cubicle

by teejay 6 Replies latest jw friends

  • teejay
    teejay

      cubicle n. 1. A small compartment, as for work or study. 2. A small sleeping
      compartment, especially within a dormitory. 3. small area set off by walls
      for special use [syn: booth, stall, kiosk]

    --------------------------

    I figured out a while back that I married my mother. Sure, in certain ways my wife is more sophisticated than my mother but in other, more fundamental ways, these two women could easily pass as twins. That's not necessarily a bad thing. In one way, it is.

    As loyal JWs I think they fairly represent the average Dub. Both live in cozy worlds where everything is explained; where foreign ideas are dismissed as demon-inspired, selfish or otherwise worthless; where questions that conflict with their brand of "truth" are readily dismissed; and, generally speaking, where every idea has either a black or white connotation. What little gray areas exist definitely lean one way or the other, based on the way the latest Watchtower reads. Usually it leans toward the "don't do it or else you'll die at Armageddon" end of the scale.

    Now, don't get me wrong. These women aren't dumb -- far from it. Mentally they are typical women, meaning that, put up against the typical man they will easily run circles around him without breaking a sweat and with one hand tied behind their backs. On the other hand...

    Mentally, she (and my wife) lives in a neat, sparsely furnished cubicle. The way she looks at the world, shaped to some extent by her upbringing out in the country but more by her life as a Dub, is extremely simplistic. It hems her in, coddles her sensitive sensibilities, and constantly assures her that her simplistic view of life and people is correct. Beyond her control, every once in a while, life--reality--forces itself in on her. When that happens, it's as though she walks over to one of the walls of her neat little cubicle and peeks outside. I don't doubt that she understands what she sees, but she closes the curtain anyway since it conflicts with what goes on in her neat little cubicle.

    I'm radically different from either my mother or my wife. Sometimes, I also take a peek outside of *my* cubicle. Reality forces itself in on me and my perceptions of what Life really is. Instead of closing the curtain, most times I step outside to examine more closely what I have seen or heard. In a sense, I hold it up to the light, turn it all around. If it looks like food, I might even taste it... to see for myself if it's good. Sometimes, it is.

    I end up extending a wall of *my* cubicle to embrace this "something new." It does not challenge me to change, to accept that something as good as this "new thing", formerly unknown to me, really is good. Worthwhile. Honorable. Acceptable. Call it a paradigm shift, an altered state, a heightened worldview. I call it growth, which is what life should be about.

    Most of us here have experienced what I am describing here. Because of the realization that we have come to accept about the Watchtower, we have gone through a radical change in thinking--not a painless undertaking for anyone. Many people totally loose it when that happens since it *is* so hard to deal with. It's not a small, insignificant happening in one's life.

    But, here we are. Still trying to make sense of it all. Extending the walls of our own personal cubicles... picking up those new thoughts, new perspectives... holding them to the light. Growing. We are champions. Overcomers. In some ways, I don't mind saying it.... we are heroes.

  • Beck_Melbourne
    Beck_Melbourne

    Teejay

    Originally I thought you were talking about a 'dunny'.

    I agree, as a jw I used to enjoy the comforts of the boundries set by the borg...it made me feel safe in knowing that a higher force has established these boundries and I was conforming...what a rich reward it was to have a clear conscience!

    This growth and change you mention can be quite daunting on ones like myself...I was a third gen jw...and there is a history in my family of comfort zone sitters. My grandmother for example is resistent to change...so her jw lifestyle is all she knows and she has passed that on to my mother, who passed it on to me...I would rather she gave me her jewellery to be honest!

    We are champions. Overcomers. In some ways, I don't mind saying it.... we are heroes.

    That was nice!

    Beck

    Edited by - Beck_Melbourne on 24 July 2002 22:11:9

  • teejay
    teejay

    >> This growth and change you mention can be quite daunting on ones like myself...I was a third gen jw...and there is a history in my family of comfort zone sitters. My grandmother for example is resistent to change...so her jw lifestyle is all she knows...

    Beck,

    That's exactly what I meant. Being willing to change one's mental outlook is hard for anybody. Most people are like your grandmother and my mother. They would rather continue with what is comfortable to them and not have their viewpoints challenged with new ideas.

    I wonder: since most of us *have* been able to make such a mental shift and more or less create a new life from scratch since leaving the Organization, does that make us special? In some ways, I think it does.

  • Xander
    Xander
    comfort zone sitters

    That's easily the best way to describe them. They could change if they had to. Some might even realize a little of what's wrong - they might see Toto tugging the curtain away in Oz to expose the man behind....but they just look away then. They aren't interested in the truth, they are merely interesting in being told they are doing right.

    It's funny, all the parts they had mocking 'worldly' religions because people flock to them only because they 'tickle their ears' (tell them what they want to hear). When, in fact, JWism is, by FAR, the worst offender.

    That's called hypocrisy.

  • cellomould
    cellomould

    Teejay,

    I am glad I came back around here to read this post. Just what I had on my mind this evening as I was chatting with my girlfriend. I appreciate your ideas about growth.

    Interestingly, I almost married my 'mother' also. It is really funny because people even told me that she looked like my mother. (Actually, it's more scary)

    I am certainly looking forward to new challenges. And women who less resemble my mother.

    cellomould

  • SYN
    SYN

    Luckily, my Apostasization was a slow, gradual process that took place over a period of several months, but yes, I doubt I even HAVE cubicle walls anymore...

  • larc
    larc

    Interesting subject teejay. I wonder if some differences are genetic, or maybe a gender thing. My sister is very bright, but not at all intectually adventuresome. I was always much more curious, and more interested in learning new stuff. My sister is still a JW, and I left a long time ago. Obviously, we were raised in the same home, so I am not sure why we turned out so differently.

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