Every day since I faded is Independence Day! Freedom actually is free!
just saying!
by zeb 20 Replies latest jw friends
Every day since I faded is Independence Day! Freedom actually is free!
just saying!
And RIP to our first and second presidents, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. Who by strange coincidence both died on the same day, July 4th, 1826 - exactly 50 years to the day after the Declaration of Independence was signed.
What I appreciate about this day is the idea that we (Americans) are celebrating the DECLARATION of our independence from the tyranny of an oppressive dictator, not the attaining of it. That came later.
As ex-members of a cult, we can and should celebrate the day we reclaimed our personal independence and left the cult. We can do so even if the process of leaving was long and painful leaving us with emotional scars that last perhaps even until the present.
We may carry the scars of our wounds for the rest of our lives. May they remind us of the price we were willing to pay for our personal freedom of mind and the integrity of our conscience.
Happy Independence Day to all ex-JWs!
What I appreciate about this day is the idea that we (Americans) are celebrating the DECLARATION of our independence from the tyranny of an oppressive dictator, not the attaining of it. That came later.
It's kind of like celebrating the day you sent in your disassociation letter or the day you decided to never return to the Kingdom Hall. Just because you decide to leave doesn't mean you know what freedom is.
Mrs. Thatcher is sending a gunboat as we speak.
If it wasn't for Independence day, Americans would still be driving on the correct side of the road.
And RIP to our first and second presidents, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.
2nd & 3rd, actually.
-- Sir82, Pedantic class
WT: Just because you decide to leave doesn't mean you know what freedom is.
Au contraire, deciding to leave is the first step toward freedom and away from oppression—out of the cult.
As the saying goes, “The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”