Wednesday, December 19, 2012

My Spiritual Journey


So this is a blog a long time in the making.  And it’s one that I’ve thought long and hard about.  There were several reasons for waiting, all of them valid in my eyes.  I was afraid that people would be offended.  I was afraid that people wouldn’t understand.  I was afraid that I would lose friends over my personal beliefs.  I wanted to make sure that I knew exactly how I felt and that above all, I was able to put it into words in a way that was clear both to me, and to whomever might read it.  But...I’ve spent years listening to others weigh in on their personal beliefs, and even if I didn’t personally agree, I respected their beliefs.  I know that none of us have the answers.  And I use that plural intentionally, because I truly believe that there isn’t just one answer.    
Every journey needs a beginning, and here is mine.  I was born and raised in a Catholic household.  I went to catechism classes weekly all the way through my junior year of high school.  I went to church every weekend.  I refrained from eating meat on Fridays, I didn’t eat before church, and I went to confession.  I was a Catholic.  I assumed that I was Christian because the Catholic faith is considered one of the many sects of the Christian faith.  So by default, being Catholic made me a Christian (I’ll expound on this more later).  I didn’t reserve any ill will towards my friends who were Lutherans, Methodists, or Baptists.  I even went to a Baptist Christian camp in the summers following my 7th and 8th grade years.  I thought that Christians were Christians and that since we all believed in essentially the same thing, we were the same.  Unfortunately, not all Christians felt that way.  

I very distinctly remember the first time I experienced anti-Catholic attitudes.  It was during my second summer at the Baptist camp in northern Minnesota.  I had just finished 8th grade and I was so excited to go to camp for the second summer in a row with my best friend Dana.  We were all sitting around and chatting in the cabin with our cabin mates, when one of the girls said, “I hate Catholics.”  Being 14 years old and not yet having filters, I blurted out, “I’m Catholic.”  The room went silent and everyone stared at me.  No one knew what to say.  It was like I was an impostor in their midst, a wolf in sheep’s clothing.  Seconds ago we were just a bunch of 13 and 14 year-old girls giggling and having fun, and now we were divided by faith.  But we were technically all Christians.  It was very awkward, and I still think about that moment to this day.  At 14 years old, I really don’t think there is any way that a young girl could come to the conclusion on her own that she personally hated Catholics.  I doubt she understood all the facets of her own faith at that point, let alone all the facets of mine.  Someone she knew and respected in her life had undoubtedly made the comment that they hated Catholics, and in solidarity, so did she.  This is the conclusion that I’ve come to.  She and I never discussed it, so I can’t say that I know for sure where she was coming from, but most 14 year-olds I know are not educated in religious theology.  

Over the years I encountered several other people with anti-Catholic leanings.  I even dated one for a good year and a half.  He was Lutheran, which in my experience, really isn’t all that much different from Catholicism.  I’ve been to Lutheran services before, and found that I know most of their prayers; their church service followed pretty much the same outline as my familiar Catholic ones.  In fact, the only discernible difference (to me) was that the Lutherans didn’t kneel.  And throughout my life when I would ask other Christians why they didn’t like Catholics, the kneeling was brought up more often than anything else (followed closely by the length of Catholic weddings).  Okay...so you don’t like kneeling.  Then don’t kneel.  But don’t say you hate my faith because we choose to kneel.  That’s stupid and petty.  And in the broad scheme of things, a complete non-issue...there are far more logical reasons to hate Catholics than for the simple reason that they kneel during the church service.  It’s like these other faiths were looking for reasons to hate Catholics.  And I can honestly say, in all my years of attending Catholic mass, not once did I hear a priest bash another Christian religion.  Not once.  But that has been my experience with my particular priests.  I understand that others have had different experiences.  I tried to find good, solid reasons why other Christians didn’t like Catholics, and they were hard to come by.  It became clear to me that not only did some of these people not know the Catholic faith, they didn’t know their own faith.  But they passed on their religious hatred/superiority simply because they felt they could, or because someone at some point in their life had told them that they should.  

