Drafting letter to parents
Posted: Wed Jun 14, 2017 9:54 am
I was inspired by a recent post on Reddit (https://www.reddit.com/r/exmormon/comme ... the_email/) and used it as a framework (along with some other similar posts) to start drafting something to my parents. To be fair, I outright stole large portions of it. It's really good, imo.
My wife is awesome but is also still a nuanced TBM, so I don't know if it's right to ask her to review before I send, or if this is just something purely between my parents and me. I don't know that I'm in any hurry to send this, but my Mom is visiting in a week and each of my parents have been getting more inquisitive and pushy lately, so I kind of think I need to have it ready.
It's probably too long. But I really feel the need to say everything here. If you're so inclined, I'd love some feedback from a (relatively) objective crowd.
Dearest Mother and Father,
I hope all is well. I really enjoyed having Dad come out to visit recently, and I can't wait for Mom's trip either.
About a year ago, I took off the garments for good, and after a brief period of thought toward middle-way Mormonism, I determined that it is healthiest for me to no longer be affiliated with the church. This was after years of introspection and reflection, a lifetime of cognitive dissonance and discomfort, and an ever-growing revulsion to the church's policy added to the handbook in November 2015 regarding the children of gay parents.
I almost wrote and sent this email at that time as well as several other times throughout the last year, but decided that it would be good to wait. I figured that since you hadn't asked, maybe you didn't want to know. I also figured that my spiritual path is nobody's business but my own. But you both have been asking questions lately, so it's time to set the record straight.
It's important to note that I am well past the point of re-conversion. I could write a lengthy book about all the reasons I left the church. In this email, I think it would be fruitless to share many of those reasons, as it only opens the opportunity for debate. We could sit down and discuss points of the church endlessly, and you could not change my mind – exactly like I could never change your minds. Suffice to say that there is not just one reason I have chosen to leave the church: the reasons span modern and historical actions, doctrinal and cultural issues, financial and political concerns, and my personal experiences, observations, and beliefs.
The church made me feel pressured to be perfect, and whenever I fell short of perfection (i.e., always), I felt hopeless, lost, unhappy. I felt badly all the time for believing things I was told not to believe and not believing things I was told to believe – but belief is involuntary! It feels absurd to me that I spent so much of my life depressed over something that I had no control over. I have never fit into the cookie-cutter mold at church, and the more I tried, the worse I felt.
Mom, Dad: I want you to know that I love you very much. Part of the reason I took so long to tell you is to protect you from the heartbreak of a child leaving the church. I know that the doctrine of the LDS church teaches that the most serious consequences come to those that have gone to the temple and held the priesthood and then choose to reject it. I know that the church, at one time, taught that if parents are worthy enough that all of their children will return to the fold. I don't believe that either of those teachings hold any truth, but rather that they exist simply to create loyalty to the church. The church emphasizes eternal families but rejects those who go on a different path, claiming it has the "one and true path." These teachings do nothing but divide the family unit, not to mention their implications regarding the 99.99986 percent of people in history who have not been Mormon.
I hope that you choose to accept me for who I am. I know you probably think I can never find "true happiness" without being a part of the church. I find it to be quite the opposite. I have found great joy in pursuing other interests, learning about philosophies such as secular Buddhism and classical stoicism, and developing new talents. I no longer dread Sundays, a dread that for my whole life made Fridays and Saturdays bittersweet due to the upcoming church block. The suicidal ideation that came and went throughout my teens and twenties and became interminable last year is gone – instead, I feel a drive to live and learn and grow like I have never felt before. After removing the garments and not forcing myself to wear a second layer at all times, I actually started to like living in Florida! I feel spiritual confirmation regularly by studying things that are meaningful to me – spiritual confirmation I never felt in the church.
[Wife] has been wonderfully kind and supportive during my faith transition. While she still believes, she respects my right to follow my own path just as I respect her right to follow hers. [Son] will grow up in a mixed-faith home, and that's okay. I will be open with him about my disbelief, and that's okay too. If he chooses the path of Mormonism, it will be a choice he makes among other alternatives, which will be so much more meaningful to him than the non-choice I was given.
