A POST-MORMON LIFE

Life after leaving the Mormon Church

Rachel Velamur

Rachel Velamur
Location
Texas,
Birthday
February 15
Bio
Born and raised in a strict Mormon family. I write about what life was like as a Mormon and what my life is like after leaving.

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JUNE 12, 2012 12:11PM

Is There A "Right" Or A "Wrong" Reason To Leave Mormonism?

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There is a perception among Mormons that people who choose to leave the Church do so because they are prideful, or because they want to sin, or because they were offended by other members, or because they have been deluded by Satan.  Since Mormons believe that the LDS Church is the “one true church” on Earth, by extension this means that they also believe that no one ever leaves simply because the Mormon Church isn’t true.  

This places a heavy burden on the person who chooses to leave; they find themselves in a position of needing to defend their actions and “prove” that they are not sinful or delusional.  Over the years, I have had people ask me if I was on drugs or alcohol.  I have been treated like a simpleton; when I finally gathered up the courage to tell my bishop that I didn’t believe in the Mormon Church, he looked at me and said in a very slow, very loud voice --- “Did you know that Joseph Smith was a fourteen-year old boy when he was visited by God?”  This was coming from a man I had known for years, who had been my visiting teacher, whose daughters went to school with me.  He knew that I was a straight-A student that attended seminary faithfully.  But with a single admission of disbelief, all of his respect for me as a person was suddenly erased.  In his mind, I was a simpleton who had never been educated about the Church, in spite of all of my actions that indicated otherwise.  

For a long time, I felt a sense of shame about my reasons for leaving.  I didn’t leave because I learned that Joseph Smith was a serial adulterer who used his status as leader to acquire countless wives in secret, the youngest of whom was only fourteen.  I didn’t leave because I discovered that the papyri that Joseph Smith had purportedly translated the Book Of Abraham from, when evaluated by proper Egyptologists, turned out to be just a run-of-the-mill funeral papyri.  I didn’t leave because I found out there were multiple versions of the First Vision, all of which varied in crucial details.  I didn’t leave because I discovered a smoking gun that “proved” the Mormon Church wasn’t true.  All of this knowledge came later, after I left.  My exit out of the Mormon Church was based on intuition and logic, rather than facts.  

I left because I didn’t like the person I was becoming; my thought patterns were starting to settle into a rigid mold.  I was judging non-Mormons and inactive Mormons for being less worthy.  I judged and then I felt bad about judging.  Did I really want to spend a lifetime feeling bad about my actions as a person?  When I thought about the matter, I realized that converting some of my non-Mormon friends into Mormons would cause them to lose what was most precious about them.  I liked having friends that pushed boundaries, that challenged authority, that dared to dream of a different life.  As a Mormon girl, I was powerless to do any of that.  My life was already planned out for me; temple wedding to a Mormon boy, lots of children, a career as a home-maker, and a life of obedience to the authorities and to my husband.  The future that had been dictated for me filled me up with panic and dread.  I wanted to choose my life’s path but as a Mormon girl, choices were not an option available to me.  

Most of all, I knew that there was no way of knowing if the Church was true.  I knew that the feelings subscribed to the Holy Ghost and considered as proof of the Church were flimsy evidence of truth at best.  Did I really want to go through life subscribing to a religion that made me uncomfortable, that made me more judgmental of others, on the off chance that it might be true?  So when the time came for me to ask “Do I believe this church is true?”, the answer was no.  

Even after I left the Mormon Church, I was still plagued by doubts.  I had friends within the Church with the same frustrations, who had stuck with the Mormon Church in spite of their differences.  Were they better than I was, for staying in spite of their issues?  Were they stronger, more faithful?  I just couldn’t shake off the mind-set I had grown up with.  

And so, for a few years after leaving, I went around saying “There is no God” with the same certainty that just a few years ago I had been saying “The Mormon Church is true”.  I was embarrassed by my reasons for leaving; a part of me wondered if I was simply weak and prideful.  I thought I had left the Church for the “wrong” reasons and so I felt compelled to bolster my insecurities with certainty.   

But life moved on and I began to settle into my new identity as an post-Mormon.  I began to see the Mormon Church with the eye of an outsider, viewing my life’s experiences in a wider lens.  The issues inherent in the Mormon Church started to become clear.   I realized that I was, truly, genuinely, not a Mormon.  My identity as a post-Mormon girl began to feel as natural as breathing.  Bit by bit, my heart began to soften and heal.  

This was when I realized I am an agnostic.  I don’t know if there is a higher power.  I can’t say “There is no God” with any more certainty than I can say “There is a God”.  And I have accepted this fact; I may never know the truth.  I am comfortable with who I am.  I take delight in the small joys of everyday life --- I love learning, my family, and my husband.  And for me, that is enough.  I will live my life with integrity and respect.  When I die, and if there is a higher power, I will say that I lived the best life I knew how.  

