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Do you feel like you have been forgotten, that your life isn’t what it should be, that, somehow, you are not good enough because you are still single?
Another friend is getting married. You are happy to be picked as bridesmaid, but really…..all you want is to be the one walking up the aisle in that beautiful white gown! In your heart you feel….unpicked.
Remember the story in the Bible where another Apostle had to be chosen because Judas was gone from the Little Band? Do you know the method they used to pick between the two men, Barsabbas and Matthias? A prayer was said and straws were drawn and whoever had the longest straw was the disciple!
Wow! That’s amazing. Such an important job….and a straw is drawn!
“And they gave them lots, and the lot fell upon Matthias, and he was numbered with the eleven apostles.” -Dhouay Rheims
I’m sure Matthias was very happy! But what about Barsabbas? Did God forget about him? Did God not have big plans for him?
Just because Barsabbas was not “picked” in this particular instance did not mean that God loved him less or that he had been overlooked or that He didn’t have wonderful plans laid out for him.
How about you? Do you find it very difficult when the ladies around you are getting “picked” and you are not. Does it make you sad that you have not found that “one and only” yet?
Of course! It is hard to wait on Our Lord when it seems like life is passing quickly!
I remember those single days, in the interim, before I was married. I lived in Canada, really in a spiritual desert. I had quit my “important” job and went to live back with my mom and dad who had moved to a small town and bought a gas station. I pumped gas.
I was reading some very good books at the time and I knew in my heart I wanted the noble and wonderful vocation as wife and mother.
But wife and mother to who? Ah, there lay the rub! The town I lived in had about 400 people. And believe me, serious Catholics were hard to find, even in the big cities!
I remembered what my dear mentor and older friend had said to me. “If you want to be a wife and mother, Leane, start now by learning everything you can about that important vocation. Roll up your sleeves and practice cooking, cleaning, sewing, music, art. Read good books on the subject….on parenting, gardening, ‘good wife’ books, etc.”
This is one reason I had left my job in the big city. To me, it was not helping me get to my final goal. No, it was hindering it. No one could understand why I left and went to pump gas. But I had a goal. And part of that goal was being back home helping Mom and Dad.
Now, life did not go all that smoothly from this point on. But circumstances led me to write a dear priest in the U.S. and I asked him what I should do. He told me to come to his Apostolate, help him by working in the office, and he would help me, mentor me, on my journey.
I did this. I was there for eleven months, serving this dear priest’s apostolate, going to Mass and Benediction each day. It was a time of spiritual growth. I learned so much about my Faith! And I met my husband, who had also come to serve at this Catholic Shrine…..
The point being, if you are downcast about being “unpicked”, don’t be! You have much to learn and it can be very fulfilling! It can also be fun! It really can be!
Get some cookbooks and start planning the meals!
Learn to sew, crochet, arrange flowers, paint, etc.
Join the Legion of Mary, serve others…at home and elsewhere.
Serve the busy mothers with many children….babysit for them, help with their homeschooling.
Be with the children. Read to them, teach them Catechism. There is nothing so beautiful as a young woman who spends herself for the little ones….
Work hard wherever you are at!
But the most important thing is growing spiritually! If you can go to daily Mass, do it! Pray for your future spouse.
Read good spiritual Catholic books. I have two lists you can look at:
Learn to be happy, even in trying circumstances. This is the very thing that will carry you through when your vocation is in place and the crosses come.
Life is an adventure! Give, give, give to God and He will more than meet you half way! But be on the lookout for what He is trying to teach you. Have an open heart to His Voice. We do this by grace.
We often don’t recognize His Voice but if you are doing what it takes, He will lead you to what His Will is for you. And ultimately, that is what will make you happy!
In my little fairy tale story above, I have one sentence that is very important and I didn’t expound on: After I moved back home, life did not go all that smoothly from this point on.
My family life was not great. I met discouragement, I was in tears many times, things could look black. It wasn’t roses. But I kept seeking and praying…and trying to have peace with it all.
God didn’t turn a deaf ear to me. I had to be patient. Patience is one of the hardest things to learn…and it is something that will have to be practiced all through our lives.
God is not turning a deaf ear to you! Are you kidding? He loves you and has something wonderful in mind for you!
You must get through the lonely times, those times when you feel “unpicked” and remember….God sees the bigger picture, you don’t. Keep that in mind and seek for inner happiness, through the grace of God, in the interim. Work towards getting “better” not “bitter”!
You will be blessed! Believe it!
You may also like this post, In Praise of Unmarried Women.
