liz3564 wrote:Being non believing and active isn't anymore confusing than being believing and inactive.
Liz with the win!
H.
liz3564 wrote:Being non believing and active isn't anymore confusing than being believing and inactive.
zeezrom wrote:by the way Just Me, I agree that it's hard. It also seems the challenges will never end.
Have you ever seen the show Cake Boss? The owners and employees of this cake business are all in a very close family. They argue and bicker and scream at each other sometimes but they love and support each other. Family is everything to them. When I watch it, I'm sad to think that my family isn't like that. There is too much "hoping for conversion" that gets in the way. Too much silence. Too much being said while we aren't in each other's faces. We think we are so different from each other now but we really aren't. I know. It feels different because we don't wear garments like you do. But dad, that really isn't who you are. Can't we just look at who we are?
Jersey Girl wrote:zeezrom wrote:by the way Just Me, I agree that it's hard. It also seems the challenges will never end.
Have you ever seen the show Cake Boss? The owners and employees of this cake business are all in a very close family. They argue and bicker and scream at each other sometimes but they love and support each other. Family is everything to them. When I watch it, I'm sad to think that my family isn't like that. There is too much "hoping for conversion" that gets in the way. Too much silence. Too much being said while we aren't in each other's faces. We think we are so different from each other now but we really aren't. I know. It feels different because we don't wear garments like you do. But dad, that really isn't who you are. Can't we just look at who we are?
Of course they argue, bicker, scream, love and support each other. Of course family is everything to them.
They're from Jersey.
:-)
LDSToronto wrote:Jersey Girl wrote:
Of course they argue, bicker, scream, love and support each other. Of course family is everything to them.
They're from Jersey.
:-)
That's still no excuse for the flagrant misuse of fondant.
H.
LDSToronto wrote:That's still no excuse for the flagrant misuse of fondant.
H.
why me wrote:Darth J wrote:
Maybe she should weight. Maybe she is board with church.
As soon as I posted my post, I saw my mistake and corrected it. I didn't realize that you were marshall Matt Dillion. Fast on the draw.
just me wrote:I just can't believe I started this journey somewhere around 3 years ago. The cog-dis began around the time of Prop8 for unrelated reasons. I stopped believing totally at least 2 years ago. Now it seems like time has gone by so fast and here I am, finally getting ready to take my leap of faith off the edge of the known and into the unknown. I've sometimes been frustrated with myself, watching others take a much quicker exit from the church. I was happy with my pace in the early stages, but now not so much.
Life is a lot more exhilarating and complicated without the church to tell me what to do. I get to actually think about things myself now. But, in another way, it is more simple. I don't have to worry about utterly stupid crap.
The funny thing about humans is that no matter how awesome we are, we are also messy and sloppy. We make choices and sometimes we like the results and sometimes we don't. Whose to say that those choices were "wrong" or "right?" They just lead to different experiences and no matter the outcome those experiences become part of us.
I've been told that what I have done is selfish and that I am damaged. It's not okay, what I did. Not to my family. Not to my church family. Thinking for myself and doing things that are good for me is the highest offense. The hurtful things they have said were said out of love and concern, of course. That doesn't make it hurt less.
This has truly been my Refiner's Fire. I will never be the same person I was. I don't want to be. I have been made a new creature. I have broken the bonds and I am free.
The most treasured things I have learned from my journey are these few things:
*God/ess is within me and within each person
*To see the face of god/ess is to truly see myself
*When we serve others, we serve god/ess
*God/ess is love
*Life is precious and precarious and fleeting-live your personal truth
Doing this...doing this is hard. Staying in the church is hard. Leaving the church is hard. Everyone has to follow their own heart, their own path. Live the life you were meant to live. Help people along the way, if you can.
You know the kite story that gets told in church sometimes? The one where the kite can only fly as long as it is tethered by the string? The string is supposed to be the commandments and church and all that. Well, my old kite string was all knotted and tangled and short. Kite strings can be replaced. I found a better one. It is longer, stronger and the fibers are smooth and tangle resistant. I added some more ribbons to the tail, too. Just because I can.
Tarski wrote:
Yet you can't catch on to the fact that your avatar is not visible to the rest of us even though this has been pointed out repeatedly. Reload it!
PS: You also can't catch on to the fact that Joseph Smith was a fraud.
liz3564 wrote:
If it isn't too intrusive to ask...You mentioned that your husband is very strong TBM, and your children are all still actively attending. How is that working? Does your husband feel abandoned taking the kids by himself? You have small children, right?
Have you been able to talk to your husband about your doctrinal concerns? Is he supportive in your choice?