The Religion Of Rejection - And Now That Includes Me

by dubstepped 32 Replies latest jw experiences

  • dubstepped
    dubstepped

    Due to some recent developments I find myself in a new place, and at this point I've lost all of my family and fri....oh that's right, I never really had any friends in the organization anyway. Just people that wanted something from me and a few people that I would invite to do things that occasionally said yes. The recent rejections of me got me thinking, so let's take a rejection inventory.

    I had to reject all of the holidays when my parents started studying.

    I had to reject any worldly friends that I already had.

    Even family became rejected, and the new religion had some place in that.

    I was rejected in school and bullied all of the time, not just because we were poor and I made good grades, but for JW reasons too. It was just piling on at that point.

    I rejected having time after my school day to do anything, as my parents had to fill many evenings with service to get their time in.

    I rejected the thoughts of having fun on weekends because we had service and meetings and whenever I wanted to do something suddenly my dad wanted to have a family study.

    I rejected lots of fun activities because I was a young ministerial servant that was "used" (to burnout) in the congregation. I also had to auxiliary pioneer every summer because that's what you did to be a good person, and I wanted to be one. I also had parts on district conventions and meetings and circuit assemblies, oh my. Lots of rejecting to make room for trying hard to please everyone around, including Jehovah.

    My family was emotionally abusive (apart from the religion), so I rejected my feelings and tried to bury them because I had nowhere to turn. It's okay though, my dad was an elder, and he would never be rejected for such abuses. Well, actually my mom and I threw enough of a fit that they deleted him eventually, but he was right back as an elder in no time without any change.

    I rejected all of the college offers that I had, and an opportunity to start a business with a guy that saw me as his protege because I had to pioneer, of course.

    I rejected things like porn, masturbation (okay, let's face it, nobody can hold off on that one forever), sex before marriage, any experiences with the opposite sex to be honest because our congregation was scared that any dealings with the opposite sex would lead to fornicating right there on the spot, sports (because I was good and another brother tried to hurt me while we played several times so the elders told ME to stop playing), and I'm sure I could go on and on.

    I rejected opportunities to earn more money that I needed once we got married because I had to play the role of spiritual family head.

    I was rejected constantly by our loving brotherhood. I have invited people to my home and been told yes, only to sit with a bunch of pizzas and nobody to eat them but me. I've sat at meetings for field service and watched everyone else be put in groups but my wife and I. I've raised my hand when they were ready to go to be told that we could just go alone.

    The few friends I had growing up all rejected the religion, and I rejected them like any good brother should.

    My brother was rejected by the organization and disfellowshipped, and I rejected him too like I was supposed to for many years.

    I rejected my own self. My authenticity was hidden behind a veil of organizational expectations. I always had questions about things that never made sense to me, and ruffled plenty of feathers because I wasn't one to stay quiet. Still, I rejected most of my concerns under a pile of rationalization and reasoning that I was instilled with through meetings and association.

    A couple of years ago though, I started to reject some of the things that I was taught that didn't hold up factually.

    I started rejecting the cold narcissistic world that I was raised in and that was all I had ever known, including the religion. I rejected the negative attitude toward self-help books and for the first time I found hope and emotions and love and something that made me feel good. The next thing to go was my disdain for other human beings. I rejected looking down on worldly people. I saw that many had great lives, moral lives, and happy lives, the opposite of the dismal picture painted by the organization. I rejected the notion that happiness could only be found in a place that I found so utterly depressing and devoid of love.

    Then came the BIG one. I rejected the rejection of my brother. We grew up in a volatile home and he was rejected (disfellowshipped) young from the organization. I reached out to make things right, to open up about our childhood emotional damage and to try and do some healing for both of us. I rejected the notion that once shunned, always shunned, made sense. He was married now and lived a good life. So I went to see him and spent time with him and his wife.

    Now both my family and my wife's family reject us both. Word spread and my wife was rejected by even more people. If I had any friends in this organization they would have rejected me too. A whole life full of rejecting things to conform to something so that when I make ONE decision that goes against the grain I can be rejected too. And sure, if someone that knew me read this I might be rejected by the organization itself. I've said things on here that I know would make that come true. Honestly, I just don't care anymore. They took and took and took from me and gave me very little. If I'm just an object to be discarded then go ahead and get it over with. I've been rejected by everyone in my life to date, and the only people that have EVER reached out to me are those evil worldly people. I've literally missed meetings for 17 months at one point before anyone reached out, and that was just a note on our door.

