THIFB-Chris-Walking

Brown patch­es in the lawn. Gar­den weeds. Melt­ed bub­ble gum strings draped across my black car bumper. The nag­ging sting of a sun­burn on my shoul­ders. Chil­dren shriek­ing at the cold water erupt­ing from a sprin­kler placed strate­gi­cal­ly beneath a tram­po­line. Proof that life has moved on. Proof that a dras­tic and ter­ri­fy­ing change in one’s fun­da­men­tal self is no match for the inevitabil­i­ty of the pass­ing time.

But in the thick of it, it’s hard to imag­ine ever smelling the near per­fect fra­grance of a fresh­ly cut lawn again. When your life changes on this scale, it’s hard to remem­ber that time is sup­posed heal all wounds.

It all accel­er­at­ed so quick­ly. It was this time last year, sit­ting under an oak tree in the front yard, enjoy­ing the cool sum­mer evening, 300 and some odd pages into “No Man Knows My His­to­ry,” lost in my own head.

Things stick. I remem­ber learn­ing about it in my under­grad­u­ate biol­o­gy class­es but don’t remem­ber specif­i­cal­ly how it works (I was not good at tests). Cer­tain envi­ron­men­tal con­di­tions will trig­ger mem­o­ries that you asso­ciate with those con­di­tions. Every time I hear a Wil­son Phillips song I think of a camp­ing trip I took with my fam­i­ly 20 years ago. Every time I smell the exhaust from a diesel engine I think of walk­ing the streets of Brazil, sweat­ing through my short sleeve dress shirt, rocks in my shoes that snuck in through the gap­ing holes. And I sup­pose that from now on, the smells of sum­mer will elic­it mem­o­ries of the begin­ning of this new chap­ter in my life’s book.

We were all in. On Bob’s Mor­mon Cred Scale, I scored an 85 which makes me a ‘Celes­tial Mor­mon’. Despite this admirable score, I have always lived on the ‘edgy’ side of Mor­monism with the inten­tion to be more approach­able, and thus a bet­ter ambas­sador and mis­sion­ary for the church. I do often won­der though if this per­ceived ‘edge’ about me feeds fuel to the fire of rea­sons I am sure I am accused of for leav­ing. “He watched R rat­ed movies and they numbed his sen­si­tiv­i­ties toward the spir­it.” “He was sar­cas­tic and snarky which made him cal­lous toward The Church.” “He drank Pep­si and prob­a­bly left so he could exper­i­ment with hard­er stuff like.” And so on….

We offi­cial­ly announced our inten­tions to leave the church in Jan­u­ary, haven’t been back since, and don’t plan on returning.

So what’s that like?” This is the ques­tion that I would ask me if I weren’t me.

What’s it like? It’s prob­a­bly a lot like spend­ing most of your life on the Inter­na­tion­al Space Sta­tion, return­ing home, and learn­ing how to walk again. It’s prob­a­bly like those videos of deaf peo­ple who receive a cochlear implant and get to hear for the first time or like los­ing 200 pounds and run­ning a marathon for the first time. It is weird and strange and scary and excit­ing and fun and miserable.

But most­ly just OK.

It’s been ok. I remem­ber last sum­mer, mak­ing deci­sions and plans with my recent­ly dis­il­lu­sioned wife. We were going to stay in the church but not par­tic­i­pate ful­ly. We were done with the tem­ple and all that goes along with it. We were prob­a­bly going to bap­tize our chil­dren but only because it was an impor­tant fam­i­ly tra­di­tion; a rite of pas­sage so to speak. We were going to attend our meet­ings and try to find call­ings in the ward that would work for us. We were going to become New Order or Alter­na­tive Mormons.

It seemed well thought out and sin­cere, but we quick­ly dis­cov­ered that when you have one foot in and one foot out, the insti­tu­tion you thought would be pulling you in was actu­al­ly prod­ding at you with the spikes of big­otry and xeno­pho­bia. You are wel­come to come and sit and serve and pay, but don’t think, or at least don’t share your thoughts. We read sto­ries of peo­ple with­in the church being excom­mu­ni­cat­ed for express­ing con­cern or dis­be­lief in core tenets of the church that are quite frankly UNBELIEVABLE. We would sit in church ser­vices and become ill lis­ten­ing to the lessons and talks. I’ve nev­er been to a Mag­ic The Gath­er­ing con­ven­tion but I think that is how I would feel at one.

So we left.