I have a huge issue with the way Christians fight amongst themselves.  To be Christian means that you believe Jesus was the son of the God and that he died on the cross for our sins.  I don’t mean to over simplify, but that’s basically what it is.  Lutheran, Catholic, Methodist, Baptist...they all believe that.  All their religious rules and doctrine came afterwards.  It doesn’t matter to me what Christian religion a person happens to be.  If all Christians truly believe that Jesus died for our sins and believing in him and his sacrifice means that we’ll get to spend all eternity in heaven with him, what’s left to bicker about?  Kneeling, eating fish on Fridays, length of weddings, and who happens to be “the most” Christian.  That’s what’s left.  It drives me insane.

I also remember quite clearly the progression of distancing myself from the Catholic faith (I call it my “fall from grace”).  The first incident happened when I attended a mass at a church in a neighboring town.  The alter was in the middle of the church (different than what I was used to), the cup that held the wine was made out of glass, the bread that we had was more like a biscuit, they had a full band, and there were people dancing around the alter waving ribbons around.  Oh, and they didn’t kneel.  They didn’t even have kneelers available for those inclined to kneel.  Now, I had been taught in my many years of catechism that the wine should be contained in an unbreakable chalice, meaning a glass that could not be broken.  Glass clearly did not fit that criteria.  It was also taught to me that the bread was to be unleavened, and the bread at this particular church clearly was leavened.  I was so disturbed by it that I didn’t go up to receive it.  I thought these Catholics were bringing a travesty upon our faith with the breakable chalice, their fluffy bread, and their full band (including a drum set) rocking out unfamiliar hymns, not to mention the people ribbon dancing (I will admit, I didn’t mind that we didn’t have to kneel).  I went home from mass that night and couldn’t get that church service out of my head.  What were they thinking?  I was trying to wrap my head around it all.  And then I started thinking about why I was so sure that the way things were done in my church was the “correct” way.  So what if the bread was leavened?  It was still symbolic of Christ’s last meal with his apostles, right?  Wasn’t that the basis behind the ritual of passing out bread during mass in the first place?  So I started thinking.  And thinking.  And thinking.  I thought myself all the way into a literature class in college that was based on the varying styles of prose featured in the bible.  

For the first time in my life, I was reading the bible.  Not just listening to the selected passages that were recited in church every Sunday, but really reading it.  And understanding it.  And I came to the conclusion that the bible was a collection of stories.  It wasn’t a text listing the rules and regulations of the Catholic faith, or any other faith, for that matter.  It was just a bunch of stories.  Like an adult version of Mother Goose.  I’m not trying to trivialize the bible by comparing it to Mother Goose, but I found some very distinct similarities between the Good Book and a book of cautionary children’s tales.  The bible is essentially a collection of (sometimes very violent and awful) cautionary tales, and from those cautionary tales sprouted one of the largest faiths on the planet.  No where in the bible was there mention of a breakable chalice, or of eating fish on Fridays.  It simply isn’t in there.  At least not in any vernacular that I could discern.  And that’s another issue with the bible...it’s been translated into so many different languages, by so many different people, so many different times.  What’s been diluted?  What’s been left out?  What’s been changed?  In my college literature class, we would read a bible passage and discuss as a group what we thought it meant.  The different responses were astounding.  It was crazy to me to think that a small group of 15 people could come up with such differing opinions on what a single paragraph was saying.  And who was right?  Were any of us right?  Broaden that out to millions of people reading one paragraph, and what do you get?  What do you get when those millions of people read not only one paragraph, but entire passages, chapters, and books in the bible?  Add to that the passages that people cling to, and the passages that people choose to ignore.  It’s no wonder that Christians have a hard time finding common ground with each other.

