Reflection and Meditation Through Groups: Part 2
Meditation and reflection on scripture have been powerful tools for me as a chaplain working with groups of people in various healthcare and residential facilities and hospitals.
In order to measure progress within the group, I developed an assessment tool that measured ten factors of participation, relationship building, and spirituality on a scale of one to ten for each factor.
The research and writings on the aging by Richard P. Johnson, Ph.D., especially in the book 12 Keys to Spiritual Vitality were most helpful in developing an assessment tool and providing material for the groups. An initial assessment of the group showed an overall score of 49 on a scale of 100 and, ultimately, a final score of 74, a 25 point, or 50% relative improvement overall in the factors measured.
For example, four of the group members moved from isolation to meaningful relationships, five of the group dealt openly with long-term faith and spirituality issues, two of the members dealt with deep-seated grief issues and several took on a ministerial role toward others from their own experience relating to the issues being dealt with.
Two members of the group died during this period and the group was able to deal with the grief and loss in a positive, even celebratory way. Most interesting, however, were the individual stories that were shared by the participants and the ongoing relationships that the sharing fostered.
The format of this group and other groups that I have formed has used meditation, silent prayer, reflection and sharing of scripture, and prayers of thanksgiving and petition.
It is interesting to note and worthy of more research that common prayers and music, such as the “The Lord’s Prayer” and “Amazing Grace,” can often be said or sung in entirety by those persons that are otherwise non-responsive, aphasic, or with dementia.