A year ago I'd be getting ready to head over to the VA hospital for my first day of CPE, Clinical Pastoral Education. I blogged about it during my first week, then it was brought up in a group meeting that I was blogging my positive observations, that VA officials higher up the chain were monitoring. I was writing on my own computer, during my off hours, so I decided to be even more careful. I didn't use the VA computers for anything other than entering patient notes and checking VA e-mail.
So, for future scholars, reading last summer's blog posts, wondering why I wasn't writing more, there's the story. I did some offline journaling during the summer, but for the most part, I was too exhausted by being a VA Hospital chaplain to do too much in the way of writing at all.
I'm still not sure why this kind of training is seen as essential for ordination in the ELCA version of the Lutheran church. Chaplaincy is VERY different from visiting parishioners in the hospital. Throughout last summer, I kept thinking, what, exactly, am I supposed to be learning here?
While I liked all of the people I met during my CPE experience, I have not kept in touch with any of them. It's strange, in a way--we do have a lot in common, even outside of our shared CPE summer. But I am old enough now that I can't keep in touch with friends in the deep way I would like--there's just too many people to call every week or to see once a month. So I'm rarely adding more.
CPE made for a strange summer, and it came crashing to an unexpected close when my mom got very sick with pneumonia; she was much closer to dying than we knew at the time.
This summer is very different, and I'm grateful. I'm teaching more online classes, so I'm not having a complete summer off. We've got a house that needs attention, 2 houses really. But even with the pivots and plotting that a fixer-upper requires, there's still more down time. I don't need to be at a hospital for 9 hours a day. I have time for other interests, time to see friends, for example. I'm still feeling overwhelmed at times, but I'd rather be overwhelmed by home repair timelines than by patients with life threatening issues.