N
NetNuncio
Guest
I think it’s important, though, that there be a difference between considering “what might have been” and knowing you rejected your intended vocation. Certainly, I wonder what might have happened had I chosen a different career path or worked on a family relationship in a different way. This is different, however. If I really wanted to, I could go back to school and give that other career a shot. I could give that family member a call and try a different path in relationship. Certainly, these are difficult things, but they aren’t impossible. If I felt it was God’s will for me to be a fireman or a teacher, I could fulfill his will by doing those things, even though it would take great sacrifice. However, as a married man I can no longer fulfill my vocation to the priesthood. Again, I love my wife so very much. The mercy of God is so incredibly evident in that, even though I rejected his call, I was graced with such an amazing woman. However, I think wondering “what might have been” in careers, etc., is far different than the sorrow that comes with rejecting one’s vocation.I bolded the most telling phrase in your post. Indeed: many people are just unable to live where they ARE. As one who could not pursue a vocation in Religious life, I DO wistfully think about the road not taken and wonder about ‘what might have been,’ yet I am fully committed to my husband, my family, my mission as a Christian – and I am happy in my life.

