Constructing a World for Compassion: How Temporal Work Can Preserve Compassion in Extreme Contexts
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Date
2024Author
del Río, Dolores
Fernández, Pablo D.
Marti, Ignasi
Willi, Alberto
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This article extends previous research on how compassion can be preserved in
extreme contexts, highlighting the phenomenological experience of time in practices. Based on
an ethnographic study of hospice care, we show how temporal work preserves compassion by
enacting the end-of-
life
as a time of agency, a liminal time between the past (life) and an undesirable
and certain future (death) that shifts focus to here and now actions. Taking a Heideggerian
approach to the lived experience of compassion, we understand the hospice as a world where
different ways of being are implicated in practices organized through existential spatiality
(being with the guest and being by the guest). We show how exposure to people in end-of-
life
affects the
experience of time in compassion practices, allowing them to be experienced as kairos, involving
sacredness and spiritual connectedness with others, and as chronos, allowing compassion-givers
to
restore their capacity by focusing on compassion tasks.
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