@EE
First, thank for posting an answer.
its such a shame that some are so stupid and short sighted that they only see one way to handle things. their way. I sleep well at night and will continue... and maybe one day I'll take my own advice and stop clicking on these types of threads altogether.
I didn't feel Kensho was accusing anybody. Clueless, and expressing a difficulty to imagine, but not there to put guilt or whatever. Only by answers from people in your predicament can we understand the circumstances and the reasonning that can make somebody remain as an elder.
I know that I don't have a clue what's in the head of someone that remains an elder after realising TTATT. That makes me more curious. Even though I now 100% that no reason in the world could make me compromise - the strain on my way of thinking and living would outweight any bad consequences, because I've got a far too low threshold for coping with cognitive dissonance - I'm not blind and see that somebody else would make that choice, and be perfectly right for themselves. Learning their reasonning, the way they solve the cognitive dissonnance is invaluable input about others, and about myself, because we're all fellow humans.
Asking about it doesn't mean judging the other person. I only judge myself, and I've got no problem saying that I wouldn't respect myself in that situation. Yet I still respect someone else in that situation - everybody has a responsibility towards themselves and their own family. That's what comes first in life.
For example, I'm really interested to know how people still in for their family deal with seeing their kids growing up subjected to the cult endoctrination and ruinning their own life in the cult. Is it because for a parent there's an advantage in the Watchtower teachings - after all, most parents I know would rather their kids didn't have sex before marriage, smoke or do some of the silly things teenagers do, and the cult make it easier to control their kids? For example, many fall into cults (or go back to the cult they were raised in themselves) when they start having kids, and I'm wondering if it's because it's frightenning to have to decide what to teach your kids in a world without any absolutes one could rely on. Or is it because they feel life as a Witness isn't worse than as a non-Witness, as long as they can ensure their kids go to college and have a good job? I'm sure everyone will have their own reasons, but I'd really like to know some.