Garrett - "What did you become after leaving Jehovah's Witnesses?"
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by Garrett 26 Replies latest jw friends
Garrett - "What did you become after leaving Jehovah's Witnesses?"
Free.
I was an evangelical, bible-believing, born-again, saved, washed-in-the-blood, adopted, son of god, praaaaaaise Jeeeeebus, christian for nine years.
Then I started reading books.
Hi Garrett. My husband and I left twenty-six years ago. We were Christians for two years but not churchgoers. Then my husband did lots of research on evolution and he even wrote a book about it. The publisher said he needed a science background to publish a science book so he started the physics degree he had always wanted to do.
I started a degree in European history. Within a year we had both stopped believing in God. My husband became a chartered physicist but dropped the book idea because it was based on theistic evolution.
It was in his will he wanted a non-religious funeral, he died at age fifty-four six years ago. I am an atheist but I think there is a lot of evidence for conscious existence after death. We got here without a god so I don't think any further stage of evolution has any need for a god or anything supernatural. This was something I first started reading about 23 years ago when I came across a book about it in a second-hand book shop, much to my surprise. I am still open-minded, nothing is set in stone.
Garrett,
I went back to school, finished a bachelor's degree i had quit due to the Dark Lords' influence, then got an MBA and am currently pursing a PhD.
I became a better father and leader, finished raising my two amazingly beautiful and successful brats - both of whom I am completely crazy stupid close to.
I became a better employee.
I traveled extensively, began collecting ex-girlfriends, art, and a grand assortment of real, close friends.
I volunteered and served as chair to two separate organizations for several years.
I became an adjunct professor at two colleges, a very rewarding experience.
I began seeing the world as it is; removing the black/white goggles that I had put on to mimic the Dark Lords' pharisaical teachings revealed a complex, complicated, beautiful and beautifully flawed world full of grey. As a result, I lost my judgmental nature and developed a liberal tolerance for the differences in people.
The term "religioned out " best describes my position since leaving that lot 20 years ago.
Bill