And lets go one step broader, since we are not all Christian in this world.  Muslims have a book.  Jewish people have a book.  Each faith claims that their faith is the correct one because they have documentation of it.  I’ve read a few stories from the Quran and the Torah, and I found some interesting similarities.  They all have similar versions of the Noah’s ark story (amongst others...this is just the example I’ve chosen to use).  I find that interesting, and I try to find meaning in it.  I’m not a religious theologian by any means and I’m not trying to say I know any more than anyone else when it comes to religions, particularly the non-Christian sects, but I find it interesting that three very different religions contain similar stories in their respective defining texts.  Why do they contain similar stories?  Is it coincidence or is it plagiarism?  Is it something else entirely?  Does it mean we all started in the same place and divided when the waters receded?  And then you have to take into account Buddhism, Hinduism, Native Americans, and tribal cultures, who have multiple gods, or believe in reincarnation, the Spirit World, etc.  Are they wrong because they don't have a bible to guide them?  Why are Christians so convinced that everyone else is wrong?  And I have to make this point, because the more I think about it, the more it makes sense.  People rag on Scientologists all the time for basing their religion on the writings of a science fiction author.  How different is that, really, than basing a religion from the Bible?  They are both texts written by human beings.  I admit, the Scientologists are little difficult to understand, even for me, but they believe what they believe and they have the texts to back it up.  Same as Christians.   

I never really thought of myself as a Christian.  I was first a Catholic, and by definition that made me a Christian.  People would ask me if I was Christian, and I would respond with “Yes, I’m Catholic.”  I didn’t even stop to think about what they were asking and what I was saying.  I never had a relationship with Christ.  In fact, I felt like Christ was a bit of an afterthought.  Some Catholics might disagree with me on this, but remember, this is my take and my experience.  Yours may have been different.  Of course Christ was mentioned and we said prayers referencing him and sang songs that glorified him, but I never felt that we were encouraged to have a personal relationship with him, as some religions do.  So when I started to move away from the Catholic church, moving away from Christianity wasn’t really that much of a stretch for me.  And I have moved away.  That might come as a surprise to some of you as I still take part in prayers at mealtimes and I still go to church with my family when I’m home.  Doing those things is comfortable to me, it’s what I had been doing for most of my life, and it’s something I continue to do to this day when I am surrounded by friends and family who are practicing Christians.  Does reciting a prayer to a God that I don't technically believe in make me a hypocrite?  Maybe.  Maybe not.  I guess that’s for other people to decide.  I’m perfectly okay with it.    

Not being a Christian doesn‘t make me a bad person.  I know that some people feel they need the overseeing eye of God to keep them from doing bad things, but I disagree.  I think people are good because they want to be, and likewise are bad because they want to be.  I don't think there's anyone orchestrating our behavior from above.  Life, as I see it, comes down to choices.  I don't believe that we are separated into the righteous and the evil.  I don’t believe that not believing in God means that I’m destined to burn in hell for all eternity either.  I don’t believe in hell.  Perhaps I’ll have a rude awakening at the time of my last breath, but at this moment, I don’t think I will.  I don’t know what will happen when I die.  Maybe something, maybe nothing.  I don’t know, and neither does anyone else.  Maybe we just cease to exist.  Maybe there's another plane of existence where our energy continues to reside long after our bodies are gone.  Maybe our energy dies with us and we go back to nature.  People can believe whatever they want to believe, but at the end of the day, no one definitively and without-a-doubt knows.  And people have said to me, “You have to have faith, you just have to believe.”  But I don’t have to do either of those things.  I don’t begrudge people for believing or having faith.  Some people can’t imagine life without it; it gives them comfort, it gives them strength, it rights their moral compass.  Whatever happens at the end of my life happens, and it’s not going to change the way I’m living my life today.

People ask me, “If you’re not Christian, what are you? Atheist?”  The fact of the matter is, I don’t have a label for myself.  I’m not Atheist, I’m not Christian.  I don't believe in a Christian God.  I don't know that I believe in a "god" character at all, but I'm not ruling it out.  I don’t know enough about any of it to be comfortable committing to a label.  I have a very "live and let live" philosophy about life.  I might not agree with other people's choices and beliefs, but they have the right to their choices and beliefs just as I do.  I don't feel that we accomplish anything by shoving our beliefs down other people's throats.  Religious doctrine can be upsetting to some people, myself included.  I don't push my lack of Christian beliefs on anyone.  If you believe in God, great.  If you don't, equally great.  I have a saying that I revert to every now and then, and it goes something like this: "I'm willing to let you go along with these ideas, so long as they're not hurting anyone."  I don’t have all the answers, but I’m not willing to trust something blindly either.  I feel like I'm much too rational of a person to believe in something because someone says it's so.  I’m just me, living my life the best way I know how to live it.  I believe in myself, and I believe in those around me.  I believe in what I see, in what I experience, in what I’ve learned.  I‘m no different than I was yesterday, and I’ll be no different tomorrow.  I’m just here on this earth like everyone else, trying to find my way, trying to be as happy as I can.  I take comfort in my friends and my family, my job, my travels, my dogs, and the random people I come across everyday.  My life is very full of very good things, and I feel lucky for that.  

