Why did her boyfriend dump her for the priesthood?

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In summary: I mean, "if the guy's been called to other work," and leaves seminary.In summary, a 18-year-old girl's boyfriend recently broke up with her because he is going into the priesthood, which she was not expecting. Her initial reaction was shock and sadness, as she was very invested in the relationship. She was in denial about his plans for a while and only recently realized that he was serious about becoming a priest. This is a difficult situation to deal with as there was nothing wrong with their relationship, it was just a matter of him not being allowed to have one anymore. There is a high drop-out rate for seminary students, so there is a chance that he may change his mind, but it is uncertain
  • #1
Math Is Hard
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My 18-year-old baby sister just got dumped by her boyfriend. The reason: he is going into the priesthood.

This has got to be one of the strangest breakup stories I have ever heard. Poor thing is crying her eyes out. :cry: She was crazy about him.
 
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  • #2
Math Is Hard said:
My 18-year-old baby sister just got dumped by her boyfriend. The reason: he is going into the priesthood.
:bugeye:

This has got to be one of the strangest breakup stories I have ever heard. Poor thing is crying her eyes out. :cry: She was crazy about him.
Did she have any clue to his plans? Poor thing, she must be crushed. :frown:
 
  • #3
Evo said:
:bugeye:

Did she have any clue to his plans? Poor thing, she must be crushed. :frown:
I think she has been in denial for several months. He had hinted at it once before, but I don't think she took it seriously. :frown:
 
  • #4
Wow -- Tell her one of my friend's brothers drove three women to the nunnery. (The fun of going to a Catholic undergrad was that I heard of this stuff all the time.)

She's 18... tell her to put everything in a box, to pull out someday when her son/daughter has a break-up. It'd be a great story to tell THEN. That's what I decided to do about my first boyfriend when we broke up (I was about the same age as your sis). Of course, then I threw the box away years later... healing takes time. Now I just have the story and a few (very few) letters.
 
  • #5
physics girl phd said:
Wow -- Tell her one of my friend's brothers drove three women to the nunnery. (The fun of going to a Catholic undergrad was that I heard of this stuff all the time.)
oh my! :eek: I've known a few guys like that!

She's 18... tell her to put everything in a box, to pull out someday when her son/daughter has a break-up. It'd be a great story to tell THEN. That's what I decided to do about my first boyfriend when we broke up (I was about the same age as your sis). Of course, then I threw the box away years later... healing takes time. Now I just have the story and a few (very few) letters.
That's a good idea. Much better than mine. I was just going to buy her a copy of The Thornbirds. :biggrin: o:)
 
  • #6
Wow, that's a tough one, because it's one of those cases where it probably meant there was nothing at all wrong with the relationship, other than he's not allowed to have one anymore. :frown: It's kind of hard getting over it by convincing yourself he was a no good jerk and it never would have worked out anyway if he's going into the priesthood. :bugeye:

Tell her there's only one thing left to do, sign up here and join the PF Sisterhood! (Speaking of which, have we determined physics girl's shoe size yet?) :biggrin:
 
  • #7
Math Is Hard said:
I was just going to buy her a copy of The Thornbirds. :biggrin: o:)
Geez, talk about pouring salt on the wounds!

Tell her to write the Catholic Church to encourage them to change their position on not allowing priests to be married.

Alternatively, tell her to have her boyfriend become a Unitarian-Universalist. We're very liberal and flexible, but very nice too! o:)

I should point out that Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, and even Albert Schweitzer were Unitarians.
 
  • #8
Moonbear said:
Tell her there's only one thing left to do, sign up here and join the PF Sisterhood! (Speaking of which, have we determined physics girl's shoe size yet?) :biggrin:

Moonbear -- you're so sweet! But my foot size is way too large to reveal!

P.S. Just so ya'll know, I'll be changing my online name soon. I'm thinking of going to "3-D" or "Three-D" when I get married in a few weeks-- when I become a (Dr. Debra. D.! -- yep, I'm name changing just cause it sounds cool). I just found and joined Physics forum the WEEK that I defended my thesis, fell in LOVE with the forum :!) and joined it instantly (and "physics girl" is my forum name on a non-physics forum). Now, I few weeks later, I feel so... immodest. :shy:
 
  • #9
Math Is Hard said:
The reason: he is going into the priesthood.

That was a favorite line for all of us Catholic guys. :rolleyes:

Who knows, maybe he will have a change of heart. I don't know what the drop-out rate is for priests but it's probably pretty high.

