I've told this story before, but I think it's worth recounting here. This happened back when I was young and it was a sibling that recounted it to me only about a year ago. To me it was a rather matter-of-fact event that I'd long forgotten.
I rarely got into trouble... like my siblings did. When Dad was mad, he'd give the silent treatment. It tore my siblings to pieces. Sometime when I'd done something that he didn't like, he gave me the silent treatment. This sibling remembers saying to me while we were all at the dinner table, "Dad's giving you the silent treatment, aren't you upset?"
My indifferent response, as she recalls, "I really don't want to talk to him anyway."
That was the last time that he used the silent treatment. I don't remember it after that from him. One of my sisters tried giving me the silent treatment when she was mad at me, but she "gave up" on it long before I would have. And I'm sure our parents were more upset by what was happening than either of us kids were. How could my parents condemn me/us for being "passive aggressive" when they had taught us how to use it? So, as I've said before, I'd disfellowship the congregation before they could disfellowship me.
Billy=99%"nice guy"+1%"heartless SOB"... it's that 1% that makes all the difference.
Although I was smart, funny, and kind, I think my parents were afraid I'd become an a$shole if they kept setting a "traditional JW" example. Sure, they might be happy if I was still attending meetings, but at what cost? There are so many JWs in their congregation that they would never want as children. And so many of the kids we've grown up have faded, nobody in the congregation makes that much of a deal about it, I think.
sd7: "I haven't even really felt able to give them a call on the phone, even though my dad's never been a JW."
There have been several times when I called as a matter of principle, rather than out of desire. Sometimes the calls were brief, just checking in on their health. In my case, my parents have become so lonely that they are starved for human contact and will sometimes talk for hours without WT issues coming up. I always feel better after talking to them, even if the conversation didn't go great. In the end, I know I did the right thing.
"I just f***ed it all up and never had the chance. "
And there have been several times when I thought, "I've really f***ed things up now!" But I've taken the chance by reaching out, and in my case, by parents have reached back. It makes Sparlock sad when people don't believe in the magic of unf***ing things up. [I need a Sparlock emoticon here. LOL]
And I certainly don't mean to sound preachy that my psychology will always work, or that it's the only way to fade, or the only way to leave. Frankly, there's lots of right ways to get out of the cult. And I've heard of enough nutso JW families where I'd just tie the relationship up in a bag with several rocks and dump it in the lake.
Lois: "Get up extra early. Go to convention site early for best seats. Visit. Program starts. Fall fast asleep. Wake up to clapping and singing, then back asleep."
My folks would usually stay awake and take notes, but I don't think they do anymore. There used to be a convention review during the Service Meeting, but I think that's pretty well eliminated, so there wasn't much point of taking notes.
And I'm wondering if the "no education" topic was hit hard at their DC. That's something they don't agree with. How can they go to doctors and take medicine, yet condemn the higher education that makes that possible? And all this new emphasis on technology and electronics rather than the printed word. It's not the JWs on public aid that are coming up with these advances.