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Well Becoming

a blog about being well, becoming well, staying well - and flourishing. Written by a professor and family doctor living between Liverpool, UK and Granada, Spain

Seeking Sanctuary
Saturday, January 26, 2013 @ 8:10 PM

 

Where do you go when life gets too much for you?

 

When everything’s getting on top of us, when we just can’t take it all any more, we need to escape to somewhere safe. A refuge, a bolt-hole, an asylum, a shelter - a sanctuary.

 

In the Middle Ages a sanctuary was a place – often a church or monastery - where safety was guaranteed for people fleeing from arrest or prosecution. By the law of the medieval church, a fugitive from justice or a debtor was immune from arrest. If you’ve ever watched Derek Jacobi in Cadfael (or read Ellis Peters’ stories) you’ll know how that worked.

If you were seeking sanctuary in those days, getting your hand on the door knocker was enough. You were safe and your pursuers couldn’t touch you. Next time you’re in Durham, grab hold of the sanctuary knocker on the main door (complete with protective gargoyle to ward off evil spirits) and breath a huge sigh of relief.

 

We don’t always have to go to such extremes. It is good to have our own personal sanctuaries, for those times when we just need to get away from it all. You might find yours in the shed at the bottom of the garden, or on your allotment. Or jogging round the park, with your favourite tunes on your iPod. Or soaking in a hot bath with music and candles, and the bathroom door firmly locked.

 

When I was growing up in Dublin, family life was often stressful. To escape from all the hassle, I created a little library for myself in the outside toilet. I loved sitting there and reading. My brother Nick found a different refuge (usually from us older brothers wanting to beat him up!) in the branches of an old apple tree. Going through major life changes in my late 20s, the main place I felt safe was in my car, driving up and down the M6 between Manchester and Worcester.

 

Sadly, sanctuaries can become prisons. Lots of people use booze or drugs as a means of escape. They work for a while, giving that warm glow of comfort and forgetting. But too much for too long and they cause more problems than they solve.

 

If things are really, really bad – if you’re experiencing abuse or violence at home and don’t know how to get away from it - you may seek sanctuary inside your own head. You find ways to watch what’s happening to you as if you’re outside the situation. It’s safer and easier than experiencing the pain or terror directly. But you risk losing touch with the rest of the world. As a GP, a lot of people with problems like this find ten minutes of sanctuary in my consulting room.

 

How do you find sanctuary, when life gets too much for you?



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3 Comments


ElviriaDreamer said:
Sunday, January 27, 2013 @ 12:21 AM

Hi Christopher

I often read your blogs and they always cheer and provoke thought.

I had to reply to this one because of a little irony. The very place you feel safe and find sanctuary, is the very thing that stops me "getting to my sanctuary as much as I would". You are a very brave man and you have amazed me with your place of sanctuary...it makes me physically sick. I'd of thought maybe you would choose your childhood roots due to memories or familiarity.

It just goes to show how very different we all are in thought and action. One persons ideal, can easily, be anothers hell. The thing you love, is my worst nightmare and a big obstacle.

You have taught me a good lesson in "seeing things through anothers eyes".

My sanctuary is my caravan which we are going to have to move this year, so I can get to use it more...because it's just off the M6, that covers most of the journey!! It is cosy, warm and peaceful, in the middle of nowhere. Just beautiful green space, country lanes, sheep and birdsong every morning. Just a garage, pub, laundrette and chip shop in the village...no action just tranquility. It's perfect to re-charge...I just can't there :)






Chris Dowrick said:
Sunday, January 27, 2013 @ 10:14 AM

Thank you, ElviriaDreamer. You're right, our places of sanctuary are very personal. I find swimming in the sea a wonderful means fo escape, but for my wife Sue it that would be her worst nightmare, even the thought of swimming stresses her out... I hope you can soon move your caravan sanctuary to a safer place.


Patricia (Campana) said:
Monday, February 25, 2013 @ 6:42 PM

As always, Christopher, your articles are wonderful, insightful and with that inner core of peacefulness. Your patients are very lucky to have you!

Patricia




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