Traditions, Rituals and Celebrations are Important to Families

by Scully 14 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • Scully
    Scully

    I've been reading Dr. Phil's new book Family First. One of the factors he includes in creating a "phenomenal family" is to Establish Meaningful Rituals and Traditions, and I'm finding myself having lots of moments with regard to my JW upbringing and why it sucked so badly. And more importantly, it's becoming very clear that the lack of these activities among JWs contributes to the ease with which so many of them can turn their backs on one of their own in favour of The Organization?.

    Whether it was the traditional holiday dinners you enjoyed at your grandparents' or the vacations you took every year with your parents, we all remember events and celebrations that define who we are as a family and how we are connected to one another.

    The only definition our family had once my parents got involved with the JWs, was being JWs. We stopped associating closely with non-JW relatives. We stopped visiting them at holiday times. Once Mr Scully and I became Inactive™ JW relatives stopped associating with us. Without the JWs' in the picture, our family never would have become so disconnected.

    ... predictable activities and patterns in your family life that serve as psychological and behavioral anchors for your values and beliefs, provide your family with a sense of stability and identity, reinforce your family's heritage, give your family meaning and continue to create rhythm in your family's life.

    What are the "predictable activities and patterns" of the JW life? Don't they revolve around 5 meetings a week, Field Service™ on weekends, Circuit Assemblies™, District Conventions™, Special Assembly Days™, Special Talks™, Memorial™, and other JW-related activities? None of these activities have anything to do with individual family members, but focus solely on the WTS.

    ...family rituals are activities that are repeated, deliberate and coordinated and have meaning. You make a commitment to do these activities. You don't do them only when they're convenient and blow them off when they're not. The power of rituals and traditions is found in their repetition. Without these defining characteristics, a ritual falls to the level of being just a routine and loses its power.
    Rituals... help your children acquire a sense of continuity, security and love, particularly in today's world where there's so much family brokenness and emotional distance, and a pace that's, literally, a blur of hyperactivity, diversion and distraction, and what I call living in the laser lane.
    Holidays, vacations, family reunions or other special events that bring families together are examples of traditions. Traditions aren't meaningless habits or ways of doing things; like rituals, they create a sense of identity and a sense of belonging among family members.
    So important in family life are rituals and traditions that social scientists tell us that without them, a family may be lacking in certain ways. Your children are more likely to develop behavioral problems, you'll experience more conflict in your home and, in general, you'll create less family stability. What's more, rituals have been found to produce positive changes in the physical body, in the form of stronger immunity, lower levels of stress hormones and reduced blood pressure.

    It makes me wonder just how much the WTS knows about the positive and strengthening psychological effects of family traditions and celebrations. Did they ban the observances of Pagan™ holidays and birthdays with the knowledge that it had the potential to weaken family bonds and make it easier for JWs to show their loyalty to the WTS by shunning those who do not conform?

    I am really starting to believe that this was a deliberate and calculated move on the part of the WTS to weaken family allegiances and replace those with loyalty to the WTS. And it's worked.

    Love, Scully

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    Very thought proking.

    I had already noticed that the lack of family celebrations and rituals impacted family cohesion and relations, but I hadn't thought of the Watchtower rituals as a surrogate -- and the impact of this on shunning.

    The Watchtower attitude on family rituals (namely, that they are unnecessary and should not involve the whole extended family) is expressed well below:

    *** w98 10/15 pp. 30-31 Questions From Readers ***

    Many

    of Jehovah?s Witnesses observe wedding anniversaries. A birthday is an anniversary of when you were born. So why celebrate wedding anniversaries and not birthday anniversaries?

    Frankly, there is no need for a Christian to celebrate either. <snip> Whether they focus on this happy occasion in private, just as a couple, or they have a few relatives or close friends with them would be for them to decide. The occasion should not become a mere excuse for a large social gathering.

    (I've underlined the key buzzwords)

  • Happy Guy :)
    Happy Guy :)

    I am really starting to believe that this was a deliberate and calculated move on the part of the WTS to weaken family allegiances and replace those with loyalty to the WTS. And it's worked.

    Very astute observation. I have always felt that the WT was very much against family because of the reasons you mention but also shunning and the way child and spousal abuse are dealt with.

  • Fleur
    Fleur

    Scully, once again a brilliant post. I have to get that book...I'm behind on my Dr. Phil. It makes total sense that they would try to abolish these things that forge strong family ties, so that the individual tie to the cult is stronger than the individuals tie to each other.

    My family had only had one real tradition...visiting a certain spot for vacation every year, sometimes twice a year. Grandparents came with us most trips. So it's no wonder that one of the most comforting, if sad, things to me after my grandmother's death was the fact that we had a trip planned to that very place coming up soon. It was hard to go but once I got there, I felt so connected to her love, remembering, going places we once went. It kept me sane in those first weeks after her passing. In a way, it felt like going home.

    Rituals and traditions ARE important. We're trying to establish some good ones for our kid. One of them is to read "A wish for wings that work" by Berke Breathed every Christmas Eve. I can't believe it'll be our fourth Christmas doing it. We all look forward to it...I can't wait. It'll be here soon.

