How miserable are Witless Kids REALLY?

by hamsterbait 43 Replies latest jw friends

  • Nowman
    Nowman

    I was a miserable witness kid, but I have always tried to make the best of things which is part of my personality. But, being 36 now, and having 3 kids of my own, I definitely see that it was alot harder than I thought growing up JW, but like some had said, you do it because its all you know. When I got older, I saw more, and then eventually left cold heartedly, really did not have a choice. I longed to go to school to have some relief of the pressure from my parents, school was my freedom. I was not allowed to hang w/kids from school, which really sucked acutally.

    Nikki

  • parakeet
    parakeet

    Certainly they were maladjusted. Some of them had the social skills of a nine year old. Why was this?

    1. Not allowed to "associate" with worldly kids, except to "witness" to them.

    2. Not allowed to participate in holiday activities at school.

    3. Not allowed to salute the flag or sing national anthem.

    4. Other students see you as weird, antisocial, and unpatriotic, prompting them to ridicule you whenever they can. Sometimes the teachers joined them.

    How's that for miserable?

    And that was just at school. At home, there was another whole world of misery, which I will detail for you if you're not yet convinced.

  • OUTLAW
    OUTLAW

    My life as a JW Kid was frigg`in Miserable..

    I was continueously "told" how happy I was..

    Disagreeing was not an option..Unless I wanted to be Beaten Happy..

    Asshole JW parents!!..

    ................................ ...OUTLAW

  • Magwitch
    Magwitch

    Funny how we were taught how lucky we were that we received presents all year long - not just on Christmas and Birthdays. I do not ever remember getting a present any time of the year.

  • cantleave
    cantleave

    Life as a witless kids is hell. Seen as weird by your peers at school and perfection expected from the Cult. When a kid plays by the cult rules they can find friends and a social life, but they know it is conditional. Any witless kid that leads a double life is racked with guilt and that adds to the misery.

  • mrsjones5
    mrsjones5

    "The one thing I’m incredibly grateful for (is I) NEVER GOT BAPTISED!"

    Ditto!

  • readyornot
    readyornot

    I lead a double life as a witless kid. Most of my memories are blocked and that's exactly where I want to leave them.

  • jdhf
    jdhf

    My 2 daughters told me tonight that i was really strict with them..until recently and they do understand why i was like that, but they said that now i'm COOL!!! 15 and 12 year old girls think mum is cool...great. I told my sister today that I'm leaving for good, and she said...GREAT! She said I joined when i was vulnerable and i agree. Most i know that joined were the same. I'm glad my girls didn't get baptized though. My daughter's 13 on 29th March and she wants a big fat juicy chocolate cake with triple fudge. And boy is she gonna get it! She was initially devestated but now is really happy....i still have to pick up the pieces, but will get there. My girls hated the isolation and taunts, but fought it well and have come out the other side. glad i got the TRUTH now and not in 10 years time....thanks leoking! x

  • pmljohn
    pmljohn

    How miserable was my childhood? To be honest, I can't remember a lot of it. I attribute that to the massive double life that I led, from a very early age. I led that double life because of all the restrictions that my Witness parents placed upon my sister and I. We were not allowed to do any of the things that all of us that grew up Witnesses know we were not allowed to do. No "wordly" friends. No school activities outside of regular class. No sports. No dances. No video games. No Van Halen. No Led Zep. Hell, there was a time where I was not allowed to have a Talking Heads album, because dad thought it was a euphamism for a talking penis. Really!!

    All these restrictions, with little substance backing up the reasons for not being allowed to do these things, resulted in my leading of a double life. When I went to school, I was "wordly." When I was at home or at meetings, I was the best freakin' elder's kid you ever saw. I actually made it all the way to Ministerial Servant, giving public talks to the congregation, when the night before I was at a club, drinking and macking on women. I had a fake ID from the time I was 16. My cousins and I lived together in a big house that was basically our version of Animal House. Beer cans, posters, black lights, mess all over, and yes, girls hanging around from time to time. We ran wild, but we kept it so down-low that no one was the wise. It was fun, or so I thought.

    As I grew older (18-22), I started feeling guilty. Guilty not because I was violating JW rules, but guilty because I was fooling so many people, myself included. I felt bad for living the JW part of my double life. I felt bad telling people what they could not do, when I was out there doing it all. I felt bad when I saw families torn apart by this crazy religion, parents kicking their kids out for being kids, husbands getting shunned and wives stuck in love-less marriages, all because of JW rules. Rules designed to keep the masses down, keep them quiet, keep them unquestioning. It sickened me. But I was a coward. My dad was a big shot in the organization. My uncle was a CO. My family was JW, thru and thru. So I continued leading that double life, into my first marriage and all the way into my late 20's. Eventually I came to my senses. Eventually I saw and heard enough to put my foot down, for myself, and get out. I just left. And guess what?? Very few people seemed to care. Of course my family did/do. They try to "encourage" me, showing me articles and scriptures from time to time, all with the intent of getting me back in the fold. I ended up getting divorced and re-married. I have a son and step-daughter. Her dad is a new JW. I am scared to death of her having to even deal with a bit of what I had to deal with. Fortunately she only goes to his home for the summers, and I have been laying the groundwork to show her, very clearly, why that path is not the right way. And she seems to see it. Despite wanting to please her dad, she see's that what she would lose, is way more important than what she would ever gain.

    So, growing up JW, for me, was kind of tough. But it was tough in different ways. I have seen and heard so many horrible stories in my life, all related to being JW. The lack of balance is amazing. The mind control is sickening. I feel for every young person and new adult that becomes or is forced to be a part of this cult. I have a happy, single track life now. I have not led a double life for years now. And my sanity is in place, I feel good and I am happy. And my family is happy. That is what I imagine a loving god would want for his creations. Not what JW's think and preach.

    With all that said, I have to complain. Over and over again I read posting from some who do, in my estimation, a dis-service to all of us ex-JW's. There are some who continue to use childish, stupid wording like "Jehova Witless, Washtowel Slaveholdery, Witchtowel, Pio-sneer," and the list goes on and on. WHY?? How do you think that looks to those JW's, some who might be on the cusp of realizing that they are on the wrong path? If you were going to apply for a job at a company that used wording like that, about themselves or others, you would pass. You would move on. You would probably point out how immature such a company was to use words like that. So why use them in your postings? Do you think it makes things better? No, it doesn't. In fact, it de-legitimizes the work that so many of us are trying to perform, that is to save people from this cult. Grow up. Use your adult words. You are angry, perhaps. But try and act like a legitmate adult who cares about what people think of our group, just as we care about how people think of their group. JW's will use any excuse to walk away from sites like this, and juvenile wording will do the trick.

    Thanks for reading, and have a great day!

  • ldrnomo
    ldrnomo

    pmljohn:

    This was really a good post. I totally understand what you are saying in your last paragraph. I have been guilty of using some of those terms myself. Thanks for making me aware of possible consequences. I also appreciated your experience growing up a JW. It makes me very mad as a parent to know that I was also like that in some ways to my son.

    LD

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