Ascetic Life
Aninas pursued an unusually severe discipline. The accounts relate that during the forty days of Great Lent he ate nothing, and that he ordinarily took food only once every several days, withdrawing for extended retreats of twenty to thirty days into the inner desert. The sources present these austerities as feats of self-denial sustained by what they call spiritual nourishment.
A recurring detail is his daily carrying of drinking water from the Euphrates, described as a distance of several miles, both for himself and for his community. When Bishop Patrick of Neocaesarea, learning of this labor, twice provided him with donkeys to ease the burden, Aninas gave the animals away to the poor and continued to carry the water himself; one account adds that he eventually accepted the bishop's provision of a barrel with servants.