I am sorry that many parts of this email may seem harsh, but I want to be straightforward with you. You both deserve to know the truth.
I respect your devotion to the church. I will not seek to de-convert family members, and I hope you all will extend me the same courtesy. It only makes me withdraw from the family to suggest that I haven't studied enough, or spoken to the right person, or prayed hard enough. I have done all these things and more, including careful study of the primary sources (https://www.lds.org/topics/essays?lang=eng) Mom wants me to pay attention to – sources which outright contradict decades of Sunday School and and specific things I was taught in the years of Institute classes I attended. Everything I have learned and continue to learn further strengthens my resolve that the church does not provide spiritual sustenance for me:
"Why spend money on what is not bread,
and your labor on what does not satisfy?
Listen, listen to me, and eat what is good,
and you will delight in the richest of fare."
Isaiah 55:2
The church was not helping me to become a more moral or happy person, but rather had me in a spiral of boredom, depression, and anger. This burden was lifted from me when I chose to disassociate myself. Since that time, I have found myself energized and excited in ways that I didn't realize were possible within the confines of the church. I have indeed found the scripture above to be manifest in my life.
This is very difficult to tell you. I'm scared you'll think less of me, or that you'll talk badly about me with other family members. "Talking badly" doesn't just refer to saying mean or negative things, but also gossiping condescendingly about my choices as if I don't have my own thoughts, feelings, and agency; undermining me to my son because I have different metaphysical beliefs; discussing or planning ways to get me back into the church; using anything bad that happens in my life as a cudgel by claiming it as proof that I shouldn't have left the church; cheapening anything good that happens in my life by implying it would be somehow better if I were in the church; or any other passive-aggressive or unkind comment about choices I have made based on my convictions, beliefs, and personal quest for truth.
I love you both very much. I couldn't be more thankful that I get to call you my parents. I appreciate more than ever the sacrifices you made raising me. Feel free to share this with other family members if you want to.
Love, your son,
[Enoch]
My wife is awesome but is also still a nuanced TBM, so I don't know if it's right to ask her to review before I send, or if this is just something purely between my parents and me. I don't know that I'm in any hurry to send this, but my Mom is visiting in a week and each of my parents have been getting more inquisitive and pushy lately, so I kind of think I need to have it ready.
It's probably too long. But I really feel the need to say everything here. If you're so inclined, I'd love some feedback from a (relatively) objective crowd.
Dearest Mother and Father,
I hope all is well. I really enjoyed having Dad come out to visit recently, and I can't wait for Mom's trip either.
About a year ago, I took off the garments for good, and after a brief period of thought toward middle-way Mormonism, I determined that it is healthiest for me to no longer be affiliated with the church. This was after years of introspection and reflection, a lifetime of cognitive dissonance and discomfort, and an ever-growing revulsion to the church's policy added to the handbook in November 2015 regarding the children of gay parents.
I almost wrote and sent this email at that time as well as several other times throughout the last year, but decided that it would be good to wait. I figured that since you hadn't asked, maybe you didn't want to know. I also figured that my spiritual path is nobody's business but my own. But you both have been asking questions lately, so it's time to set the record straight.
It's important to note that I am well past the point of re-conversion. I could write a lengthy book about all the reasons I left the church. In this email, I think it would be fruitless to share many of those reasons, as it only opens the opportunity for debate. We could sit down and discuss points of the church endlessly, and you could not change my mind – exactly like I could never change your minds. Suffice to say that there is not just one reason I have chosen to leave the church: the reasons span modern and historical actions, doctrinal and cultural issues, financial and political concerns, and my personal experiences, observations, and beliefs.
