C
CarmeliteGirl25
Guest
LOL, I thought of them.:newidea:
CG, when I read this a light went on. :newidea:
carmelitesistersocd.com/index.asp
I believe they also have made foundations outside of California.
LOL, I thought of them.:newidea:
CG, when I read this a light went on. :newidea:
carmelitesistersocd.com/index.asp
I believe they also have made foundations outside of California.
The Daughters of Charity have a hospital where I live too, but they are not habited sisters. For me, personally, this is a requirement. I appreciate the recommendation though.The ones in L.A. do have vocations in health care. Iām not sure doing what exactly though. Considering your medical background, I come from one too, have you thought about the Daughters of Charity? They own a few hospitals in California and there sisters can work as nurses and such. I am currently working at one of their hospitals now.
Habited as in wearing habits? I know that the one here do. They have a few options so they are not always in the same habit but they only wear habits here.The Daughters of Charity have a hospital where I live too, but they are not habited sisters. For me, personally, this is a requirement. I appreciate the recommendation though.![]()
.:nun2: :nun2: :takeoff:Iāve gone over and over again in my head trying to be rational about this decision, but I keep coming back to the CFRs. I really would love to ājump into the poolā and go visit themā¦
I think Iām going to do it⦠I think Iām going to jump! I am going to go there after the New Year and check it out! Iām going to write the vocations director or call her and see when their next āCome and Seeā retreats are, too
Iām just following what the Holy Spirit is telling me to do, and I just found a spiritual director, so he will help me figure out where Iām being led.I see several here have big problem that is very common in the United States. It is called catalog vocation shopping.
When you feel that enthusiasm, above all with the founder, you donāt see the defects of the members of the community.
At the beggining, it is all joy and sweetness. If it isnāt, it is most probably not a calling, but rather a good inclination of the heart.
The litany of the Holy Spirit in Latin has an invocation that calls Him āSweetness of those who begin in Your serviceā
It is not a thing you read and give it a shot.
Pray more. Pray your Rosary. She wonāt leave you to think it out yourself.
I shouldnāt have to explain this to anyone, but just for interest, I have started going to Adoration and praying the Divine Mercy and Rosary with the community at my nearby Church. I have restarted my discernment so to speak, and Iām being driven back by the Holy Spirit to the active/contemplative life as I was originally drawn to. I donāt get to talk to my spiritual director until after Christmas, but, I fully intend to discuss everything with him. I am no longer posting these question posts on here because I think they have left me more confused. I need to be listening to my heart. It has never steered me wrong before.I see several here have big problem that is very common in the United States. It is called catalog vocation shopping.
When you feel that enthusiasm, above all with the founder, you donāt see the defects of the members of the community.
At the beginning, it is all joy and sweetness. If it isnāt, it is most probably not a calling, but rather a good inclination of the heart.
The litany of the Holy Spirit in Latin has an invocation that calls Him āSweetness of those who begin in Your serviceā
It is not a thing you read and give it a shot.
Pray more. Pray your Rosary. She wonāt leave you to think it out yourself.
Iām almost 100% certain Iām going to be a Carmelite. Iāve been thinking about them more than any other order. I love the Franciscans, and I will probably visit one or two orders of Franciscans, but I believe God is calling me to the Carmelite Sisters of the Divine Heart of Jesus in the Northern Province. (I wrote more about it in the PM I sent you). I want to continue to be a nurse, because I feel that is part of my calling. I felt so at home with my patients in the clinicals of being a CNA.oh carmelite girl, i think we have the same "confusion problemā. i discovered my vocation when i was reading the apparitions of the miraculous medal. the story i was reading mentioned st. vincent and i was quite interested with him after doing some research. actually, that time, i donāt know what vocation is, or what religious orders or congregations are. then i felt God wanted me to be a camillian, then a franciscan, then a dominican, then a benedictine, then a carmelite, but now i have my hopes of being a trappist someday. (oh geesh⦠i seldom share my vocationā¦!)
i am going to pray for you, i can feel the confusion thatās in your heart.
I think itās important to point out that no one I know is doing catalogue vocation shopping. If you feel an inclination in your heart that God might be calling you to a community, whether it be by words of the founder or the communityās apostolate, then you should visit them. I donāt think anyone visits a community when they donāt like the founder or the community. 98% the time, if you donāt have a stirring, then you are not called there.
None of us are masters at hearing the Holy Spirit. We are called to seek Him out in our daily lives. Thatās why itās important to follow your heart, because God makes His desires known there.
No one discerns in just one day. If they do, then they are wacky! Iāve been discerning my vocation for a little over a year, and I am willing and prepared to wait for a few years longer, if thatās what God wants. No one dives into this thing because itās a life decision. My mom described it perfectly at the beginning of my discernment. She called it a āmarriage to the Church.ā And just like divorces from your husband are very difficult and frowned upon by the Church, I can only hope and imagine that itās just as difficult, if not more, to divorce the religious community you join. No one should take this lightly, and I understand that. Thatās why I am ādatingā religious communities, trying to make sure, that like dating potential husbands, that this is the right fit, and that God is calling me to them.:clapping:
Well said, and my thoughts exactly. Yes, a calling and a vocation are up-down processes, and not down-up. Itās not like I just started thinking about this yesterday. I have been thinking and praying about this for years, trying to discern if the call is still there. It is. Now where am I called, and to what purpose. Itās not like one day I heard an audible voice and I jumped up to get the vocations ācatalogueā. Iāve known all along I wanted to be a cloistered contemplative. That life is not all sweet and rosy. Thereās sacrifice, thereās submission. Iām not sitting on the vocational āpink cloudā so to speak. Cloistered contemplative life is not all praying and āpie in the skyā. Itās hard, itās demanding, itās difficult. Things worth having usually donāt come easy. The only thing now is to discern where, and when. Due to the length of time it takes to discern a vocation (Rome wasnāt built in a day, neither is a vocation discerned in one), and the time it takes to build a relationship with a vocations director in community (so you both get to know each other, and learn), Iām concentrating on Visitation communities. I will be close to 50 if and when I enter the novitiate. Like I said in another thread, if itās Godās will, it will happen in Godās time. Not mine. My job right now is to talk to my SD and pray for His will for my life.
Way to go, CarmeliteGirl25!![]()