Well, I think this is something to discuss with a spiritual director. I know it can be disheartening to speak about vocations when something like sexual orientation, disabilities, or mental illness (a mental disorder in my case) seem to disqualify is from vocations to the religious life and even sometimes marriage. This doesn’t mean that God doesn’t have a calling for us, and maybe the suffering that we experience with each one of our different conditions is a vocation in and of itself. It can be easy to make the purpose of our vocation an earthly one. We believe that our life on earth will somehow be terrible if we don’t match up with one of the particular vocations, but this is simply not true. Like St.Therese said, this earth is Our ship, not our home. Ours may be a different looking kind of vessel, but it doesn’t mean that it’s any less fulfilling. It’s our cross, and crosses are never pretty. They are always painful, hard to carry, and ultimately that’s the point. I don’t mind suffering so long as God makes sure that I suffer well. Right now, my main issue is my disorder has kept me from confession. This is my main point of pain, thinking that all the suffering I go through is lost. Just take a deep breath, work with a spiritual director because each individual person ( LGBT or not) has a personal vocation. It’s not a mass type of deal. Are some LGBT people legitimately called to the religious life? Absolutely. If they are honest about their condition and still their directors believe them to be good candidates it’ll happen. If God wants something, nothing can stop it. Single hood is not a bad vocation either.