I spent two years pushing book of Mormons onto people. It sucked or was good based on who you were with. If you were with someone who wanted to have fun, you had fun. If you were with a tightwad who was interested in useless things such as tracting, etc then it was LITERALLY HELL.
After I returned and before the cog-dis left my mind I told myself that it was the best thinkg I could have done for myself.
Now I see I was dead wrong. I could have finished school 2 years earlier, my career could b etwo years ahead, my social network could have been much larger. All of these things are direct benefits for not wasting two years of my life trying to make my round peg fit in the square hole.
Mormon missions are a point of pride for the believer. Its their ticket into mainstream Mormonism. The shunning and stigma attached to individuals who did not go is astounding.
Pressure to go on an LDS mission is compounded by the fact that females will marry a loser RM over a nice non-RM.
One of the biggest surprises to my exmormon mind was the fact that noone really gives a damn wether you were an LDS missionary or not when interacting with individuals outside of Mormonism. In fact they actually feel sorry for you.
I now see my mission experience as one of the most (practical) useless two years I spent. I might as well had become a heroine addict for two years, at least I could've had SOME happiness.
Loran:
Good heavens Vegas could you quite your pathetic, narcissistic whining?
There are hundreds of thousands of returned missionaries and missionaries in the field who wouldn't have the slightest idea what you're talking about and would probably pick up in short order, as I have, that
you don't have any idea what you're talking about. Again, you prove our points: Many exmos shouldn't be in formus such as this parading their personal demons in public, but in church or, failing that, on a couch at least making an attempt to do something constructive about them.