Some might question the timing of this blog, with it being so close to Christmas and all.  I honestly just realized that this evening as I was typing this out.  It hadn’t even crossed my mind.  What really brought this on was the shooting in Connecticut this past week.  It was horrific.  It was awful.  It left me questioning what is wrong with humanity, and wondering why something like that happened in the first place.  People were quick to take to social media, condemning the shooter, the failure of our government to both tighten gun control laws and to find a solution to the increasing mental health population.  Condolences abounded for all those who lost a child or a loved one.  People were also quick to quote scripture, both as a form of comfort and as an explanation for the tragedy.  Many said that they were sad to hear about what had happened, but that they trusted their faith in the Lord and that through prayer he would protect them and their families.  Others quoted scriptures in which the Lord would protect and keep those who were faithful to him, those who believed, and that through Christ all things are possible.  What I am struggling with is how a Christian, especially one who lost a loved one in that massacre, is able to reconcile their trust in God after something like this happens.  Because I frankly don’t get it.  I don’t cut people in my life any slack for doing bad things to me, and I likewise wouldn’t be able to handle the thought of a deity, a God that I believed in and trusted, allowing something like that to happen to me or my loved ones. I personally would much rather hear that what happened in Connecticut was a tragic accident, a case of too many people being in the wrong place at the wrong time. “Everything happens for a reason,” “God needed them in heaven more than we needed them here on earth,” “God doesn’t give us any more than he thinks we can handle,” are all meant to be words of comfort.  And to some they probably are.  If someone said anything like that to me after losing someone as violently and as senselessly as those people did, I would rage.  I don’t want to hear that this horrible tragedy was orchestrated by the very God that swore through scripture that he would protect his people, the very same God who people place their trust in every day of their lives, the very same God who sacrificed his own son as payment for our sins so that he wouldn’t have to punish us like this anymore.  God couldn’t find it within his power to spare those innocent children, many of whom probably came from Christian families.  In essence, are we to believe that he allowed the violent death of the very people he was supposed to protect.  How are people rationalizing this?  Are people really under the assumption that the deaths of all those children and teachers is to be interpreted as some sort of atonement for the sins of the rest of the world, the "wicked," if you will?  As the bible would have people believe, all that ended with Jesus on the cross...or am I mistaken?  

I don’t mean to sound like I’m attacking anyone for their faith...I truly am just trying to understand.  I’m a curious person by nature and I just want to understand the world around me, if that’s even possible.  I’m upset about the state of our country just like everyone else.  Some people take comfort in their faith, some people take comfort in alcohol, some people take comfort in their families, some take comfort in just sitting quietly and thinking.  I’m thinking.        

                                       
            

11 comments:

  1. Thank you for sharing your story with me Stephanie. We live in a very exciting time! With the internet, a world without religion is actually possible. If there were a god or gods to thank for the internet, I would... but I think I'll just thank science instead ;)

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  2. Loved this post Stef! Thanks so much for sharing. I am right in line with your thinking on SO many things. :)

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  3. Awesome journey, Stef. Agree with a lot if what you say, especially the part about the crux being to believe Jesus died on the cross. I, too wrestle with the same concluding thoughts you have. I continue to learn and think and grow every day, so what I believe today might be different from tomorrow as I continue to learn from the Bible. But a few things are in changeable for me, such as basing my morality in what the Bible teaches. We had a very good Sunday school class recently where our associate pastor answered exactly the points you brought up about the accuracy of the Bible's words now to when it was first written. There are scholars out there who have studied that very issue because obviously, as you pointed out, it's very important. What I came away with from the discussion is that over 99% of the Bible has been translated accurately. I guess with this as with most things is you can chose to believe that conclusion or not.

