The smile on my face gives me away, maybe my language too, I put too much money into the swear box in the office sometimes.
I can however wrap presents pretty good!
these days my jw past stay safely under wraps from nearly everyone.. i dont dig it up- and i see no need to talk about it with anyone.. sometimes i feel as if my past is a large and terrible secret, and i will be found out eventually.
people can sense i am different.
i never talk about my family.. i guess people chalk it up to being a private person or let me be a mystery.. however, there is one thing that i feel completely reveals me as having been raised a jehovahs witness:.
The smile on my face gives me away, maybe my language too, I put too much money into the swear box in the office sometimes.
I can however wrap presents pretty good!
no self respecting jw would doubt the demons ability to attach themselves to physical objects.
for example if a jw put a poster on their wall of a pentagram or some other "satanic symbol" that's a "doorway" for the demunz.
it's inviting them into your home.
Doesn't the firewall stop them? ;-)
i would have to say that ray franz was the biggest influence for me.. when i first got on this board, a poster by the name of james, a former bethelite and organization heavy, helped me understand a lot of the inner workings in the upper echelons of the society.. .
and of course, farkel's common sense approach was (usually) helpful..
It was me that made me leave, I worked it out for myself.
My order of contact with 'apostates' was Ray Franz, then Bill Bowen via Silentlambs, then Cedars via JWSurvey and then I found you all here.
http://www.itcanwait.com/videos/xzaviers-story/ .
I know someone who's neighbour died whilst texting, she drove into the back of a stationary lorry, the police found the phone with a text message to her mother saying she will be with them very soon, the text was half finished
When I feel like that I go out into the countryside, it's an advantage living in Scotland. Do something different.
every congregation i have attended this is the case.
i was wondering if this is just a local thing or if it is an unwritten rule worldwide?.
hoser.
Was always the case when I was in, however when I was WT conductor sometimes we had a couple of visiting speakers who were simply awful, and I always picked on someone else to say the closing prayer, a few in the hall picked up on it and found it humerous, i was never called up about it.
worth a listen on the podcast.
talking on the issues of his life as a jehovah's witness and the child abuse issues.. plus a backlash afterwards by a few jw sympathisers.. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01ffl21.
It was a great interview, which got me really angry, why did I ever go along with that crap?!!! I had the same issues with my kids, having nightmare I was going to die at armageddon, I'm seriously thinking of writing a DA letter after listening to that, even though I have successfully faded away.
i am the husband of an ex-jw.
she left when she was 18, because she was dating a non-jw.
they got married, and he began openly cheating on her.
Do you want to build a bridge to people like that? It's a cult. Continue loving your wife and be thankful she escaped, she's been through enough as a result of that organisation.
last weekend.
so unbelievably sad.
rip.
Absolutely tragic. The last meeting I ever went to was an assembly, except the one to hear my no longer being an elder, I needed to hear that for closure. These gathering are pure BS, promising comfort and security in a spiritual paradise! Yeah right! I was in Glasgow on Saturday around that time (not the convention, in an antique shop not far away), so near and yet so far for this young person :-(
ok i posted about a month ago asking for advice on writing a letter to my former congregation regarding my children.
my ex husband still goes to our old hall and although we have joint custody he is raising them to be good little jws on his time.
i understand that in your organization age is not a determining factor in whether or not a person can get baptized, however as the young people ask book points out:
Hi Michelle365, I understand your frustration. I would perhaps word it that 'legally' they are not old enough and that you will seek legal advice should your children decide to go ahead.