S
SisterSnowflake
Guest
Many blessings to all of you in your continued discernment!

You have determined for sure that your call is contemplative. So have I. But I donât feel 100% cloistered. And, since there is an incredible need in my rural area just west of Springfield, Missouri, I am hoping and praying that a diocesan order can begin here that is contemplative but offers 2-1/2 hours a day (Monday through Friday) to assist in rural needs.I will be staying with the Carmelites of Cristo Rey in San Francisco on June 20-22 and then while in California, I will be going south to stay with the Menlo Park cloistered Dominican nuns from June 22 to 27th. Then I will visit the Carmelites of Springfield, Missouri in early July.
I am 48 yrs old with 2 grown kids (married/divorced/annulment) and these Carmels are open to me - for anyone in a similar situation to mine who feels called to great, traditional and full habited Carmels.
The Carmel of Springfield is a wonderful Carmel and on 5/27 lost their former prioress who was sick for awhile. They are now down to only 3 but they are still fairly young - the current prioress, Mother Marya is about 46 and the other two are around that age or a bit older so they are not a doddering old community! They are not closing but please call or write them if you have a Carmelite vocation. They donât have a website but when I visit I hope to change Mother Maryaâs mind as that my help me alot.
The Carmel of Cristo Rey has 35 as an upper age limit in their IRL profile, but they do and have excepted older when the woman has good health and a vocation to Carmel and their monastery. This is a bilingual community (the recreation and Divine Office is in English for 2 wks, then both are in Spanish for 2 wks). They came from Mexico over 75 yrs ago. They were founded from a Carmel in Mexico that was founded by a Carmel in Spain that St. Teresa of Avila founded herself! Wonderful history.
As I am making sure I AM a Carmelite vocation, I would still like to visit the Visitation monasteries of Toledo and Tyringham (if these monasteries are to be my âhomeâ!) and may go to England to visit and stay with the Colwich Benedictines and visit the St. Helenâs Carmel and the Wolverhhampton Carmel possibly.
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Oh, donât forget to ask St. Anthony of Padua as he is very good at helping our lost selves tooooWell, I AM 48 and I am NOT getting any younger so I have to move and get going quickly! lol!
It is definitely getting harder to get up every day and having to face a in the world and NOT the monastery. I am harrassing Our Lord, Our Lady, St. Joseph, St. Teresa Benedicta, St. Teresa of Avila and St. Therese so badly to get me into the monastery, they JUST have to soon just to shut me up! :byzsoc:


I know how to use the book, but itâs really hard to explain by typing. I had one of the priests at my parish show me how to use mine. Then I moved onto the Complete Liturgy of the Hours. Iâll try to come up with a useful run down that might help.No I do not have another aka on Phatmass.
And I do understan how hard it is to get up to Not the monastery,
the peace and quiet, and the prayers, singing and chanting, which is so hard to do on the outside, espescially as I have a rotationg schedule and cannot make a special time. But I do the best I can.
Does anyone know how to use the âShort Christian Prayerâ I have had this book since my conversion and still do not know how to use it. Could any one shed some light on this.
:getholy:
Welcome to the thread!Hello everyone! Iâm 16 and I am going to join the Sisters of Life in NYC.
Thanks!Welcome to the thread!![]()
Sorry, TB. You post as TB on Phatmass.No I do not have another aka on Phatmass.
And I do understan how hard it is to get up to Not the monastery,
the peace and quiet, and the prayers, singing and chanting, which is so hard to do on the outside, espescially as I have a rotationg schedule and cannot make a special time. But I do the best I can.
Does anyone know how to use the âShort Christian Prayerâ I have had this book since my conversion and still do not know how to use it. Could any one shed some light on this.
:getholy:
Wonderful !! Prayers coming your way ! KathieHello everyone! Iâm 16 and I am going to join the Sisters of Life in NYC.
Thank you! I could use all prayer I can get!Wonderful !! Prayers coming your way ! Kathie
I sent you a private message. Hopefully it will help explain it for you. If not, I belive there are some websites that help, but they didnât help me much!Does anyone know how to use the âShort Christian Prayerâ I have had this book since my conversion and still do not know how to use it. Could any one shed some light on this.
:getholy:
The Servants of the Blessed Sacrament are contemplative but not cloistered.You have determined for sure that your call is contemplative. So have I. But I donât feel 100% cloistered. And, since there is an incredible need in my rural area just west of Springfield, Missouri, I am hoping and praying that a diocesan order can begin here that is contemplative but offers 2-1/2 hours a day (Monday through Friday) to assist in rural needs.
Kathie
Hi! I met the Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart. They are located in California and still I would describe them as very traditional and devote. Just for you to knowThe Nashvilles are widely known because they âspawnedâ the SMMEs in Michigan.
I donât think I would want to remain in California since the sisters donât wear the traditional habit and many are changing the chapels in the convent house to something modern, or they practice new age things like centering prayer, it turns me off a bit. I want a community that is in full union with Rome, and Californiaâs just too liberal for me!
Oh, shout out to Amata Child!! :extrahappy: Iâll write to you soon.
Yes, I do know what you mean. I just came back from OCD place where I talked a lot of things to one nun who has known me.Iâm getting excited for my visit this weekend. I hope to procure a vocation director while Iâm there. Some of the doubts are starting to creep back inâŚI need someone to talk to about all of this. Not that you all arenât great, but you know what I mean!
I talked to one of the sisters at an order for about an hour last night. It was a useful converation in that I learned a lot about her monastery, but it didnât do anything to calm some of the concerns. Itâs unreasonable, I think, but I got this whole âyou have to be perfect, you have to have always been perfectâ feeling.Yes, I do know what you mean. I just came back from OCD place where I talked a lot of things to one nun who has known me.
But I think Iâm still long way to goâŚ![]()
Yes, itâs always useful talking to someone who knows better. But remember that you should be calm because of that then you may listen Godâs voice. I had a thought the same as you before that how could God call me because my life isnât perfect. Then I read the life of St.Francis of Asisi and Iâve fallen in love with the way of his life. Iâve been thinking to learn more about franciscan order.I talked to one of the sisters at an order for about an hour last night. It was a useful converation in that I learned a lot about her monastery, but it didnât do anything to calm some of the concerns. Itâs unreasonable, I think, but I got this whole âyou have to be perfect, you have to have always been perfectâ feeling.