We left because we want­ed to be hon­est with our­selves. We left because we want­ed to be hon­est with our kids. We left because we were only stay­ing for fear of the con­se­quences from leav­ing. It was hard to leave. But it was hard­er to stay. In my head, I was explor­ing for the first time the pos­si­bil­i­ty that this life is all we have. This is a ter­ri­fy­ing thought for any­one expe­ri­enc­ing it for the first time, but a sober­ing one as well. If this was it, I wasn’t spend­ing anoth­er minute liv­ing for the sake of some­one else.

Believing/practicing Mor­mons don’t usu­al­ly under­stand this. They are not well equipped to empathize with what it is like to doubt or dis­be­lieve. When coun­sel­ing a doubter, they often offer up a solu­tion tan­ta­mount to say­ing “You’re hav­ing a faith cri­sis? Have you tried NOT hav­ing a faith cri­sis?” It sounds an awful lot like telling a can­cer patient to stop hav­ing can­cer. And this has been the hard­est part (for me at least). The Church cre­at­ed a cul­ture that dis­cred­its and mar­gin­al­izes defec­tors to the point that ortho­dox mem­bers can­not under­stand how any­thing could exist that would make you aban­don your faith.

But if there is any­one out there lis­ten­ing, please trust me when I tell you that there most def­i­nite­ly are things out there. There are things you may think you know, but the real sto­ry has been sug­ar coat­ed and pro­pa­gan­dized into a sto­ry as clean and neat and per­fect as only a fairy tale could be told. The real­i­ty is far from what you have been told and taught and you/we have been for­bid­den from look­ing for more infor­ma­tion out­side autho­rized church pub­li­ca­tions. But a peek behind the cur­tain reveals ter­ri­ble and heart­break­ing truths. It reveals reality.

I won’t go into details. I don’t want to turn off any per­spec­tive read­ers and risk being seen as a church crit­ic. Although I am crit­i­cal of the church inter­nal­ly, I don’t think mud­sling­ing is the most effec­tive method of shar­ing an impor­tant mes­sage. See the CESLet​ter​.org if you ever become curi­ous (I encour­age you to become curious).

Now what? What becomes of my rela­tion­ship to the church? Do I hope for change? Do I hope for more trans­paren­cy? Do I wait for church lead­ers to give cre­dence to my doubts? Do I hope fam­i­ly and friends awake to the same ter­ri­fy­ing real­iza­tion that their world view may not be as clean and neat as they have per­ceived? Do I hope for the demise of the church?

I don’t know.

I only know that the pre­dict­ed mis­ery, lone­li­ness, and con­fu­sion that was sup­posed to accom­pa­ny my ‘apos­ta­sy’ has only ever come to fruition inas­much as:

  • It has been mis­er­able being around peo­ple who seem to be more hurt by my leav­ing the church than I am hurt by my own loss of faith. This didn’t hap­pen to you near­ly as much as it hap­pened to me. I didn’t leave to hurt you and it is not your fault. It real­ly has very lit­tle to do with you.
  • Friends and fam­i­ly have been unwill­ing to meet me on the field of rea­son­able con­ver­sa­tion and have left me alone with unable to gen­uine­ly express myself. They have quar­an­tined me for fear of becom­ing con­t­a­m­i­nat­ed. Los­ing your faith leaves you lone­ly enough with­out also los­ing your community.
  • Gen­er­al church lead­er­ship has left me con­fused as to why the dis­cov­ery of insti­tu­tion­al impro­pri­eties leaves the dis­cov­er­er guilty of apos­ta­sy rather than the insti­tu­tion itself. It’s con­fus­ing to me why the explo­ration of his­tor­i­cal church sins makes me guilty of a despite to sin.

From here I move for­ward. I’m excit­ed to build camp­fires with my kids and go wake­board­ing with friends. Frosty Freeze rasp­ber­ry milk­shakes beck­on me to aban­don my diet and to throw in some onion rings just for fun. Bike rides around the neighborhood.

The sea­son is young and I have so many new mem­o­ries to make. Now that my week­ends have exact­ly dou­bled in dura­tion, I’ll have more time to make them.


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3 responses to “What it’s Like to Leave…”

  1. Diana Avatar
    Diana

    You wrote this three years ago. I am now where you were then. Tell me, is this going to get any easier?

  2. John Krok
    John Krok

    Why is it that we all seem to go through those same emo­tions. As I read your tran­si­tion­ing out of the church I knew exact­ly the feel­ings you felt. I hope there is light at the end of the tun­nel. Thanks for post­ing your sto­ry. It helps!

  3. Eric Nelson

    This is great, Scott.

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