I did a quick google
By its nature, seminary training has a high drop-out rate. Once a man realizes he no longer feels called to the priesthood, he is encouraged to discontinue his formation. Only about half the freshmen who enter Conception will ever reach graduation. Conception’s president-rector, Father Benedict Neenan, is quick to stress that, unlike at mainstream schools, dropout rates do not equate with failure.
http://www.conceptionabbey.org/TowerTopics/TTFall05/admintheo.htm
 
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  • #10
physics girl phd said:
P.S. Just so ya'll know, I'll be changing my online name soon. I'm thinking of going to "3-D" or "Three-D" when I get married in a few weeks-- when I become a (Dr. Debra. D.! -- yep, I'm name changing just cause it sounds cool).
How about [tex]D^3[/tex]
 
  • #11
Ivan Seeking said:
I did a quick google

http://www.conceptionabbey.org/TowerTopics/TTFall05/admintheo.htm
By its nature, seminary training has a high drop-out rate. Once a man realizes he no longer feels called to the priesthood, he is encouraged to discontinue his formation. Only about half the freshmen who enter Conception will ever reach graduation. Conception’s president-rector, Father Benedict Neenan, is quick to stress that, unlike at mainstream schools, dropout rates do not equate with failure.

1) 51% of all college students graduate within 5 years, so there's not much difference in the drop out rate. http://www.act.org/news/releases/2002/11-15-02.html

2) What girl would want to marry a college dropout, anyway? She only gets the guy if the guy's a loser! :smile:
 
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  • #12
Math Is Hard said:
My 18-year-old baby sister just got dumped by her boyfriend. The reason: he is going into the priesthood.

This has got to be one of the strangest breakup stories I have ever heard. Poor thing is crying her eyes out. :cry: She was crazy about him.
That's got to stink! She could probably have an easier time if she had been tossed in favor of another young woman that was prettier, nicer to him, more popular, wealthy, etc, etc. Immature people do that kind of stuff all the time, and at least she could say "He's shallow, chasing another girl just because she's got a big chest and flirts." or something similar. How do you rationalize getting dumped by someone who essentially chose "none of the above" over you, especially if you respect him for his faith? Someone nice will come along for her. At age 18, days and weeks can seem like ages, and she may seem "down" for a while - I know you can give her some perspective.

My "niece" (actually my cousin's daughter, but she is closer to me than any other female relative) is getting married next summer at the age of 28. If you look in the dictionary under "cute", she'll be there. She was pursued fairly relentlessly by a couple of guys that were entirely inappropriate for her (including "handsome" and "wealthy") and after several years with a gem of a guy who is the son of a minister and manages a chain restaurant, they are going to tie the knot. I just want them to move to Maine so we can spend more time with them and (hopefully) kick their butts at darts. :biggrin: I have been waiting for this announcement for years.
 
  • #13
physics girl phd said:
P.S. Just so ya'll know, I'll be changing my online name soon. I'm thinking of going to "3-D" or "Three-D" when I get married in a few weeks--
Be prepared for some extremely low jokes about cup-size from someone whose screen name also coincidentally begins with a 'D'. The fellow apparently has no sense of decorum whatsoever, and would probably be insulted if anyone implied he did.

I would never even imply such a joke, of course.
 
  • #14
Not Orthodox then... ohh well
 
  • #15
twisting_edge said:
Be prepared for some extremely low jokes about cup-size from someone whose screen name also coincidentally begins with a 'D'. The fellow apparently has no sense of decorum whatsoever, and would probably be insulted if anyone implied he did. :biggrin:
You need to learn to use smilies. See, how your meaning is now clear as opposed to without the smiley?

I would never even imply such a joke, of course. :rolleyes:
Smilies, I'm telling ya, you need them. :-p
 
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  • #16
Evo said:
You need to learn to use smilies. See, how your meaning is now clear as opposed to without the smiley?
Tsk, tsk. Shouldn't that word be spelt "smiley" in the singular? (Unless, of course, you attend school in either NZ or San Bardino.)
 
  • #17
Evo said:
You need to learn to use smilies. See, how your meaning is now clear as opposed to without the smiley?
I would never even imply such a joke, of course.
Smilies, I'm telling ya, you need them. :-p
Not to mention, there's something wrong with your 'I'.

I:shy: , on the other hand:approve: , am well versed in smilie use:cool: .
 
  • #18
twisting_edge said:
Tsk, tsk. Shouldn't that word be spelt "smiley" in the singular? (Unless, of course, you attend school in either NZ or San Bardino.)
Why, whatever are you talking about? :rolleyes:

And it's "spelled", spelt is an ancient form of wheat and is pretty nasty.

And don't use that "I lived in London" excuse.
 
  • #19
BobG said:
I, on the other hand, am well versed in smilie use.
Specialized fonts and whatnot are all very well and have their place deep in the bowels of marketing departments. But if you cannot make your point without them, you shouldn't oughta be writing inna first place.

I will use bold and italics here and there, mostly to get that true-to-life, arrogant, "you're-too-stupid-to-figure-it-out-by-yourself" tone I use so often when speaking.

Who? Me? Cop a pose? Never happen!
 
