Where did you get “when everything else doesn’t work out”? Please go back through my umpty-ump too-many posts in my history, and tell me how often I suggest that. I don’t have a lot of “vocations cards,” thank you very much, let alone a propensity to offer religious life as a solution to life’s problems.
The OP is positively attracted to poverty, humility, and regular religious devotion. Of course it is possible she has a religious vocation. Yes, she is young, but she is exactly at the age when most of us start to seriously consider what state in life might be right for us. A lot of us knew fairly well which direction we were headed in 11th or 12th grade, including those who became religious. Even more yet were seriously considering these things at that age. So while it is too young to make a commitment in an age where perseverance has been made as hard as it has been made in our day, she is by no means too young to start considering what state in life might eventually be right for her. (I don’t know about your diocese, but the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon allows young men younger than 18 to participate in Quo Vadis Days, if they have parental permission
qvdays.org/register/archdiocese-of-portland/.)
So, is she being “dramatic”? I’d say she’s reacting as I’d expect any 17 year old might to a situation that could easily upset someone far older than she is. Re-read some of the things she said her mother said to her:
Religion is over-rated
Catholic sacramentals and devotion to the Blessed Mother are silly
Sacramental confession is unnecessary
Most Christians don’t have it right
No one knows what to truly believe
The solution to a daughter who refuses to concentrate on a money-making career instead of praying so much is to keep her from going to church
So–do you think the OP is lying, that her mother never said anything like that?
Once you’ve thought about that, let’s imagine your own mother told you that she thought it was a mistake to have allowed you to be baptized a Catholic. Imagine she debated whether to let you avail yourself of the sacraments as a way to pressure you into doing what she wanted you to do. Let us say your mother was opposed even to the concept of the evangelical counsels and instead wanted to push you to pursue a career based on how much money it would make you. Would you say that feeling upset about that would make you “dramatic”?
If the OP is naturally attracted to living the evangelical counsels, she may just be an idealistic teenager, but she may also have a vocation to the religious life. Idealization of the evangelical counsels is not uncommon among teens who are devout, but it is not a phase every teen goes through, either. Most teens hear “poverty, chastity, and obedience” and the immediate reaction is “Uh-uh! Not me!!”
On the friend, Mr. “Romeo”: Let us say you were living with your parents but not in a position to move out from home and your parents didn’t want you to have anything to do with your hand-picked best friend. Would you say that being upset about it would make you “dramatic”? They could be absolutely right, and you’d still naturally be upset. Which of us wouldn’t be? If you had a best friend of the opposite sex and he let on that he found you attractive as a woman, would that not turn your head? Of course it would. Marriages have started that way, and good ones. Silly infatuations have, too, of course, but the situation isn’t preposterous off the top.
Yes, however, I will agree on this: She is old enough to begin to consider these questions in earnest, but she is too young to make a commitment just yet. It is very exciting to consider our future state in life, there is nothing wrong with that, but we ought to be careful about infatuation. Point well-taken. People married or joined monasteries at her age in times past, but those were times in which childhood was shorter and society made perseverance to a commitment much easier.
Yes, she ought to assume that a commitment to marriage or a religious community is at least several and probably many years in her future. If she were to approach a religious community to join now or asked a priest to prepare her for marriage now, she would be told that she ought to keep discerning, but to wait to commit. No question, you are right about that. That doesn’t make her “dramatic” for posting the things she has. She is upset, but I can see why anyone in her place might be, regardless of age.