To My 10-year-old Catholic Self
Your instinct to question was valid, same as your urge to hold disbeliefs close to your heart. Yes, the Catholic trappings intrigued you: scent of incense, Mass in Latin (a mystical sounding language), the idea of sacred rituals and mysteries, communal singing, the beauty of stained glass windows, and the priest’s vestments for different seasons, special feast days—red, green, gold, violet, purple, rose with ornate hand-stitched needlework on silk, damask, brocade.
When you reach adulthood, you’ll no longer stomach their rabid regard for guilt (except for their own), their patriarchy, their narrow views of sexuality, how they hide their history of abuse.
You will declare yourself no longer Catholic, no longer Christian, grateful to be free of any organized religion.
You will celebrate
who you’ve become, what you term
a happy heathen.
7 thoughts on "To My 10-year-old Catholic Self"
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Understood and felt. 💜
Thank you!
Thanks Karen! My journey is similar, although of Protestant character—few mysteries to cling to in those plain rooms ringing with a drumbeat of salvation and little else …
Thank you, Kevin.
Agree with H.A. and Kevin.
The things that are said done in the name of God!
Love: “a happy heathen.” and my hunch there is where goodness dwells!
Felt and agreeing with the others. Love “the idea of sacred rituals and mysteries” and “special feast days—red, green, gold, violet, purple, rose with ornate hand-stitched needlework on silk, damask, brocade.”
I get this, Karen. Me, too! Ironically, I rejected the Unitarian Universalist Church because I missed the pomp and circumstance. Go figure! Those rituals get under your skin.