    So if they decide to throw me on the reject pile with so many others, like discarding an object and not a person, then let it be. It has been a lot of misery and I want so badly to leave it all behind and move on toward happier things. In fact, I've been doing that for some time now. But damn if the past doesn't seem to have been so strongly programmed into me that I have a hard time shaking it. Every seemingly healthy thought is contrasted by some fearmongering scripture or saying that someone fed me. I'm struggling with the hole left by knowing that the only people I really had left rejected me too, my family. I'm left trying to build everything from scratch, and it sucks. I have plenty of good things in my life, but two biggies (religion and family) just folded, and it hurts to have rejection enter my life once again.

  • paulmolark
    paulmolark

    Usually I have a very hard time reading long posts... Mine included.

    this post however was great.

  • NeverKnew
    NeverKnew
    Wow... this is a sick reality. Never saw it quite like this.
  • 4thgen
    4thgen
    dubstepped - Thank you for putting your feelings down in writing. I do not believe I have ever heard it put that way before. Upon reflection, yes ours was a religion of rejection. We were always taught that to be approved, we must be hated. Sick, isn't it? It takes a long while to rebuild, especially with all the deprograming that we have to go through. Two very positive things are your wife and your brother. That is a solid foundation on which to begin your new life. Expect ups and downs. You have made a wise decision. Cherish each day of your new found acceptance of a life of freedom. Best to you!
  • brandnew
    brandnew

    Rejection .......how bout this one bro ?

    WELCOME MY BROTHER ! ! ! ! WELCOME ! ! !

  • millie210
    millie210

    Dear dub,

    You are such a wonderful writer.

    You are giving a voice to so many things many of us feel and couldnt quite express so well.

    Thank you so much for doing that.

  • dubstepped
    dubstepped

    Thanks ladies and gents. I've been struggling and needed to get some stuff out. It isn't like I can speak my mind to anyone still in the organization or to family or friends that are all pretty much gone now. When you start noticing too much and see the man behind the curtain you become a man (or woman) on an island. It is nice to know that other castaways understand the rejection that comes with all of this. I'm just now getting a taste of what my brother had to endure for all of these years. Funny how JW's talk about disfellowshipping from their side only, how they hurt when a loved one leaves the organization, and how that loved one is going off into a dark world of evil. In the meantime the one leaving is left with so much baggage, PTSD in the case of my brother who was hunted down by elders wanting to talk to him even though he just wanted to walk away, and since a lot of young people are disfellowshipped they never get a chance to grow up and see their families for what they were. They are denied a chance for psychological healing that might need to take place. My brother can't even remember a lot because he learned to disassociate (boy isn't that term ironic in organizational context) and basically numb what was going on to avoid the pain. He would be held forever in a lot of those states had I not come along to help him bring back what happened growing up and to confirm things that he's told others that they simply cannot believe. Yep, all of that stuff happened. Nope, he's not the crazy one.

    Thanks for reading and giving me a place to share what is going on inside me. I'm glad that it touches others that have been there and done that. I'm just sorry that so many have had to be there in the first place.

  • LisaRose
    LisaRose
    Wow, very well put, a perfect summation of the life of a JW, one rejection after another. It may not seem like it, but it does get better. You can't change the past, nor wipe away the hurt, your parents will probably never love you unconditionally, but you can love yourself and stop the negative thoughts. I highly recommend meditation for dealing with negative self talk and replacing it with positive. You are already doing it to a certain extent, or you wouldn't have been able to write what you did, so just keep at it, it takes time to undo years of indoctrination.
  • LongHairGal
    LongHairGal

    DUBSTEPPED:

    Welcome to the forum and I enjoyed your very descriptive post.

    As you said in the first two paragraphs, you don't really have any friends there. Sadly, they are conditional and even with persons who you actually like (and who you think like you) will cave in when it comes to that "loyalty" thing. The only time people like this come to their senses is if they have a rude awakening and experience bad treatment.

    Too many other people there fall into the category of users and those I call "social climbers in the JW world". Many of these people are motivated by fear. This a "fear based" religion. Fear of how they are perceived, fear about being seen as "spiritual enough" etc. etc.

    They don't want to be seen associating with anybody who is not "approved" by the "In" crowd of judgmental idiots that every congregation has. They are afraid they won't get invited to "gatherings".

    When you analyze it all it is really not a healthy place to be and you have given up a lot. Well, now it is time to live a real life and get some of those things back. It is not too late to be happy and free.

    Good luck on your journey out of there!

  • Alive!
    Alive!

    Thank you for your post. Wonderful.

    I always knew that there are "worldly" people who have much decency and goodness in abundance - but of course " Oh they don't love Jehovah."

    Well, we all know the stink of the branding JW style that apparently represents Christ.

    I sense something extraordinary happened, so I have faith in the appearance of Jesus on this earth - and a divine element that forms the ABC of that faith.

    Glad to be a member of the human race and seeing the lovely qualities in folk, and embracing that.

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