Life was a game of make pretend!!!

by Tez 13 Replies latest jw friends

  • Tez
    Tez

    When did I discover this? I married at the age of 18, and it was doomed to fail? Why? I was brought up by an alcoholic mother and step father, life was miserable, told never to tell what was going on to other family members. My elder siblings left home as soon as they could to marry. At 16 I thought I was going to be left on the shelf! Mum and stepdad were very strict, and I was physically and mentally abused from a very young age. My 'real' father left when I was 2. When I met my husband, amazingly my stepdad approved of him, this was the start of what I felt was freedom!!! So I married at 18... but soon felt that something was missing. Because of being brought up by very unloving parents, and the fact that I always longed for a 'normal' family, a mum and dad who stayed together even at that young age I unconsciously made the decision that I would never divorce, and that any children we had would have a normal, loving family, something I had never known. So what was missing, it was many years before I found the answer to that. My husband was, to all intents and purposes, a good man. He worked hard. I loved him. Eventually we had two wonderful boys, but I suffered with depression and had done for several years. I looked outside my marriage within a year to find what I thought I was looking for. That didn't work. Then one day, as I was praying to God to help me find the answers there was a knock at the door... You guessed it, it was a JW, I had a study and was convinced this was the way forward, that to keep my marriage together and to give my children a happier life and wonderful future I had to become a JW. I ended the affair I had been having, confessed to my husband, cleaned up my life and entered a new life, clean and convinced this was to be the best way of life. My husband was baptized 6 months after me... we both felt it was a new start. So what went wrong? We both tried so hard to be good JW's, though it was usually me taking the lead. Although he was not a bad man, my husband was very wishy washy toward taking the lead. As time went on my depression didn't get any better, we had two more lovely children... My husband was made a MS, but then opposition struck big time in the way of an brother who my husband worked for. We discovered he was committing fraud, didn't quite go the organisation's way of dealing with it, though that would have been difficult as this brother (an elder) was in business with two other elders, also later on two other elders admitted they had been duped by him. This was the first of many difficulties we came across as witnesses. In the meantime we tried to help so many others that underwent persecution from within. We tried to be hospitable, helping those that were elderley or weak. During this time, my siblings all got divorced (one of them three times!) and this engendered in me the determination to make my marriage work. My husband was made redundant five times, and finances were always very tight, so as for holidays and present days for the children, these were very scarce. I felt continually more guilty because I felt I couldn't give them what I promised them, though I would never let them forget how much I loved them. Sadly, their dad never had the same rapport with them, and they always felt that he was on a different wave length. Instead of listening and reasoning with them, he would lecture them... going on and on and on. I tried to respect him for the good in him that they couldn't see as clearly as me. Before becoming a JW I had tried to leave him, I always felt that although he said he loved me, it was empty words, no real gestures. Once I became a JW I prayed and prayed to Jehovah to make me love this man as a wife should do. My second son was disfellowshipped at age 18 and also left home. I couldn't disown him, had always felt he should never have got baptized in the first place, and did so only as a result of peer pressure. At this time I felt my marriage was over and tried to dissassociate myself. The elders in the congregation wouldn't accept my disassociation letter, told me to take time out. I was arranging to move out of our home, when one day my husband walked out, he was gone a long while and I was worried he had done something stupid! It was after that, because I felt sorry for him that I suggested we try starting over again. We moved north where his family lived. I still wasn't attending meetings, then my eldest son's mother in law (see PaulJ's story) did something so horrendous! that was such a shock I felt that the only way forward was to return to meetings, it was only with Jehovah's help and that of the congregation that I felt we could cope. That wasn't the case. Later my daughter made the decision that she didn't want the truth, that although she had made some friends, that would be the wrong reason for her to stick with it and get baptized. At this time I started a counselling course, I wanted to train to be a counsellor for Alcoholics. We had to write an essay entitled Who am I... I had to look deep into myself to answer that, and that is when I discovered that all those years I had been pretending to be happy, pretending I was happy with my husband. I realised that yes I did love him, like a brother. I realised that he irritated me as much as he did my children. I also realised that I did not want to survive Armageddon to live with him in a paradise earth. What's more I didn't want to disown my children because they had used their right to freewill. Why was I a mother if it was to disown them once they decided to live their own lives independant of JW's and their parents. So I left, the witnesses after 22 years, my husband after 30 years. In all that time I tried so very hard to do the right thing, but always felt so guilty because deep down I didn't feel I could ever be a good wife, mother, JW. How do I feel now, not so guilty with regard to my ex husband. Shortly after I told him I wanted a divorce, he suggested I go out and ensure that he could obtain a scriptural divorce! I did... not proud of it. But he is soon to be married to a JW so am sure he will be happier than he was with me. I am happier, I am now with someone who truly does make me feel loved, cherished, valued. I am still ridden with guilt... but I have contact and a good relationship with three of my children which is so precious to me.

