The Portal August 2014 | Page 5

Snapd ragon THE P RTAL August 2014 Who defines the Ordinariate? Snapdragon grapples with a question of identity Over recent months I have had to do quite a lot of listening. A friend suffering with very low self-esteem needed someone to talk things over with and an acquaintance who was trying to salvage a struggling business was in search of a sympathetic ear. I’m not sure how helpful I have been to either of them – I’m an expert in neither problem – but their very different problems have taught me a thing or two about the Ordinariate. feelings of low selfesteem in his childhood My friend’s counsellor had identified the roots of his feelings of low self-esteem in his childhood. Essentially, all his life, beginning from a quite unhappy beginning, he has allowed other people to tell him who he was. Though he had ideas about who he was and entertained aspirations for his life, he has allowed others’ perceptions to define him. We all experience hurtful words in the playground about our appearance and so on – children can be cruel. Most of us survive unscathed and as we get older learn that there will always be people in life who want to belittle us and tear us down. For some, the degree of teasing and browbeating in their early years can be quite damaging. It is more of a challenge for them later in life not to allow the critic and the detractor to determine who they are and the course that their life will take. It is fair to say that we have encountered critics along the journey into and as the Ordinariate. Some of the criticism has been constructive and helpful, and I’ve tried to heed my father’s advice to me as a child to listen to those who genuinely want to help; but some of it has been rather reminiscent of the playground. not to lose sight of who we truly are There is a danger that we can give the latter too much power to define us. It is easy to get so caught up in what others are saying about us, that we start to see ourselves in that way. As the Ordinariate develops it is important for us not to lose sight of who we truly are and the qualities that are part of who we are. As we face the challenges of later life, we should remind ourselves who we are and not be shaped into something that others have deemed us to be. My acquaintance learnt that businesses too are vulnerable, like people. His problem, though quite contents page Page 5 different to my friend’s, was not in every way dissimilar. At the end of the day, what he had failed to do, by his own admission, was clearly to define his business and thereby allow potential customers’ impressions of it be shaped by somebody else. He learnt very painfully, but I think to his long-term advantage, that in marketing if you don’t control your own messaging, somebody else will. communicating our key messages We are not in the business of securing deals and seeing off competition, but we do want to succeed and grow. Therefore, as we plan our strategy for future years we need to be clear what our key messages are and to communicate them often and simply, otherwise someone else will write the script for us. Almighty God, our heavenly Father, who, through the Child-Bearing of Mary, gave us your Son: Grant us also, by the power of your Spirit and through the intercession of Our Lady of Walsingham, that the Called to be One Exploration Day may bear fruit to the increase of your Church and the glory of your Name; Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.