FAQ/Help |
Calendar |
Search |
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#1
I've withdrawn from a spiritual belief a number of times, but all my friends are devoted to the same belief and whilst I've been really grateful for their care and friendship I'm facing up to the fact that they have always persuaded me back.
I cant talk about the belief further here without breaking the rules. Has anyone else been in this difficult ,to say the least, situation? I have mental health issues too which have been improving but I dont work so I'm rather isolated. |
Reply With Quote |
Elder
Member Since Sep 2012
Location: Arizona
Posts: 5,630
11 3 hugs
given |
#2
It is all about Control. Best to withdraw.
|
Reply With Quote |
lilacsnow, RoxanneToto
|
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#3
Thanks for your reply @Thunder Bow, I'd like to learn more about this if possible. I hadnt thought of it like that.
I was thinking that they and I had all been indoctrinated and so the default position for most people is to cling to the belief. Sorry if this is a silly question, but please can you explain more about why others might seek to exert control over me expressing doubts or dissent? I tend to have a live and let live approach and just let people go if they want to move on to explore other things and hope we can still stay on good terms. But I'm sensing that people may start saying some hostile things if I persist in saying i dont believe the same way anymore. |
Reply With Quote |
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#4
I realise there is a side of me that may be rather naive -i just dont get group dynamics and conflict in relationships sometimes.
|
Reply With Quote |
Grand Poohbah
Member Since Aug 2020
Location: England
Posts: 1,692
3 6,991 hugs
given |
#5
I think they want to keep you in the same beliefs because they feel threatened by alternative viewpoints and they strongly feel what they believe in is the truth; if their beliefs were challenged or toppled, it would likely lead to an identity crisis and everything they thought they knew being turned on its head, among other things. Some people become very lost after that happens, though others come to terms with it faster. It’s a painful process, regardless
|
Reply With Quote |
lilacsnow
|
Elder
Member Since Sep 2012
Location: Arizona
Posts: 5,630
11 3 hugs
given |
#6
Quote:
|
|
Reply With Quote |
Grand Magnate
Member Since Oct 2012
Posts: 3,619
11 1,103 hugs
given |
#7
I'm sorry if this comes on as a dumb question; what spiritual group do you go to?
|
Reply With Quote |
Account Suspended
Member Since Jul 2020
Location: Unknown
Posts: 707
3 371 hugs
given |
#8
Quote:
|
|
Reply With Quote |
lilacsnow
|
Moderator
Community Support Team Member Since Dec 2015
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 54,191
(SuperPoster!)
8 10.5k hugs
given |
#9
My advice is to follow your own beliefs regardless of what your friends think. You need to be true to yourself.
|
Reply With Quote |
lilacsnow
|
lilacsnow
|
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#10
Quote:
To be honest I'm not totally clear where the boundaries between a religious belief and a spiritual belief are. I'm also not sure what spirituality looks like without religion. |
|
Reply With Quote |
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#11
Thanks for your reply. I never saw it like that but it can be quite pressured through guilt, shame and disapproval. I guess I just have to accept that the belief in the deity they hold is much more important than their relationship with me and that's the boundary they've drawn.
|
Reply With Quote |
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#12
|
Reply With Quote |
88Butterfly88, Fuzzybear
|
88Butterfly88
|
Grand Magnate
Member Since Oct 2012
Posts: 3,619
11 1,103 hugs
given |
#13
Quote:
I don't know if that's been your experience. After I had left, my life didn't go the way I wanted it to. There were times when I wondered if leaving that church may have been the reason. If you leave something that's like a cult, that can happen after you leave. Well, anyways, a few years later, my life got better. |
|
Reply With Quote |
Fuzzybear
|
lilacsnow
|
Student of Life
Member Since Mar 2014
Location: South America
Posts: 4,658
10 2,911 hugs
given |
#14
I once had this sort of thing happen to me. I decided to just stay true to what I believed. Your beliefs are your own. I don't think I would ever give up my own beliefs to follow someone else's idea of what I should believe. I hope this is helpful.
__________________ "Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it!” |
Reply With Quote |
Fuzzybear, lilacsnow
|
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#15
Quote:
Years ago I did experience an unhelpful situation but that was then. Sorry for posting when I had things wrong. Thanks to people who shared meaning to help. I still need to process how this happened. |
|
Reply With Quote |
Fuzzybear
|
Wisest Elder Ever
Member Since Nov 2002
Location: Cave.
Posts: 96,329
(SuperPoster!)
21 81.2k hugs
given |
#16
I'm sending kind thoughts. Maybe posting here (or journaling?) will help you to process what happened, and how this happened. I do not think you're alone in having experienced something like this.
__________________ |
Reply With Quote |
lilacsnow
|
lilacsnow
|
Member
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: Europe
Posts: 90
6 87 hugs
given |
#17
Hi Fuzzybear, thank you. That was very kind of you to write after I put what I'd done.
To explain a bit more...faith has proved to be really important to me but when I've been very stressed my recall of the highlights and positives has been very poor and I was struggling. I hadnt seen or heard from anyone for a while. Combine all that with trauma etc and as you can see somehow i ended up posting the op. making assumptions about why I hadnt heard from people without speaking to them about it directly etc I really need to learn from this....having others to bounce things off to get a healthier perspective seems essential at times. Thank you to all for being here and sorry again for the meltdown. I think there were some valid points made. I do need to be clearer with myself about my beliefs rather than running when theres a problem. |
Reply With Quote |
Fuzzybear
|
Wisest Elder Ever
Member Since Nov 2002
Location: Cave.
Posts: 96,329
(SuperPoster!)
21 81.2k hugs
given |
#18
Quote:
I don't think anyone here is judging you for a ''meltdown''... I think that's one of the good things about pc, people are safe to express how they are feeling without someone else calling them names. I agree, having others to bounce things off is very helpful to most humans. __________________ |
|
Reply With Quote |
lilacsnow
|
lilacsnow
|
Member
Member Since Jul 2020
Location: UK
Posts: 368
3 |
#19
I also have faith and also have mental issues. Faith can be a good journey if you invest in it personally. You have to stop relying on people, and be self motivated and spiritually independent.
|
Reply With Quote |
Reply |
|