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“When our emotions are cold in our love of God, and we ‘feel’ nothing, there is no reason for us to be disturbed. We will find less satisfaction in our love – for it is much more pleasant for us to feel that we are loving – but our act of love will be equally true and perfect. Even more, lacking the impetus and pleasure which come from our feelings, we will be obliged to apply ourself more resolutely to the act of the will and this, far from harming it, will make it more voluntary, and therefore, more meritorious. ” – Divine Intimacy, Fr. Gabriel of St. Mary Magdalen
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Very good read for those who are single. And yes, it can be devastatingly black sometimes. And sometimes the nights are the only comfort, because during the day the heart is aching so badly.
Sometimes the rainbows are not what we expected, but they happened when I needed them the most. Marriage was not a “fix-all” cure, but rather the answer to a prayer and the deep desire of many years of prayer.
I love the list you gave for the young girls. I hope all who read it take it to heart and act accordingly.
My parents actually met at a Catholic shrine years ago…..two different lives, both independent, searching towards the religious vocation, serving others, but now they have been married 35 years. :)<3
Life is a great adventure and God's ways are very mysterious! 😉
May Our Lady always guide.
Beautiful, Mary. Thank you!
This sort of advice aligns with what I believe to be the ideal. However – Some people simply never do get married. To pin all your hopes and all the efforts of your young-adult life upon this goal seems too desperate of a gamble.
It comes off as terribly unappealing. The woman who is doing nothing else but wait to be married suddenly seems wholly defined by this goal, in her entire personality and character. It comes across as aggressive and grasping, or (in the case of those not blessed with comeliness) simply pitiful.
Married women know that finding a husband does not satisfy all the longings of her heart and fulfill the purpose of her life’s existence. Marriage is a powerful sacramental aid to growth in holiness and union with God, but to entirely depend upon the possibility of this state in life as the key to one’s future and life’s fulfillment seems misplaced.
I think that practically, it is very important for a young woman to prepare for the real possibility of never getting married. I think it is important for her to learn to focus upon union with God as her sole fulfillment and the goal of her life.
I do think that in an ideal society parents would care for the needs of their daughters until they were married or bound to a religious order, but the sad truth is that this is difficult in modern society. There is a social stigma involved, and not all parents are willing. Today a woman has to be realistic and ensure her own material security for the possible long-term.
I think you have some very good points, And that is why I reiterated in my post that one must seek for inner happiness in the single life. It doesn’t have to be sought in the way I presented, although I think that the list I included will help to develop the womanly qualities of any single lady. But it must be done for love of God…..at least that is what the aim should be, not for finding a husband. Also, a woman can find a job that is very fulfilling. My gist was not to quit your job and stay at home. Even when I was at home I worked to earn money.
A good follow-up to this post could be one I posted not too long ago, called “In Praise of Unmarried Women” https://finerfem.wordpress.com/2016/08/21/in-praise-of-unmarried-women-fr-daniel-a-lord/ Thank you for your comment! 🙂
I would say, too, that living the life of service to others, of building character, of growing spiritually is not a pitiful existence, comely or not. Nor does it come across as aggressive and grasping.
No, growing in grace is a beautiful thing. 🙂
Planning for the possibility you will not marry is prudent. But what you have said here goes beyond merely calling for prudence. Rather, it seems to me that it tears down those who hope and plan to marry. Else why use such language?
Unappealing to whom? I cannot speak for all men here, so I won’t. But speaking only for myself, a devout Catholic man looking for a Catholic woman interested in marriage, to find one who takes marriage seriously would be quite refreshing. All around me I see nothing but the opposite. Some Catholic women say they have no interest in marriage- yet do not pursue a life of service to others, or contemplation. Others say they want to marry… someday. And yet others have a long checklist of other things they want to do first, before they marry. And of course, don’t even get me started on their views concerning children….
Again, I speak only for myself. But I suspect that more unmarried and devout Catholic men share my view than not.
Thank you, Donal.
The growing in Grace is the key and abandonment to God’s Will not my own.Whatever God wills for me I ought to rejoice in it and make others happy while ‘doing’ it.
Inspiring post! A prayerful, accomplished woman in the art of making a home is a beautiful thing- married or not!
I remember reading this post back in August when it was originally posted and I knew I had to return to it many months later as I’m feeling a bit blue about still waiting. The closer I inch to my 32nd birthday, the harder it gets. I’ve had a lovely life in which I was able to help take care of my father until he succumbed to cancer when I was 24 and now I help my mother keep the house running, just the two of us. Still, it’s hard and I needed to read these encouraging words again. Thank you.
Me too Melissa 🙂 I am approaching 32 as well and have the same feelings as you describe.