SaturdaysVoyeur wrote: ↑Wed Mar 26, 2025 12:05 am
The Stig wrote: ↑Sun Mar 23, 2025 7:25 pm
First, that was the dumbest use of the word "comorbidities" I've ever seen.
Dr. Shades wrote: ↑Mon Mar 24, 2025 7:57 am
Then by all means, suggest a word that encapsulates the concept better. I'll wait.
Coexistent. Concurrent. Simultaneous. Intersectional. Contemporaneous. Concomitant. Associated. Related. Interlinked.
Get a thesaurus, Shades.
Seven pages later and whether Kish left because he didn't "believe" in Mormonism is
still the major topic of conversation??
It's not why I left either. Not exactly. Only Mormonism itself would make literal acceptance of its truth claims the defining litmus test.
Supposedly men are more likely to leave because they realize the truth claims aren't true, while women are more likely to leave over relational and social issues. I guess 'cause men are so much more intellectual.

I suspect a lot of people stop attending for a variety reasons, and "It's not true" becomes the post-hoc, shorthand answer later, because it feels smarter. Quicker. Less personal, more superficial.
I can't even pin down one defining reason I left. I loved Young Womens and I hated Relief Society? Because in YW, we had fun
and we had long heart-to-heart talks about how to live the gospel is the best way possible, but in Relief Society, all we ever did was read yet another General Conference talk and pretend it had a depth it didn't even have the first time around?
Because I was bored?? Because once I saw the lives of the women in Relief Society up close and personal, I realized I would rather clean the bathrooms every week with my tongue than live the rest of my life that way?
Well, that sounds petty
and it doesn't make me sound smart. I better just say, "Well, of course, because it's not true."
Funny, I used to thank Heavenly Father for making me a girl, for relieving me of all those terrible responsibilities.
What I viewed as "little bonuses" at the time (that only boys got the priesthood....y'know, the little stuff) were Heavenly Father's Consolation Prizes for what I imagined as hours and hours of long and difficult work. I was also legitimately relieved that I would not be expected to go on a mission, perhaps in the same way boys might have felt relieved they would never have to go through childbirth.
In a way, you might say I left because I realized having responsibilities is a part of growing up, and the church is perpetual kindergarten. Which isn't to say that being a wife and mother isn't a ton of responsibility. (In fact, as a Mormon girl, I expected I would have many more children than I actually do, doubtless with much less help from my "priesthood holder," who would be far too busy with all those those terrible responsibilities I had been spared.)
It's perpetual kindergarten
spiritually. What fed my soul through childhood and high school no longer contained enough spiritual calories to sustain me once I reached adulthood. (I never took out my endowments, but I've heard this sense of let-down can hit all at once the first time someone goes through the temple. What bothered them wasn't so much, "This is so weird! I must be in a cult!" (which I suspect is often another post-hoc answer) but more like, "That's it? This is all there is?")
To this day, I'm not inactive because "it’s not true." I grew up surrounded by Evangelical Christians. I had more than enough exposure to the idea that Mormonism's unique narrative is not literally true.
Huh....can't think of much more to say about that. What Kish believed or didn't believe when he left isn't any of my business, really. Actually, that was another reason I left: Constant Gossip. An almost pornographic lack of personal privacy.
Chap wrote: ↑Tue Mar 18, 2025 6:06 pm
More importantly, why did the authorities of the CoJCoLDS decide to STOP it being fun? Because it looks like a conscious decision to me. Did they not realise that providing a rich, varied and totally LDS social life for its members of all ages was the best way they could tie both young and old members into the church?
Or may be they now have so much money that they just don't care if the members leave in droves?
sock puppet wrote: ↑Tue Mar 18, 2025 7:31 pm
If they can drive them all away, then the 15 will just divide up the wealth and be done with it.
I don't think this is the reason.
For one thing, the current Q15 would have to be storing up treasure for the future Q15, not for themselves. Sure, the top leaders aren't "lay clergy," but they're not living anywhere near as lavishly as the church's wealth would allow them to. And the membership wouldn't even complain! They'd let them take it. It must be Heavenly Father blessing them. The prophet said so; the debate is over!
For another, Mormonism is far from the only mega-rich religion. The Catholics are still richer, just not as rich per-capita anymore. But you can't put on a play without an audience. The Catholics accumulated an obscene amount of wealth within its first few centuries and their uppermost leadership actually do live lavishly, but they still see the benefit in maintaining a large worldwide membership.
Besides, they can't just dissolve the LDS church and divvy up the loot amongst the Brethren. The church is a 501(c)3. If they dissolved, they would be required to distribute their assets for a public purpose. Rome might have an easier time of that than Salt Lake City, since Vatican City is a country unto itself.
Most of the things that made the church fun don't cost much money either. Yet even wealthy wards have done away with most of their social calendar. The stake I grew up in still has a low enough cost-of-living and enough stay-at-home moms that the members themselves could organize fun activities and pay for it out of their own pockets.
It's almost like it's been prohibited. No fun allowed. I can't even posit a logical explanation, because as Chap pointed out, it would help keep people
in the church. Partly by tying them there. It helps ensure most of your friends and potential mates are Mormon. But mostly by creating an attractive community that people want to be a part of. There's a time I would have said that's central to the gospel. It's how the gospel is lived out on a day-to-day basis.
My only guesses are:
The Brethren post-Hickley decided to "separate the wheat from the tares." Make being a member suck and see who's
truly faithful.
or
Kirton McConkie advised them to stop due to the legal liability if someone gets injured or abused during a church-endorsed activity.
And it is comorbid with widespread public knowledge of abuse within the church.
Sorry, I couldn't think of a better word than comorbid.