I was assimilated at birth...
my maternal grandparents came to England in the early 1940s, and learnt the troof here. My grandfather opposed my grandmother for a while, but then he decided it wasn't worth the fight and studied the blue "Troof book" and my grandparents got baptised at the same assembly. He's now succesfully faded and enjoying his retirement... My grandma and mum became very strong Regular Pioneers... and my mother's death strgthened her in her service...
my paternal great-grandparents were among the first to get the troof in Jamaica back in the 1900s and my grandparents (from the same family but they didn't know) continued when they moved to England in the late 1950s... My grandfather continued very strictly and abusively administering "theocratic discipline" and coupled with a family scandal in 1975 which involved him sexually abusing my aunt, 5 of his 6 children left the "troof".... Except my father who didn't know the whole story and was very dismissive to what he has heard... he became a Regular Pioneer and an Elder, labelled his immediate family as "apostate", and cut off most ties with most of the rest of his family...
My parents met at a Pioneer School and became the backbone of our congregation... my birth mother died when i was 4 and my father re-married another Pioneer sister, who became my step-mum...
i was never exposed to any family scandal until the death and funeral of my grandfather in 1998 which helped me get in touch with my dad's torn family, hear all the stories and start to doubt the spirit-direction of the body of elders... My cousin became a famous writer (Zadie Smith) and wrote a semi-autobiographical novel (White Teeth) partly on her mother's experiences as a child in 1975... (not the aunt that underwent the abuse)...
i'm mentally free from the WTS but i have a lot of responsibility and a lot to live up to in the eyes of the congregation (who do not know my family's history because of my father's "clean slate" approach)... the elder's are practically falling over me to make me a ministerial servant even if i sit in a corner and do nothing... so it's been very difficult to fade... i do regret getting baptised in 2001 but i'm not sure if i could have avoided it due to expectations in the cong and my imposed dependance on my parents... Now that i've got a measure of independance having lived in paris for 9 months, i've chosen this year to move to a different congregation (the french speaking) and begin my fade...