Wow. The "drama and self-absorption of a Mormon parent," indeed. That sounds just awful.annie wrote:My mother called and read this article to me as she sobbed on the phone. And then she apologized for not raising me with a strong enough testimony.
I have not had any of my very TBM family do anything like that to me; however, I have had some of them ask me why I left. My response has always been I'd be glad to tell them if they're really interested, but if their goal is to convince me to reconvert, then I choose not to discuss it. Only one of them said he was really interested in why, but it soon became obvious that wasn't the case, and I ended the discussion.
If someone acted with me the way you're mother did with you about leaving the Church, my response would be similar to what Chap wrote above. I'll repeat it here so you don't have to hunt for it. He's responding to a TBM's question "How do we cope with these painful feelings when family members choose to leave the Church? There are several things we can do." Chap replies:
So, I'm wondering if you could say something like the above to your mother in response to her phone call, or if you're not up to it, if she happens to call you sobbing again in the future? I just really despise this sort of manipulation (I don't doubt the pain is real, but it IS also manipulation).And one of those might be to ask yourselves [annie, this would be your mother] how it could be that those decent, loving and intelligent young people you raised [annie, this is you] might have come to the conclusion that the CoJCoLDS is one of the things they would rather leave at home when they move out into the world.
Maybe even consider the possibility that their perspective might not be completely unreasonable and perverse?
Talk with them about it, even? (As in' "Talk with them", not as in "Bear testimony at them, weep at them, lament that you must have failed as a parent, ask them why they want to break their parents' hearts" and so on.)
Elphaba