I didn't read all the replies, but glossed over them. I promise to read them all eventually.
I could start by saying "Read COMBATTING CULT MIND CONTROL, RELEASING THE BONDS,
CRISIS OF CONSCIENCE, IN SEARCH OF CHRISTIAN FREEDOM, CAPTIVES OF A CONCEPT.
Do all that reading to discover that you are not wrong to get out and get your kids out of WTS."
I could start by saying that WTS implants fears in children, fears greater than your "What if we're
wrong?" fear for their sakes.
Let's just (for the sake of this argument) say "What if we actually were wrong and WTS was right?"
WTS keeps changing their own doctrines to show that they don't know what God's will is. IF God
is love, He's not planning on killing 99.9% of humanity because they didn't recognize that JW's had
the "right" religion. God would have to truly give each individual the ability to recognize true worship,
and He would have to forgive throngs of people who were never raised or converted to JW-ism because
of their location or circumstances, but were basically zealous good people. WTS would eventually
have to acknowledge that throngs of non-JW's must survive along with JW's. If I am wrong about that,
then I would rather not serve that God. Death would just be nonexistence, so I would be better off
not existing rather than serve a God who killed innocent children.
Depression is a serious thing. If you don't have a doctor, get one. You can start out at a general
practition doctor until you find a good counselor. If money is tight, check with government and
college programs or ask at a Narcotics Anonymous (or A.A. center) how to find low cost or free
counseling. Consider going to an emergency room before doing anything drastic.
Don't let any JW family convince you to go back to WTS without seeing a doctor or counselor first.
Don't let a JW make you fret over your children. They are in more danger from
well-intentioned JW's influence than from a loving, caring parent who teaches them to think for
themselves and pursue an education. Flipper is one good guy to call if you need someone to talk to.
I was suicidal many many years ago. I was seeking help in a bottle of booze. I wound up in a hospital
instead. After observation, I was enrolled in an Alcoholic program that helped me face my past and how
I got where I got. I won't say I have never been depressed since then, but I have never been so hopeless.
Even learning that WTS is a mind-control cult didn't make me consider suicide, but I did slip a bit and
returned to the bottle. I went back to A.A.. There's also Narcotics Anonymous. My ex-brother-in-law
went to that for 10 years or more until he died (heart thing, unrelated). He loved it. He went to their
parties and made good friends.