St. Thérèse was a Prima Ballerina

by Claire Dwyer

Recently I was listening to an Avila Institute class lecture. Professor Hollcraft’s comments on fortitude in the everyday situations and decisions of our lives solidified something which struck me deeply a few years ago.
 My friend was giving a talk about the loss of her two-year-old son in a drowning accident.  An amateur ballet dancer, she has a great love for St. Thérèse of Lisieux.  “The Little Flower,” she said, “is a prima ballerina.  A prima ballerina spends endless hours, years and years, doing minuscule movements over and over until she can do them with precision and perfection which appear almost effortless.  The movements seem repetitive, boring and pointless but build a strong foundation of the ballerina. If incorrectly practiced, a dancer cannot grow. If done correctly with purpose, she abounds in grace. We see her dance across the stage and it looks easy and graceful.  But we could never do it because we have not put in the ages of work behind the scenes. St. Thérèse’s life appears to us a masterpiece of simplicity and easy trust that has appeal because it looks so fluid and natural – but those millions of acts of love were anything but easy.  She became a saint because she practiced painfully for years.”
This, I think, begs a profound reflection.  We too will have our hour on stage – often that stage resembles the severity of the cross.  And the world will watch – and most importantly, God will watch.  And how will we perform?  It will greatly depend on how we practiced in the millions of unseen instants of our lives.  The exercise of virtue gives strength to the soul before the curtains are raised.  The small sacrifices and tiny movements of love will crescendo into our final act – we pray it will glorify God and leave the world searching for what we have found.
My ballerina friend Angee has the gift of fortitude in spades.  After God led her deeper into relationship with Himself through many and experiences and people, she practiced the faith and participated in the sacraments joyfully and faithfully. And when, in the sudden loss of her son, she was asked to make the supreme sacrifice, she did so with a grace and strength that left the Church of Phoenix amazed.  She clung to the cross with white knuckles but never slipped – because her spiritual muscles were strong.  I pray to have such fortitude, too.  To embrace this gift, exercise it, and ask to be ever mindful of it.  We have a thousand opportunities each day.
To pick up a pin for love of God can convert souls.  – St. Thérèse of Lisieux
Image credit: Sergei Gavrilov on Unsplash

Claire Dwyer

Mom, Wife, Interior Life — that’s it in a nutshell. Claire’s been devouring books and pouring the words back out again longer than she can remember. It’s where her love of God and the Catholic faith finds its fullest expression. Claire graduated Summa Cum Laude from the Franciscan University of Steubenville with a degree in Theology, has a certification in Spiritual Theology from the Avila Institute, and a certification in Spiritual Direction from St. Vincent Seminary’s Institute of Ministry Formation. Her roles as mother, mentor, spiritual writer, editor of spiritualdirection.com, and lifelong student of the interior life all came together in her first book, "This Present Paradise: A Spiritual Journey with St. Elizabeth of the Trinity." She is also the author of Blessed is She's Advent study, In Time: Living in the Now and Not Yet" and a contributor to their daily devotionals, and has written a book on St. Edith Stein set to release January of 2027. She has a passion, through writing and speaking, for helping the faithful to see the beauty and possibility of their own interior lives and their unrepeatable place in the Church, and for Catholic writers in particular to be encouraged and formed in their writing journey. To that end, she is co-founder and content director of Write These Words and the PraiseWriters Catholic Writing Membership Community. Most importantly, she has been married for almost 28 years to her husband Delaney and they have six children and two grandsons. Connect and keep in touch with her at ClaireDwyer.com. You can also read about spirituality for the Catholic writer on her Substack, Word and Silence. 

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