    There is much more I could have added to this but have tried to keep it brief, also because it brings up too much emotion that I cannot deal with right now.

    I realise now that I became a JW for all the wrong reasons. When push came to shove I could not give Jehovah 'exclusive' devotion, so in that I feel that I failed.

    But I now know that I don't have to pretend any more, I can be me for the first time in my life!!! I just have to learn to be happy with who I am... thats the hard part, but at least I am honest.

  • prophecor
    prophecor

    Tez, Hi. Wow. Powerful stuff. It's a wonderful thing to see someone find some semblance of sanity after the often bumpy ride that can come from being JW. The fact that you felt like you were faking it all and only going along to get along is how I've felt about a lot of the struggle while being in the truth. I'm glad you feel you have found your place in this life, despite the fact that it is no longer within the walls of the Kingdom Hall.

    Welcome.

    Art

  • crazyblondeb
    crazyblondeb

    Sounds like you had a long hard road!! Welcome to the site. They have all become my family now.!!

  • Frog
    Frog

    Hi Tez, it's great that you're at a stage where you can share your pain. Most of us here have been in very similar places to where you are. It's a tough road, but you have your lovely children, and the whole rest of your life ahead of you. Good on you for getting up the courage to be honest with yourself, you should be very proud:)

    Take care of yourself, and I look forward to seeing you around the board frog

  • Sparkplug
    Sparkplug

    Welcome tez!

    Second time I put that smile on tonight.

    Sp

  • PaulJ
    PaulJ

    Hi Mum, well done!! I hope it feels better to 'get it out'... It certainly did me. I always thought Dad got baptised 2 years after you... shows what i remember huh???

  • greendawn
    greendawn

    Welcome it's great that you could see through the cultish deception, not disown your children and then leave the borg for a truly free and creative life.

  • katiekitten
    katiekitten

    Hi again Tez,

    that must have taken an incredible amount of emotion and courage to write all that. I hope its the start (or maybe the middle) of a healing process for you.

    I was so touched at the comment you made about being a mother - 'why would i be a mother and then disown my children when they chose to live how they wanted'. I feel exactly the same. Im lucky enough to be out while my daughter is small so I will never face the awful tug of war between god and my family.

    And I honestly dont think you failed for not being able to give god 100%. It is a system with failure built in, no-one can make it balance properly, those that seem like they are have just never been chllenged with problems in their life. The Troof only works if you are middle class, middle income, middle of the road and NEVER have any problems in life. Its like the Woolworths christmas adverts with all the family sat round a fire laughing and sharing lovely presents.

    You suceeded because you chose your family. All respect to you.

  • homesteader
    homesteader

    hi tez,

    thanks for sharing your story. it is verysimiliar to mine. i was from and alcholic family, married a guy at 17 to get away from family, became a jw at 20, had four children and tried hard to be a good jw. when the two older kids were df'd in their late teens after being baptized at 12 &13 i couldn't abandon them either. especially because they had such valid points about jw's. i left the org. and my immature husband and i divorced. i remarried a wonderful man and am now living happyily ever after and am not pretending. we have our problems, but have coping skills. you don't have anything to feel guilty about!!!! you did your best and as a previous post said it's a system that is set up for failure. i don't regret the 20 some years as a jw because it contributed to the person i am and that's someone i love unconditionally. i learned a lot while being a jw, met some wonderful people and it kept me out of trouble for a time. take care and keep in touch. how neat to have your son sharing on the board also.

  • sweet tee
    sweet tee

    Welcome aboard Tez!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    My story is similar to yours and homesteaders ... hope you stick around !

    Tam

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