New here

by granny 24 Replies latest jw experiences

  • safe4kids
    safe4kids

    Hi Granny,

    Just wanted to add my welcome to you and your hubby. And I agree with you when you said that about them being brainwashed...I was a Dub all of my life until about 4 years ago...I am so very glad to be out of that cult mentality!!

    Look forward to reading more of your posts!

    Dana

    "Someday we'll find it...the rainbow connection...the lovers, the dreamers and me"

    Kermit the Frog
    "Rainbow Connection"

  • musky
    musky

    welcome! I am new here also. my wife and i wanted to get married at the kingdom hall, but were not allowed. It made me feel very bad. We were married at a relatives house. I cannot say that the watchtower is wrong for a few people making mistakes though. I think I have problems wth them because of there doctrines

  • Billygoat
    Billygoat

    Hi Granny,

    Glad to know you found us! I hope you find on this board the community you would NEVER have found at the Kingdom Hall. Although there are MANY interesting stories, there are even more interesting people! Haha! I've learned to embrace them all even when I don't agree with them. I look at this place as a place for unconditional love and acceptance - not necessarily for myself, but for me to 'practice' it as well!

    Hope to see some of your posts in the future. Welcome to you and hopefully your husband sometime in the future!

    Love,
    Billygoat

  • granny
    granny

    Safe4kids, Musky, Billygoat,
    Thanks for the welcome. Billy I never had any intention of becoming a Dub although I guess from what I've read here it would be very easy to get sucked in. My Mil talked me into doing a bible study when my husband and I were going together. She wanted me to do it so I would know what my hubby was thinking when I taught our kids about holidays etc. Well on the third study she told me she had turned my name in as an interested person. I was very unhappy about that because I told her up front it was only to learn what my hubby was thinking about with holidays and stuff. I ended the study right then and there.
    I've learned more reading this board than I ever would have Dub literature.
    Granny

  • ReverendRoy
    ReverendRoy

    Hello to all,
    As a former Jehovah's Witness I can both empathize and sympathize with you and the many others that have written here. I apologize in advance for this long post...

    A JW mother and alcoholic father raised me. The feeling of torment and abuse as a child by "not fitting in" or being allowed to associate with others not a JW did not register until later. The embarrassment of not being able to sing happy birthday, not saying the Pledge of Allegiance, dating, involvement in the community or being completely ostracized did not dissuade me from being baptized as a JW at the age of 11 years. That evening I realized that in my short life I had made the biggest mistake of my life. I can remember clearly going door to door with the Watchtower and the Awake from the age of 4. I also remember how that our neighbor had a son my age, and I, being the good JW, told him that I was going to live forever and all animals would be kind. He of course told his mother, and in turn, the “mom” said I had such an imagination. Obviously, after that the neighbor kid did not comer to play any more.

    I listened and watched over time, at times watching in horror, as young people my age, were dying, because the parents had refused a blood transfusion, older JW’s dis-fellowshipped for smoking (all of their life as a JW) or the torture JW’s in other countries would go through or allow their families to go through in the name of this religion. By age twelve, I begun to question the teachings of the JW’s, not only to my self, but with the elders of the congregation, one of which was my older brother. Although I questioned many times I did not have the courage or internal strength to break free and think for my self.

    Up until I was dis-fellowshipped at the age of 18 (I was a morning disc jockey and was wishing people a happy birthday and such) I was “kind of, sort of” a JW. The choice of quitting my job or being dis-fellowshipped was the easy way out, but helped me make the decision to break free.

    I thought, at that young age it would be the end, however, I did not realize the extent of “mind-control” type behavior the organization and my family would use to try to get me to “come back”. All I had (have) to do is say I am sorry. How easy is that. A few years after being dis-fellowshipped the family cut off ties with me, with only moderate contact. Although hard to accept, it did make it easier for me to live my life and try to move on. This continued on and off for years (10 or so) until somehow it was decided that immediate family could have contact with me (O BOY). I, during this time had decided that many so called Christians were not Christ like, so in an effort to “open my door” I accepted them back into my life (my family). I allowed them to take part in my life, despite how they have treated me. All the time being reminded that it would be so easy to “come back” and “don’t you know it is the truth” type comments. I would just smile and say that they were welcome to their beliefs, but it was not for me. I would debate them on their belief system. However, as if “brainwashed” they were unmoving in doing what they were told by the WBTS and what they think is the truth.

    About 4 years ago another change in direction from the WBTS must have changed what and how they are treat dis-fellowshipped family members. I was getting the full court press to come back, change my evil ways; I was going to die, etc. etc. However, when my mother told me that I was the reason my then 1-year-old daughter was going to die, I could no longer take any more. How dare they tell me that the God they believed was all knowing, loving and caring was going to kill my daughter in this “time of the end” because of me or at all.

    That was it. It took me 40 years to finally understand. I could not change them, I could not be associated with them and that I was the one that should have disassociated myself from the JW’s.

    I could go on, but I have ranted enough. I know my little life experience compared to many, and it only sounds like whining at this point. I hope all that have been hurt by this religion can find a way to heal.

    I would consider myself more of an agnostic, wandering mystic now. I have looked at all religions and try to lean from all of them. The Sufi poet, Rummi wrote the following and it is a favorite of mine:

    My heart holds within every form
    it contains a pasture for gazelles,
    a monastery for Christian monks,
    There is a temple for idol-worshippers,
    a holy shrine for pilgrims;
    There is the table of the Torah,
    and the book of the Koran.
    I follow the religion of Love
    and go whichever way his camel leads me.
    This is the true faith;
    This is the true religion.

    To find yourself, think for yourself.

    Reverend Roy
    "Why is it when we talk to God we're praying - but when God talks to us, we're schizophrenic?"
    - Stop in at Reverend Roy's Voodoo Lounge where nothing is sacred: http://www.geocities.com/reverendroysvoodoolounge/

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