The church made me feel pressured to be perfect, and whenever I fell short of perfection (i.e., always), I felt hopeless, lost, unhappy. I felt badly all the time for believing things I was told not to believe and not believing things I was told to believe – but belief is involuntary! It feels absurd to me that I spent so much of my life depressed over something that I had no control over. I have never fit into the cookie-cutter mold at church, and the more I tried, the worse I felt.
Mom, Dad: I want you to know that I love you very much. Part of the reason I took so long to tell you is to protect you from the heartbreak of a child leaving the church. I know that the doctrine of the LDS church teaches that the most serious consequences come to those that have gone to the temple and held the priesthood and then choose to reject it. I know that the church, at one time, taught that if parents are worthy enough that all of their children will return to the fold. I don't believe that either of those teachings hold any truth, but rather that they exist simply to create loyalty to the church. The church emphasizes eternal families but rejects those who go on a different path, claiming it has the "one and true path." These teachings do nothing but divide the family unit, not to mention their implications regarding the 99.99986 percent of people in history who have not been Mormon.
I hope that you choose to accept me for who I am. I know you probably think I can never find "true happiness" without being a part of the church. I find it to be quite the opposite. I have found great joy in pursuing other interests, learning about philosophies such as secular Buddhism and classical stoicism, and developing new talents. I no longer dread Sundays, a dread that for my whole life made Fridays and Saturdays bittersweet due to the upcoming church block. The suicidal ideation that came and went throughout my teens and twenties and became interminable last year is gone – instead, I feel a drive to live and learn and grow like I have never felt before. After removing the garments and not forcing myself to wear a second layer at all times, I actually started to like living in Florida! I feel spiritual confirmation regularly by studying things that are meaningful to me – spiritual confirmation I never felt in the church.
[Wife] has been wonderfully kind and supportive during my faith transition. While she still believes, she respects my right to follow my own path just as I respect her right to follow hers. [Son] will grow up in a mixed-faith home, and that's okay. I will be open with him about my disbelief, and that's okay too. If he chooses the path of Mormonism, it will be a choice he makes among other alternatives, which will be so much more meaningful to him than the non-choice I was given.
I am sorry that many parts of this email may seem harsh, but I want to be straightforward with you. You both deserve to know the truth.
I respect your devotion to the church. I will not seek to de-convert family members, and I hope you all will extend me the same courtesy. It only makes me withdraw from the family to suggest that I haven't studied enough, or spoken to the right person, or prayed hard enough. I have done all these things and more, including careful study of the primary sources (https://www.lds.org/topics/essays?lang=eng) Mom wants me to pay attention to – sources which outright contradict decades of Sunday School and and specific things I was taught in the years of Institute classes I attended. Everything I have learned and continue to learn further strengthens my resolve that the church does not provide spiritual sustenance for me:
"Why spend money on what is not bread,
and your labor on what does not satisfy?
Listen, listen to me, and eat what is good,
and you will delight in the richest of fare."
Isaiah 55:2
The church was not helping me to become a more moral or happy person, but rather had me in a spiral of boredom, depression, and anger. This burden was lifted from me when I chose to disassociate myself. Since that time, I have found myself energized and excited in ways that I didn't realize were possible within the confines of the church. I have indeed found the scripture above to be manifest in my life.
This is very difficult to tell you. I'm scared you'll think less of me, or that you'll talk badly about me with other family members. "Talking badly" doesn't just refer to saying mean or negative things, but also gossiping condescendingly about my choices as if I don't have my own thoughts, feelings, and agency; undermining me to my son because I have different metaphysical beliefs; discussing or planning ways to get me back into the church; using anything bad that happens in my life as a cudgel by claiming it as proof that I shouldn't have left the church; cheapening anything good that happens in my life by implying it would be somehow better if I were in the church; or any other passive-aggressive or unkind comment about choices I have made based on my convictions, beliefs, and personal quest for truth.
I love you both very much. I couldn't be more thankful that I get to call you my parents. I appreciate more than ever the sacrifices you made raising me. Feel free to share this with other family members if you want to.
Love, your son,
[Enoch]