Did your wife/husband/parents/children mourn?
Posted: Sat May 05, 2018 6:33 pm
We get pretty hung up on our own losses when we're in the thick of a faith crisis. Honestly, I'm not sure there's any other way to be. Half of your identity gets torn away... yeah that's painful and disorienting.
So here's something I noticed about my wife. She's been really accepting of my faith transition. I think this is related to how, early on - the first day I recognized my faith crisis for what it was - we talked about her losses. She's accepted and mourned them. There were a lot: loss of ease of teaching the gospel to the children, loss of spiritual intimacy (though that one has been coming back now that I'm much less triggery), loss of certainty, and many, many changed expectations.
My parents, on the other hand... well, I haven't told them yet that I'm out. Different country, haven't had to. Also, when two of my siblings left the church a few years apart, they didn't take it well either time. Lots of blaming, calling to repentance, that sort of thing. My mom still can't have a conversation with my sister 10 years later without making some passive-aggressive remark. And it's got me wondering whether my parents have been denying or resisting their losses.
It sort of reminds me of what often happens after a faith crisis, when the person is experiencing profound grief but doesn't know it. I can't count the number of times I've read "I'm always either so angry or depressed" and someone replies "Those are stages of grief, bro."
So here's my question. Think of someone close you've told about your faith transition, who experienced losses of some kind because of it. Did they accept and mourn their losses, or deny or resist them? What affect do you think this might have had on your relationship?
So here's something I noticed about my wife. She's been really accepting of my faith transition. I think this is related to how, early on - the first day I recognized my faith crisis for what it was - we talked about her losses. She's accepted and mourned them. There were a lot: loss of ease of teaching the gospel to the children, loss of spiritual intimacy (though that one has been coming back now that I'm much less triggery), loss of certainty, and many, many changed expectations.
My parents, on the other hand... well, I haven't told them yet that I'm out. Different country, haven't had to. Also, when two of my siblings left the church a few years apart, they didn't take it well either time. Lots of blaming, calling to repentance, that sort of thing. My mom still can't have a conversation with my sister 10 years later without making some passive-aggressive remark. And it's got me wondering whether my parents have been denying or resisting their losses.
It sort of reminds me of what often happens after a faith crisis, when the person is experiencing profound grief but doesn't know it. I can't count the number of times I've read "I'm always either so angry or depressed" and someone replies "Those are stages of grief, bro."
So here's my question. Think of someone close you've told about your faith transition, who experienced losses of some kind because of it. Did they accept and mourn their losses, or deny or resist them? What affect do you think this might have had on your relationship?