
if it has always been this way, either blissfully unaware of horrors taking
place in plain sight or painfully aware of the secret horrors exposed.
Any caring person who has a stake in life is gravely concerned
with the status quo, but that grave concern grows tangentially when that caring
person, or those they care about, is embroiled as a victim themselves.
First-hand experience of the horrors of abuse
take people on a disparate path toward
an entirely alienating destiny.
take people on a disparate path toward
an entirely alienating destiny.
First-hand experience is, of itself, unbelievable within the
perception, yet entirely believable by fact. Little wonder there is so much
post-traumatic stress and the associated disorder.
We learn to care very much when we are wrapped up in some kind
of travesty. We may have always cared, but along with the tangential journey
that ramps up in crisis, our care ramps up in the concern of a simmering
outrage and an indignation beyond words.
So, what can we do? What are we to do when we are faced with
such dilemmas of conscience and reality. Somehow, we need to protect what we
care about, and even the level of our care. We are easily jaded, and in social
media world we too easily inflict our outrage on those we have next to no
relationship with.
If we believe in Jesus, we believe that he will return soon and
completely transform the earth and bring all injustice to Judgment.
In the meantime, we are charged with caring for everything
within our sphere of influence within the bounded limitations we all are
personally encumbered by.
Part of it is caring enough
not to be complacent,
whilst not caring so much to be
burned-out with compassion fatigue.
not to be complacent,
whilst not caring so much to be
burned-out with compassion fatigue.
The world needs compassion and kindness and gracious love and
gentleness, all these and more.
Our world and our lives will be judged on how we treated the
vulnerable. This is something to be seriously reflected upon. It starts from
each one of us. We are not powerless, indeed, we within our own lives are very
powerful. Are we patient? Are we kind? Are we compassionate within our fallen
world?
The object of life in today’s world is to care enough to make the
difference we can, whilst not caring so much that the abuses we see and
experience destroy us.
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