  • #20
Evo said:
And don't use that "I lived in London" excuse.
I read lots of Brit-lit as a kid. (Arthur Ransome is great, isn't he?)
 
  • #21
twisting_edge said:
Be prepared for some extremely low jokes about cup-size from someone whose screen name also coincidentally begins with a 'D'. The fellow apparently has no sense of decorum whatsoever, and would probably be insulted if anyone implied he did.

Ooh -- I wonder what "danger"ous person that would be? :smile:
But if I can gain a "busty" reputation just by becoming "3-D"... WOW. :bugeye:
 
  • #22
physics girl phd said:
But if I can gain a "busty" reputation just by becoming "3-D"... WOW.
You may wish to reassess your initial enthusiasm after a thorough consideration of precisely with whom such a reputation might lie.

Or not: it does take all kinds, I suppose.o:)

subnote: See, I used a smiley. I tell you, the concessions I make just to keep some people happy are beyond belief. And, yes, that is in fact the smiley I'd intended: I'm just so innocent-looking when I apply that scheiss-essen grin.
 
  • #23
twisting_edge said:
subnote: See, I used a smiley. I tell you, the concessions I make just to keep some people happy are beyond belief.
:smile:

And, yes, that is in fact the smiley I'd intended: I'm just so innocent-looking when I apply that scheiss-essen grin.
Yes, you manage to get away with anything.
 
  • #24
twisting_edge said:
I would never even imply such a joke, of course. o:)
Actually, this is the more appropriate smilification of your statement. :wink:
 
  • #25
Moonbear said:
Actually, this is the more appropriate smilification of your statement.
I recently read an article in the NYT about the difficulties the OED is having with neologisms from the internet. I somehow doubt "smilification" will make the next edition.

I think it is due to be completed sometime around 2014. They are sort of abandoning the idea of "editions", though, and moving to a process of rolling updates by letter. But 2014 is the date they expect to have finished the current cycle so they can start over.
 
  • #26
Moonbear said:
Actually, this is the more appropriate smilification of your statement. :wink:
I think smilification is a great word. :approve:
 
  • #27
Moonbear, I think the ironic to literal ratio of the wink is too high to justify its use in the previous post. I think we should start a conference on the mathematics behind smiley use in order to encourage high end industry and government funded research into the proper usage and timeage of said smilies
 
  • #28
Office_Shredder said:
Moonbear, I think the ironic to literal ratio of the wink is too high to justify its use in the previous post. I think we should start a conference on the mathematics behind smiley use in order to encourage high end industry and government funded research into the proper usage and timeage of said smilies
You forgot your smilies. :-p
 
  • #29
Without a proper certification and ISO 9000 process ensuring smiley efficiency and workplace decency, I have found it effusive to implement a no smiley policy on all posting heretoforth the Commission of Smiley Placement and Acknowledgement Interpretation Naturalization (aka CSPAIN) has filed proper reporting on their findings, along with all relevant paperwork ensuring said reports are complete, objective, and have been filed in triplicateTriplicate is key
 
  • #30
Math Is Hard said:
My 18-year-old baby sister just got dumped by her boyfriend. The reason: he is going into the priesthood.

This has got to be one of the strangest breakup stories I have ever heard. Poor thing is crying her eyes out. :cry: She was crazy about him.
I've thought this out and arrived at the following:

breaking up = hard

math=hard

therefore:

breaking up = math

therefore: your sister just needs to balance her side of the equation by becoming a nun.
 
  • #31
Evo said:
Smilies, I'm telling ya, you need them. :-p
What's with the slimies? You're either slimy or you're not and your intent is misinterpreted to taste or not. Heads-up for the slimy!
 
  • #32
zoobyshoe said:
your sister just needs to balance her side of the equation by becoming a nun.
This has real possibilities - priest - sister. Hmmmm.
 
  • #33
Astronuc said:
This has real possibilities - priest - sister. Hmmmm.
Evo's cheating on her vow of celibacy all the time, in front of the whole forum. Seems to be working. The Sister Of Math Is Hard could learn a lesson in the value of making herself seem unavailable.

(Boy, she's going to have a cumbersome username when she joins PF to be accepted into the sisterhood novitiate. And the sisterhood roster: Mother Superior Evo, Sister Moonbear, Sister Math Is Hard, Sister Sister Of Math Is Hard.)
 
  • #34
zoobyshoe said:
Evo's cheating on her vow of celibacy all the time, in front of the whole forum.
WHEN? Did I miss something, did I sleep through it? :cry:

(Boy, she's going to have a cumbersome username when she joins PF to be accepted into the sisterhood novitiate. And the sisterhood roster: Mother Superior Evo, Sister Moonbear, Sister Math Is Hard, Sister Sister Of Math Is Hard.)
:smile:
 
  • #35
Evo said:
did I sleep through it? :cry:
Darn, I hate when that happens! :smile:
 

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