Runtu wrote:1. How did you feel when you figured out that the church isn't what it claims to be?
It's hard to explain. I felt guarded, and untrusting. It was a clear paradigm shift and when I found myself on the outside looking in, I was overwhelmed with all the stimuli from the inside (inconceivables remarks about knowing how the reaction from family would be and trying to figure out ways to spare them, and how I was going to raise my children outside the church and whether or not my spouse would understand, etc) with all of the freeing stimuli I was feeling on the outside. I extricated myself quite slowly from the church, and was still a leader and a teacher several years into my agnosticism, I was so anxious not to cause any ripples. I was very, very careful about what I would and would not say to family members.
The untrusting part came from the clear realization that these people who surrounded me who were just soooo sure about everything, and so knowledgeable in their convictions about truth........they didn't know a darned thing. And the fact that they went around proclaiming they knew just ticked me off. I went through quite a period of time where I didn't trust a word that came out of any mouth that was speaking at church...except to privately acknowledge that their version of truth was coming from their innards and nowhere else. That helped temper my anger, I think. Still, I didn't trust that anyone claiming anything authoritative about God, or truth, or anything churchy had any clue about what they were talking about. Plus, I detest, and still do to this day, the artificial aspect of people in the church. They have been warned for so long to be a good example, and to be strong, blah blah, that they are afraid to show weakness. That is one thing I absolutely found refreshing being on the postmormon boards. It is like a free ticket for people to finally express doubt, and be able to question or say they are lonely or scared when they are lonely or scared. And they can do it without it having to be in a faith-promoting context.
As far as raising my children, I was at a loss for a long time. My family heritage is in Mormonism. When I was growing up, the fact my ancestors were principal characters in the origin of Mormonism gave me a great sense of pride and self. I didn't know what to replace it with, and hubby was still in the church so the issue of our children was a sticky point, to say the least. I worried incessantly about how my loss of belief would translate into my children's lives, their social structure, their feelings of self worth, etc. And since I knew nothing but Mormonism, I bumped around in the dark to try and replace these things outside of the religion. It was challenging. It still is challenging.
2. How do you feel now towards the church?
I am surrounded by Mormons. My family is also heavily steeped. I feel isolated sometimes. Whenever I get a call from a neighbor, I am distrusting of why they are interested in being my friend because I suspect I am an assigned task somewhere on a sheet at the church building. I hate that. I still feel guarded when discussing anything with this group. I am a people person and understand where the churchy people are in my life. At the same time I realize they have no idea where I am at and this saddens me because I think I'm a pretty good person and I know that this one fact that I have abandoned Mormonism is one that would cause people to reject me regardless of how good a person I might be. It's disappointing on all levels. I also think my feelings about church doctrine and origins and culture are about the same as they were when I left. Thumbs down.
I've never found Mormonism amusing. I took it seriously when I was in it. It has caused me much grief in my life. For instance, here I am, over a decade of losing belief in Mormonism, talking about Mormonism. Talk about a waste. The only upshot is that I have found people who have also walked this rocky trail and we can commiserate together. Still, I would like to imagine a world without Mormonism in it.
"I think one of the great mysteries of the gospel is that anyone still believes it." Sethbag, MADB, Feb 22 2008