    I'm sorry about your childhood :( i'm sorry about all our childhoods. I wish I could just give you a big ol' hug right now.

    love,

    essie

  • Scully
    Scully

    It was kind of funny that this topic of "family" came up with one of the physicians I work with. We were discussing family counselling options and he remarked how there were Catholic Family Services, Protestant Family Services, Jewish Family Services... among other cultural and religiously based family services available in the community... and then he asked me (knowing my JW background) whether JWs offered similar services for their members. I just said, "No, not only do they have nobody experienced to offer such services, they are too cheap to spend one thin dime on anything that would really help families. Their idea of "family counselling" is to have a weekly Bible Study™ with one of their books, rather than dealing with the real issues that create the need for counselling. One more reason for me to never go back."

    Love, Scully

  • ozziepost
    ozziepost

    G'day Scully:

    A worthy topic! I think there's much to be agreed with here. One thing that Mrs Ozzie and I have observed is that families have these celebrations and so on as "rights of passage". We've enjoyed joining in with families from different cultures as they observed important dates (steps?) in their family members' lives. And then we got to thinking that the nation of Israel also did the same or similar with their festivals. They had the forerunner of the harvest festival which was a community affair but there were also more personal observences to be celebrated, each marking out the individual's life stages.

    We've also noticed that former dubs find it quite hard to celebrate - they're just not used to it!

    Cheers, Ozzie

    Freedom means not having to wear a tie.

  • Scully
    Scully

    essie:

    Rituals and traditions ARE important. We're trying to establish some good ones for our kid. One of them is to read "A wish for wings that work" by Berke Breathed every Christmas Eve. I can't believe it'll be our fourth Christmas doing it. We all look forward to it...I can't wait. It'll be here soon.

    Our very first Christmas after leaving the bOrg, the children were still very young and we started a tradition of making little bags of Magic Reindeer Food for each of them to sprinkle on the snow on Christmas Eve. It's amazing the joy a couple of tablespoons of oatmeal flakes and a half teaspoon of red sugar sparkles can bring to the eyes of a child. They are both old enough (almost in their teens) to know that mom and dad are "Santa's helpers", but they still insist on sprinkling Magic Reindeer Food on the snow and leaving milk and cookies for Santa and carrots for Rudolph on Christmas Eve.

    I'm sorry about your childhood :( i'm sorry about all our childhoods. I wish I could just give you a big ol' hug right now.

    Hugs back atcha. I know my parents were doing what they thought was right and was in our best interests, and that gives me some consolation - it's just too bad that it caused us to become more or less isolated from our extended family. I am humbled at how non-JW aunts and uncles and cousins have welcomed us back with open arms after all those years of keeping them at a distance and not joining in their celebrations. That's what "love" and "family" are all about.

    ozzie:

    we got to thinking that the nation of Israel also did the same or similar with their festivals. They had the forerunner of the harvest festival which was a community affair but there were also more personal observences to be celebrated, each marking out the individual's life stages.

    For a while after leaving the JWs, I became quite interested in exploring the Jewish faith and culture - it's so rich in tradition and I was very impressed by the strong emphasis on families gathering together to observe festivals and celebrate rituals and rites of passage of the various family members. The rituals begin with a child's birth - there is a naming ceremony where the infant is welcomed into the community. The weekly Sabbath has rituals associated with it, that the child learns from infancy. They learn other traditions from their synagogue and in classes that prepare them for their bar / bat mitzvah. There are annual festivals and observances - Purim, Sukkot, Chanukah, Yom Kippur, Rosh Hashanah - all of them with their own rituals that are followed as a family. I really enjoyed learning about these traditions, and now it makes perfect sense that these rituals helped to build families and strengthen them.

    The WTS has robbed families of something truly precious and important - replacing traditions and celebrations with routines that are designed to bond a person to the Organization™, that de-emphasize an individual's worth and exchanging them for worship of the WTS. It's downright despicable.

    Love, Scully

  • gypsywildone
    gypsywildone

    I've always thought this was the REAL reason behind insisting people give up holidays. Holidays are some of the glue that hold families together. Piss off & alienate your entire family, of couse you'll want to please the cult. You'll have no one left. I've told this to jws in the Yahoochat room & they just go INSANE denying it.

    I love Dr. Phil!

  • teela(2)
    teela(2)

    You are so right. I didn't realise this until my father died. Goin through the photograghs left behind there was not one family photo of the four children and mum and dad, (I'm the youngest at 41). We found two photos of the four children together. The usual no birthdays or xmas. as the kids grew up and left home and the dickheads we didn't even get together for assemblies. I got married with out my parents or family present as did my sister. My other sister had to get married (preggers)so no pictures there. Brother at 52 has never had a girlfrend is not gay just a srewed up person, unable to have relationships of any sort.

    So in a way, no shared adult experiences nothing much in common except a crappy childhood which is not disscussed by my brother or sister, We had nothing to do with the extended family as they where not witnesses. When I tried to get to know then some cousins did't even known I had been born.

  • gypsywildone
    gypsywildone

    Find a way to get rid of the extended family, & you have control over the person.

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit