Cradle catholic here. Catholic education K-9, public 10-12, university catholic. Parents married over 50 years. Happy childhood for siblings and me. They and the nuns who taught me were my role models. Down side was the nuns who taught me were rather liberal. I remember how thrilled they were when they were allowed to no longer wear the head dress and could actually wear pants. They were strict with regard to teaching but politically they were feminists.
I entertained the thought of being a nun, particularly around confirmation preparation time when we did extra studying about saints and all. In my heart, however, I wanted to be like my mother - with children of my own some day.
By college I didn’t want to be a mom or a nun. It was the early 80s - ‘me’ generation and all. Dated someone seriously during that time, talked about marriage but his family and I did not get along and I wasn’t willing to take them on as in-laws so I broke it off. I was very selfish at the time.
Was all set to live a single life happily ever after from that point on. I wasn’t spiritual at that time, though I still attended mass regularly. Was looking forward to having time to expand all my horizons - including my faith. Moved away from home and within 2 weeks met my husband at a community college. I didn’t even have time to find my own parish after moving into the new town. 6 months later we were engaged, found a parish together, signed up to get married there, did so a year after we met and had both chlidren baptized there.
We’ve been married 18 years now. I was terrified about being a mom at first but it has all gone so smoothly I am certain it was meant to be. At the time we married we thought the vocational aspect was the part about being open to life, having children and raising them to be good Catholics so we took that very seriously.
Turns out we missed the boat on that one, but now that the kids are teens we’re focusing more on our relationship being vocational in and of itself. I’m rather enjoying this stage of our marriage - rediscovering our Catholic roots together to help each other be the best we can be. With each year as the kids get closer to college age we volunteer more at our parish, getting involved with various groups there, learning more about the faith.
I agree with the other posters - focus on being the best person you can be at all times and your purpose will be revealed to you by God. Keep talking to Him and remember that marriage and becoming a nun aren’t the only options, there is much you can do religiously as a single person while you’re waiting for your path to become clearer (I don’t think it’s ever ‘clear’ since it’s a journey).
What I found most interesting about my path is I was so certain I was meant to be single that I got really excited about all the possibilities that would mean for me. So much so that when I met my husband it was so obvious how wrong I was. It really was like a knock on the head telling me to stop trying to control my own destiny. You can’t rush God. I think I tried to when I almost married that first fellow, and again when I decided not marrying him meant I was supposed to remain single. God moved me 150 miles in order to cross paths with my husband. That always astounds me.