Lessons Learned
Posted: Thu Sep 21, 2017 8:27 pm
The hour I first believed the church wasn't true was about 6 years ago. As some of you have noticed, I just resigned a couple weeks ago. NOM has been my support group of choice throughout this whole process and I have over a thousand posts on the old site. Resigning probably makes me not a NOM now so I should probably fade here. However I wanted to share some things that I have learned through this process.
Tell your wife and kids early. You will change as you go through this process and they should be kept up to date so they can change with you. If you change by yourself and then someday you lose it and burst out "Joseph Smith was a manipulative pedofile! I'm out!" It won't go over well. But if they learned and changed along with you, it will go much better. Allow your wife and kids to choose for themselves. Don't break yourself against their desire/need to believe this stuff.
Don't argue with people about theology. These arguments are pointless and you are discussing things that are made-up anyway. Nobody wins and your friendships suffer. You can share undisputed facts if you wish, but don't provide an interpretation. People are believers because they want or need to be. Let them believe. You won't change the world.
Take care of yourself. Draw boundaries and don't let people control you. You can just say no.
I used to think NOMdom was sustainable. I now think that is true for only a rare few folks unless you can retain at least some of your faith. Go slow, but not too slow.
As soon as you stop going to church, you will gain the apathy that you so desire. You will be back here frequently to vent the more you expose yourself to the craziness.
You will lose the respect of some people you care about. It is pretty much unavoidable. Just realize this and try to be OK with it.
Don't kick yourself out of your community by banishing yourself. You have done nothing wrong and don't need to feel ashamed for attending church functions, going up to talk to members of the ward, or continuing your Mormon friendships. They can get used to diversity. Continue to invite them over and go serve them. Hold your head high, and laugh, and be kind with these people. Just avoid talking about religion and politics. It isn't that hard.
Do what makes sense for you. Even if garments aren't magic and are kind of silly, you can still wear them so that people won't judge you. There is no harm in that. We do lots of things that make no sense except to help us fit in.
OK. What lessons have you learned?
Tell your wife and kids early. You will change as you go through this process and they should be kept up to date so they can change with you. If you change by yourself and then someday you lose it and burst out "Joseph Smith was a manipulative pedofile! I'm out!" It won't go over well. But if they learned and changed along with you, it will go much better. Allow your wife and kids to choose for themselves. Don't break yourself against their desire/need to believe this stuff.
Don't argue with people about theology. These arguments are pointless and you are discussing things that are made-up anyway. Nobody wins and your friendships suffer. You can share undisputed facts if you wish, but don't provide an interpretation. People are believers because they want or need to be. Let them believe. You won't change the world.
Take care of yourself. Draw boundaries and don't let people control you. You can just say no.
I used to think NOMdom was sustainable. I now think that is true for only a rare few folks unless you can retain at least some of your faith. Go slow, but not too slow.
As soon as you stop going to church, you will gain the apathy that you so desire. You will be back here frequently to vent the more you expose yourself to the craziness.
You will lose the respect of some people you care about. It is pretty much unavoidable. Just realize this and try to be OK with it.
Don't kick yourself out of your community by banishing yourself. You have done nothing wrong and don't need to feel ashamed for attending church functions, going up to talk to members of the ward, or continuing your Mormon friendships. They can get used to diversity. Continue to invite them over and go serve them. Hold your head high, and laugh, and be kind with these people. Just avoid talking about religion and politics. It isn't that hard.
Do what makes sense for you. Even if garments aren't magic and are kind of silly, you can still wear them so that people won't judge you. There is no harm in that. We do lots of things that make no sense except to help us fit in.
OK. What lessons have you learned?