It is difficult to maintain an attitude of Christian charity and servanthood while executing this role at work. Worse, I get into habits that make it difficult to be an ordinary person in other settings and to be a receptive soul at prayer. I have noticed that I have to intentionally "switch gears" when I am an ordinary parishioner in the Young Adult group, a cantor at Mass, one of the newest and youngest virgins in the Archdiocese or at the convocation. Even more, I have to be humble when I've been in the wrong in a conflict or when I've been a bad friend and have not kept in touch. I would like to integrate the clinical hubris with the virtue of humility (and common sense) but it seems difficult. Perhaps it will become easier when I'm no longer a trainee, when those in my workplace haven't seen me as an intern who knew nothing. Perhaps it will be easier the more comfortable I am with my scope of practice; perhaps I will have to aggrandize less authority and will simply carry it.
But it seems like a long shot to rely on something spontaneously happening to make it easier. I think I'll have to continue to struggle with changing gears for now, and hope that it becomes easier to drive the stick-shift of my soul through all its settings.
But it seems like a long shot to rely on something spontaneously happening to make it easier. I think I'll have to continue to struggle with changing gears for now, and hope that it becomes easier to drive the stick-shift of my soul through all its settings.
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