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TODAY'S TOPIC:
Essay No.50
by Natalia J. Garland
Print Version
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Welcome to my 50th essay since my first publication on October 1,
2001, less than a month after the terrorist attacks on our nation.
I began writing these essays as a way to cope with September 11th,
and I continue writing for similar personal reasons. This is a
highly personal and private venture which I choose, as a process of
self-expression and catharsis, to offer to others for study.
Wave of
Consciousness is not a professional website, although I expect
that other professionals and students are the main readers. I do
not write to contribute to social work knowledge or to enhance the
profession. I do not write to assist colleagues, to advocate for
social justice, or to serve as a whistleblower on any agency or
practitioner. I do not write as a means of performing a pro-bono
service. These are social work responsibilities to which I adhere
when I am on the job. I also behave appropriately as a member of
the social work profession when I am in public. Moreover, I use
a portion of my own time and money to further my professionalism
through continued education.
Because I have
worked in the helping professions for a number of years, it is a
great part, although not the whole, of my identity. I love social
work. I cannot help forming my thoughts from a professional
caretaker's perspective. It has become my nature. It is the way
I look at life and how I make sense out of human behavior.
Although I do not particularly write as a social worker, I write
from a background of social work which heavily influences my
interests. This distinction is essential in marking the boundary
between my professional and personal levels of manageability.
I have various
facets to my identity. I am entitled to a private life. Social
workers have First Amendment rights, too. These rights have
become more dear to me since September 11th. I have always
enjoyed writing for self-expression of my private thoughts and
feelings (i.e., poetry). But now I write from an appreciation of
my First Amendment rights and a conviction to utilize this
precious freedom. Therefore, I am sharing my compositions with
peers who might relate to how I am coping with home and work issues
in our unstable world.
If you analyze my
writing, you will notice that (thus far) I express commentary and
opinion as well as certain episodes from my daily life. Any essay
that is problem-focused is also solution-focused. My essays
emphasize understanding and convey a spirit of hope. Among the
essays which express concerns regarding the profession or our
national and global situations: about one-third are problem-focused,
and about two-thirds are supportive of someone or some situation
where life-affirming activity is happening. I have also started to
write more fiction as creative option.
My literary maxim
is actually derived from Holy Scripture. ".....whatsoever
things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things
are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of
good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise,
think on these things" (Philippians 4:8). This passage
would seem to give breadth to love of knowledge, problem-solving,
beauty and order, personal reflection, and supportive
communication. My essays attempt to discuss some of these
"whatsoever things."
My writing is
personal and yet public. It is the internet that makes these two
qualities complimentary and possible. The internet affords me the
opportunity to be writer, editor and publisher. This is a new
identity for me. As I write, I hone this identity. People who
like my message can keep visiting my website. People who do not
like my message can simply find other websites to visit. There is
no pressure either way, and no necessity to praise or despise me:
the emphasis is on freedom of self-expression and availability of
information and ideas.
Those other facets
of my identity, which I had started to mention earlier, are the
reasons that I continue to write. There are intellectual,
spiritual, and amicable facets which are permitted expression in
my essays. On the job, we social workers set aside our personal
life for the sake of the patient. Our priority is patient care. I
have no complaint about that. My joy is to build up another's
life. But I have to take care of myself, too. My writing is an
act of self-care.
If visitors
personally gain from my essays, this would be a pleasant reward
added onto the satisfaction of self-expression and creativity. It
would mean that communication was accomplished, that a human
connection was achieved among peers. If by chance my essays
contribute to the study of social work, this would be a fringe
benefit which, of course, I would not reject. If my essays
contain errors, then I will need to exercise humility and wisdom
to perceive those errors and make corrections. I also reserve the
right to change my mind and write something that might seem
contradictory to something I wrote before. I really do not have
a comfort zone: I like to challenge myself.
If I accomplish
nothing more than to maintain my own sanity so that I can function
at my best, that alone has to be worthwhile. Surely nobody in our
democratic society would deny me this. So, I will probably keep
writing so long as my mind keeps processing thoughts and feelings.
You are welcomed to keep sharing my world.
(Written 01/05/04)
Until we meet
again....... .......stay sane.
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