My journey out of Mormonism was confused and circuitous.  But I am out and I am happy that I am out.  And I don’t think that there is a “right” or a “wrong” reason for leaving the Mormon Church.  If Mormonism works, then stay.  But if for some reason Mormonism doesn’t work, then leave.  Life is too short and too precious to waste doing something that you can’t believe, that doesn’t make you a better person.  

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Comments

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i knew a fine mormon man.
he was a 'convert'. he committed suicide after going insane.
leaving a wife & 3 boys.


i have zero tolerance for this fantastic nonsense.
i study it, maybe, as a pretty cool myth..
like i study catholicism
or calvinism.

all myths.

"I left because I didn’t like the person I was becoming; my thought patterns were starting to settle into a rigid mold."

that is the first sign. get the f. out and think for yrself..
it is hard.
to really think freely. but WELL WORTH IT :)
It is well-worth it; I think if I had stayed I would have ended up becoming a very unhappy person. I had a former Mormon friend commit suicide as well; I still feel awful just thinking about what he must have been going through to do that.

Thank you for your comments, I really appreciate your support.
Sounds like you did the right thing. You seem so grounded and sensible. I'm glad you made your escape.
ah,, sure..you dont have to thank me! o how
i seek out the good stuff. like u.

anyway, i heard mormons
got a big suicide rate.
ay yi yi.
i believe it. my pal introduced me in there.
you sought and found your identity and even more important gave yourself "permission" to attempt to be your own best self and withdrew your parents permission/direction to be their vision for you. i enjoy reading of the experience of the liberation but may I say I also enjoy hearing of your life free of the Mormon indoctrination, just life as you have found and live it
You're a brave person who knows the value of staying true to yourself is of more value than any dogma or so called "revelation."

I left Catholicism at 17 and was disinherited by my grandfather who wouldn't then help pay for college. It was a big price to pay, but I grew up quick.

I don't know how old you are, but I can now see the need for some "structure" in terms of belief became my legacy as a result of all the religious training I recieved, and eventually I found the need to convert to another faith I am able to believe in: Zen Buddhism. What I can't stand is any fixed, authoritarian creed where I am told what to believe rather than discover for myself what I believe as a result of my own efforts, and some of us need a defense against the pain and suffering of life.

You may notice that sometimes those with "no faith" either work harder at it than those who espouse a creed, or easily fall victim to even worse demagogery than the institutionalized religions. Hypocrasy in my view is the true indicator of whether one has a conscience, regardless of whether they have a "religion."

All the best with your journey,
I have an aversion to churches that tell their members they must not question. To my mind, that is how I know they are false. Having friends who have left the LDS Church, I have seen what they have suffered, and I have a great deal of respect for your strength. It can be very lonely when you are left with just yourself, but I believe your actions will bring much more love and happiness to your life in the end.
r./
r./
kenneth: details of my post-mormon life will be coming soon. :-) I have an added quirk of having married into an Indian family, so there has also been the balancing of an inter-cultural, interfaith family. My husband grew up in southern India, came to the U.S. for grad school. He went through a similar process as I did, only with his orthodox Hindu family. And he has handled the process very gracefully.

Ben: Thank you for stopping by. I'm so sorry about your family, that must have been extraordinarily painful. I think the closest term for what I believe in would be a mixture of agnosticism/humanism. And I'm a scientist by training, so I have a very high regard for learning and asking questions.

onislandtime: Thank you so much. I am starting to reach a point where I have made peace with my life. It helps that I am making an effort to maintain my relationship with my family. And marriage has softened me; my husband is a very sweet guy who keeps me laughing.
The same is true of ALL religions.

I've spoken in depth with Catholics, Baptists, Mormons, etc..... and, just as each religion claims that they are the one true religion, the stories of those who finally see the light, who are enlightened, are the same; they feel a very heavy burden has been lifted from their minds.

Given the attributes that the vast majority of religions assign to their gods; is it even logically possible for those gods to encumber their believers with such discomfort? No! The weight all feel lifted from their shoulders would simply not exist if those "gods" were indeed the gods they all subscribe to.

Fire and brimstone, be it mild or be it wild; be it LDS, Catholic, or Baptist is the burden the charlatans of religion use to control their parishioners, their believers; fear is the best form of control there is and virtually all religious concepts can be disputed logically, if a person, like you, seeks truth rather than solace in acceptance by the pious.

If you haven’t watched it yet, watch “The Man from Earth.” The movie is one of the most fascinating movies I’ve watched in a very long time. I dare say that ANY devoutly religious person watching the movie with even the slightest of open-mindedness would walk away from it with a question or two about their blind faith. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0756683/
Bob: I'll have to check the movie out. :-)