Reminds me of the true story of Nazarena. She was a devout Catholic who wanted to be in the "desert", so she convinced people to lock her into a cell for the rest of her life.
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In this fascinating book, Thomas Matus tells the true story of one woman's struggle to live her extraordinary vocation to a life of total silence, solitude and hiddenness. A gifted musician and ordinary Sunday Catholic, Nazarena, nee Julia Crotta, had a vision of Jesus calling her to the desert while in college in Connecticut. After much searching and numerous attempts to have her unique vocation recognized by the church, she eventually found her "desert" in a small room at the monastery of the Camaldolese Benedictine nuns in Rome. She lived there as an anchoress for forty-five years until her death in 1990.
Radical yet traditional, exceptional yet simple, Sister Nazarena had a long and spiritually fruitful ascetic life. Nazarena, an American Anchoress uses excerpts from her own letters of spiritual counseling and material taken from interviews with those who knew her to tell the remarkable story of her life of silence and prayer.
"The hermit's vocation is a rare jewel in the church. Nazarena's story is a shining example of just how costly it can be to remain faithful to the unique call heard in the deepmost heart of each one of us." Michael Downey Author, Trappist: Living in the Land of Desire