stemelbow wrote:just me wrote:Well, I don't have much advice. Other than showing an increase in love and perhaps making changes slowly.
In my experience, and reading those of others, as soon as your spouse knows you don't believe or seriously doubt your feelings and opinions on all things religion, spirit, moral and scriptures will be void. You are automatically wrong as soon as you open your mouth, more or less. You will be talked about and in less than flattering terms. You are a tool of satan and have lost the spirit.
I don't know if its fair to assume his wife is this way at all. If you go into it thinking your spouse will respond thusly, then you probably aren't going to go into in the right spirit, I'd assume. better safely go into it without assuming that your spouse will behave poorly than go into it assumign your spouse will be really bad like this.
I didn't assume his wife would react this way.
Winston, I have gotten the same reaction from my H, my mom and my bishop and at least one of my SIL. My dad was much more open and accepting, I think because he is a convert.
I've been told I am a tool of the devil, not the same person, damaged, in need of professional counseling, a covenant breaker, lost the spirit, a bad mother, selfish, etc, etc.
I am just trying to give you a heads-up for how it very likely will go down. Most of these not-so-nice things are said out of misguided love and caring...and fear. I understand that. It doesn't mean that it doesn't hurt and damage relationships.
The other spouse also very often becomes more hardcore about the church. They will pray more, read scriptures and DesBooks more, they will go to the temple more, hold family home evening more, etc. You may find yourself excluded from blessings and other family spiritual events without even being asked if you would like to join in.
I would guess many spouses would indeed rely heavily on their spiritual experience as the measure of what to believe. I do not think most spouses will treat the other with contempt or attempt to exclude anyone from anything. But when a spouse who relies heavily on the spiritual is treated poorly by the spouse who thinks such is all fairy tales then there's a problem. By all means, Winston, don't do that.
I'm speaking from my own experience. I'm hoping that Winston has the reading comprehension skills to understand that.
Basically, it sucks. And if the main reason a couple got married is because they share the LDS faith in common.....it doesn't bode well. If that was the main thing in common and then it is lost without other things to fall back on the relationship is essentially gone.
Its a big thing--religion. A Change in religion amounts to a lot of changes in life. That's why I realize this is a big deal. It'd be tough.
Yes, yes it is. And marital love is not unconditional.
Winston, I wanted to add that I would recommend refraining from making any promises. For example, my H would ask me if I was going to leave the church, I told him I didn't know, my beliefs changed so much in such a short period of time I didn't know what the future would hold. Also, I recommend not promising to "raise the children LDS" and don't promise to keep your beliefs secret from them. A lot of spouses do try to get the non-believer to promise to keep their mouth shut around the kids.