by the way, all these exit tales have a sort of a Paul H. Dunnish quality about them.......
Actually, they have a kind of 1070s Kung Fu movie feel to them. Many of those films were (including at Shaw Brothers, the largest film community in the world outside of Hollywood at the time), were actually written by small committee, which is why so many of them have standardized, formatted plots, plot points, and characters. They were genre films with a set, preformatted range of plots, relationships, and themes. An evil Kung Fu master kills our hero's master during a duel. Our hero, a tiny baby, is left unattended, and later found by an old, rag-tag wandering Kung Fu master to takes him away into the mountains and teaches him his special technique. Our hero grows up and vows revenge. Final fight lasts 15 minutes, and his master and honer is, indeed, avenged. The End.
In like manner, many of the LDS exit stories, and certainly most that I've ever read, are most definitely part of what appears to be a standardized genre; they contain a number of similar, formatted elements and themes, and can be very much alike down even to fine details. All one has to do, if one wants a ready made exist tale, is to slightly modify and personalize one of those already in circulation.
Based on Lydia and Boaz's posting history thus far, I'm pretty satisfied that, whoever these people are (or whoever this person is), there is no possibility of taking anything they claim regarding themselves or their membership in the Church with any degree of seriousness.
If these people are actually adults, they clearly have other problems, emotional and psychological, more in need of attention than their personal animus toward a Church of which they very obviously have little knowledge.
The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.
- Thomas S. Monson