Monday, September 27, 2010

Finding our Strengths

During the past year, our parish has been encouraging all members who wish to be involved in ministry to take the Clifton StrengthsFinder, a tool released by Gallup that rates you on 34 different themes, based on around 180 questions. The questions are timed so you have to go pretty much with your gut instinct. The poll is geared towards finding your strengths to better direct the types on ministry you ought to pursue. The top 5 themes are your most dominant strengths.

The results are more individualized than you'd think. The odds of someone having the same top 5 strengths in any order as you have are 1 in 250,000. The odds of someone having the same 5 strengths in the same order of dominance as you are 1 in 33 million. This surprised me!

Here are my top 5 Strengths...and it is accurate, particularly the first one:

Communication
You like to explain, to describe, to host, to speak in public, and to write. This is your Communication theme at work. Ideas are a dry beginning. Events are static. You feel a need to bring them to life, to energize them, to make them exciting and vivid. And so you turn events into stories and practice telling them. You take the dry idea and enliven it with images and examples and metaphors. You believe that most people have a very short attention span. They are bombarded by information, but very little of it survives. You want your information—whether an idea, an event, a product’s features and benefits, a discovery, or a lesson—to survive. You want to divert their attention toward you and then capture it, lock it in. This is what drives your hunt for the perfect phrase. This is what draws you toward dramatic words and powerful word combinations. This is why people like to listen to you. Your word pictures pique their interest, sharpen their world, and inspire them to act.


Empathy
You can sense the emotions of those around you. You can feel what they are feeling as though their feelings are your own. Intuitively, you are able to see the world through their eyes and share their perspective. You do not necessarily agree with each person’s perspective. You do not necessarily feel pity for each person’s predicament—this would be sympathy, not Empathy. You do not necessarily condone the choices each person makes, but you do understand. This instinctive ability to understand is powerful. You hear the unvoiced questions. You anticipate the need. Where others grapple for words, you seem to find the right words and the right tone. You help people find the right phrases to express their feelings—to themselves as well as to others. You help them give voice to their emotional life. For all these reasons other people are drawn to you.


Connectedness
Things happen for a reason. You are sure of it. You are sure of it because in your soul you know that we are all connected. Yes, we are individuals, responsible for our own judgments and in possession of our own free will, but nonetheless we are part of something larger. Some may call it the collective unconscious. Others may label it spirit or life force. But whatever your word of choice, you gain confidence from knowing that we are not isolated from one another or from the earth and the life on it. This feeling of Connectedness implies certain responsibilities. If we are all part of a larger picture, then we must not harm others because we will be harming ourselves. We must not exploit because we will be exploiting ourselves. Your awareness of these responsibilities creates your value system. You are considerate, caring, and accepting. Certain of the unity of humankind, you are a bridge builder for people of different cultures. Sensitive to the invisible hand, you can give others comfort that there is a purpose beyond our humdrum lives. The exact articles of your faith will depend on your upbringing and your culture, but your faith is strong. It sustains you and your close friends in the face of life’s mysteries.


Input
You are inquisitive. You collect things. You might collect information—words, facts, books, and quotations—or you might collect tangible objects such as butterflies, baseball cards, porcelain dolls, or sepia photographs. Whatever you collect, you collect it because it interests you. And yours is the kind of mind that finds so many things interesting. The world is exciting precisely because of its infinite variety and complexity. If you read a great deal, it is not necessarily to refine your theories but, rather, to add more information to your archives. If you like to travel, it is because each new location offers novel artifacts and facts. These can be acquired and then stored away. Why are they worth storing? At the time of storing it is often hard to say exactly when or why you might need them, but who knows when they might become useful? With all those possible uses in mind, you really don’t feel comfortable throwing anything away. So you keep acquiring and compiling and filing stuff away. It’s interesting. It keeps your mind fresh. And perhaps one day some of it will prove valuable.


Adaptability
You live in the moment. You don’t see the future as a fixed destination. Instead, you see it as a place that you create out of the choices that you make right now. And so you discover your future one choice at a time. This doesn’t mean that you don’t have plans. You probably do. But this theme of Adaptability does enable you to respond willingly to the demands of the moment even if they pull you away from your plans. Unlike some, you don’t resent sudden requests or unforeseen detours. You expect them. They are inevitable. Indeed, on some level you actually look forward to them. You are, at heart, a very flexible person who can stay productive when the demands of work are pulling you in many different directions at once.


If you're interested in discovering your top five themes, visit http://www.strengthsfinder.com. You'll need an access code to take the poll, which can be found in a number of publications. The one I purchased through my parish was
LIVING YOUR STRENGTHS: DISCOVER YOUR GOD-GIVEN TALENTS AND INSPIRE YOUR COMMUNITY (CATHOLIC EDITION). It is worth the price/donation of the book (I donated $10 to my parish for the book). Be warned that every book's code that can only be used once; do not purchase a used book for this purpose!

Memorial of St. Vincent de Paul
Daily Mass Readings
Job 1:6-22
Psalm 17:1-3,6-7
Luke 9:46-50

2 comments:

  1. Yikes! $51.99 for a new copy! (Now I remember why I always buy used.) Do you know if it's okay to use the January 2008 edition, which is "only" $24.95 for a new one? The cover's different, but it does say Catholic Edition on it. I'd really like to take this test, but $52 is a bit steep. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Yikes" is right, that IS steep...I guess my parish put more behind this than I thought they did!

    As long as the code is intact in the back of the book to access the website it should be OK. It's worth the 25 clams IMO

    ReplyDelete