http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=18096
Pope Francis revealed that he never wanted to be the Pope, and that 
he has chosen not to live in the papal apartments for the sake of his 
mental health, in a candid exchange with students on June 7.
At a meeting with students from Jesuit-run schools in Italy and Albania,
 along with their teachers and relatives, the Pope decided to set aside a
 5-page prepared address. “It’s a little boring,” he told the students. 
Instead he asked the students to pose questions. “That way we can talk,”
 he said.
Asked why he had decided to live in the Vatican guest house, the Domus 
Sanctae Marthae, rather than in the papal apartments, the Holy Father 
replied that “it’s a question of personality.” He explained that it was 
not because the papal apartments are luxurious, and not because he 
considers himself more virtuous than other pontiffs. “I can’t live 
alone; do you understand?” he said. “I need to live among people, and if
 I lived alone—perhaps rather isolated—it wouldn’t be good for me.”
When a young girl asked whether he wanted to be Pope, Francis quickly 
replied in the negative. “God does not bless a person who wants to be 
Pope,” he said. “I didn’t want to be Pope.”
In answer to a question about why be became a Jesuit, Pope Francis said 
that he had originally wanted to be a missionary, and had asked for an 
assignment to Japan, but was told that because of his health he was 
better suited for work in his native Argentina. Nevertheless he said 
that the missionary spirit is at the core of the Jesuit vocation: “going
 out to announce Jesus Christ and not becomgin too closed within our 
worlds.”
Another girls asked the Pope if he stayed in touch with his own boyhood 
friends. He said that he had enjoyed a few visits from old Argentine 
friends, and heard regularly from others. “I see them, I write to them,”
 he said. “You can’t live your life without friends.”
An elementary school girl asked if the Pope continued to see his friends
 from grade school. “But I've only been Pope for two and a half months,”
 he answered. But he understood her concern and continued “My friends 
are 14 hours away from here by plane, right? They're far from here, but I
 want to tell you something, three of them came to find me and greet me 
and I see them and they write to me and I love them very much. You can't
 live without friends, that's important.”
A boy asked about lapses of faith, and the Pope encouraged him with the 
reply: “Always remember this: you must not be afraid of failure or 
taking a tumble. The art of walking is not about not falling at all but 
learning to pick yourself up and carry on. If you fall down, get up 
quickly and go on walking.” 
In responses to other students’ questions the Pope said that the 
persistence of poverty in today’s world is a scandal, and that 
Christians have a duty to become involved in political affairs. 
“Politics is dirty, but the reason it has become dirty is that 
Christians didn’t get deeply enough involved in the evangelical spirit,”
 he said. “Working for the common good is a Christian duty.”    
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