Life of Holy Folly
After her healing, Blessed Liubov adopted the podvig of folly for Christ, the ascetic path of voluntarily appearing foolish or simple in order to conceal spiritual gifts and to rebuke the world's values. She first withdrew into a narrow space between the stove and a wall of her house, standing there in prayer for three years before going out to live among the people.
In Ryazan she became a familiar figure of intercession, attending the city's churches, and was particularly associated with the Kazan Monastery. Accounts remember her for great kindness and generosity to the poor.
Clairvoyance and Counsel
Blessed Liubov was widely regarded as clairvoyant, addressing even strangers by name and offering counsel about people's circumstances. She often gave her prophecies through symbolic objects cut from paper, which were understood to foretell marriages, deaths, journeys, and other coming events.
Her ministry unfolded in the years surrounding the Revolution of 1917 and the onset of the Soviet persecution of the Church, a period in which she is remembered for consoling those who came to her.
Relics and Shrine
Following the neglect of her grave, the brethren of St John the Theologian Monastery built a chapel over it in 1992. With her glorification in 1998, her relics were transferred to the Church of St Nicholas the Wonderworker in the Yamskaya settlement (Yamskaya Sloboda) of Ryazan, where they are venerated.
Miracles and Traditions
Traditional accounts gathered after her repose attribute a number of miracles to Blessed Liubov, related as hagiographic narratives rather than documented history. Among them are the healing of a sick soldier who restored her grave after a dream, a grieving daughter shown in a dream the location of forgotten bonds to pay for memorial services, the recovery of a lost piglet after prayer at her grave, and the relief of a woman named Vera from melancholy.