As a young child, every part of the "theocratic lifestyle" involved giving something up. Saturday morning field service meant no cartoons. Tuesday book study meant no Battlestar Galactaca. Meetings in general meant trading homework and play time for sitting in a stark hall hearing boring talks while wearing uncomfortable clothes. Circuit assemblies meant I could not go see my best friend off at the airport, who was moving away for good. It also meant no fun holiday or birthday parties at school or extracurricular activities. The reward for all that sounded really good (life forever on a paradise earth), but it was never anything tangible that was experienced. As a child there are always things you have to do that are not fun because you are "supposed to," like eating vegetables or doing chores, so all the JW stuff fell into the same category. So I wonder if the perspective here is different for the "born-ins", who have no choice initially, than for the adult converts who at least find something attractive about the JWs to choose to join them....