    I just have to believe that God, in his infinite wisdom that my mere mortal brain can never comprehend, has a huge plan for every single person and for the world. I do believe God can use evil/sin/bad times for his own purpose. I can think of many examples, from my own personal experiences to events that were and are horrific tragedies. Our time living in Wisconsin was awful. Made some friends, but not many. My job was awful. In short, that is the place we lived where we were greatly unhappy. I had Amelia there and the closest blood relative was a 12-hour drive away. And she was beyond colicky. I had been having stirrings of getting back to regular church attendance but nothing in that area was a good fit. We ended up moving back here to VA I found the perfect church for me. We also found out Dave's mom had pancreatic cancer last year. She died this past February. Had we been living in Wisconsin, Dave couldn't have made all those trips up to spend time with his mom during treatment and hospice. If we were living in Wisconsin, it would be harder for Dave's dad to come down for frequent visits as he needs us desperately now as much as he needs to get away from their big, empty house.

    If God had made our lives in Wisconsin great, we probably would have stayed. But look at all we would have missed. Those three years of sadness/difficulty for us were really being used to guide us back to where God knew we'd be needed and to the church that's perfect for me. This example might not be powerful to anyone except me, but it's always my own reminder that God can use bad situations for good or for his glory. It's just hard for us to see or understand at the time.

    A more public and historical example is something I posted recently. The sinking of the ocean liner the Lusitania in 1915. President Wilson didn't want to drag the US into WWI. A German submarine torpedo shot the ocean liner and it sank in 18 minutes and over 1000 innocent people (women and children) died. The public outcry from that and other atrocities finally got the US in the war. What would have been the outcome if the US didn't get involved?

    I do worry that God is not blessing the US now that more of the public seems to be disinterested in living God or learning about him and trying to do as the Bible teaches. The end times are supposed to be marked by an uptick in evil and of people turning away from God. No one (not even the Mayans!) knows when the world will end except God. But the worldwide acceleration of sin and evil is worth noting at the least. ("Loving" God up a few sentences).

    We do know that God is familiar with death and suffering because that's what happened to Jesus.

    But could I still believe all this if my daughter was gunned down? I don't know. But I would hope and pray that my faith would remain strong.

    Thanks for sharing this blog, Stef. Glad you are thinking and glad to get a chance to ponder about all this alongside you.

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  4. The concept of a"loving" personally involved god that would sink a ship full of his creation to change the mind of a president to get him involved in a war is terrifying. But not as terrifying as a god and savior that saw fit to have 20 children murdered in absolute terror, presumably after at least some of their parents had prayed for the safety of their children or the school as I am sure many parents do.

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  5. It is difficult to grasp. I agree. Remember the story of Job from the Bible? And what God allowed Satan to do to Job? And Job's immediate response was to praise God. And in the end God blessed Job even more than he had at the beginning of the book. Remember God asking Abraham himself to kill his only blood son? I think both are examples that God wants to be first in our lives. Again, could I hold this view if my beautiful child was murdered? I don't know. I hope so. But God can allow Satan to attack us and I not certain but I think part of it is for us to show ourselves and the devil that we are devoted to God and live him.

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    1. Those examples were all in the old testament. I was taught by many spiritual leaders that God isn't supposed to do that stuff anymore, and at least back then he used to speak directly to members of his flock. He doesn't do that anymore. If God is still testing people in such twisted ways (making gentlemen's agreements with Satan????) after having already killed Jesus for our sins, that is even more terrifying than sinking a ship to change a president's mind. I understand that people want to have meaning and peace in a world full of horrible tragedies, I just don't understand how a god that loves us can be responsible (as he is as an omnipotent being) for such misery and suffering. That is not a comforting thought to me.

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  6. Thank you for being so civil with your comments everyone, I truly appreciate it. I've had conversations like this in the past that have gotten downright ugly, so I appreciate everyone being able to talk about this like adults.

    I understand the meaning behind the stories of Job and Abraham, both very disturbing stories in what God was asking of them and allowing to be done to them. I understand that in the Old Testament, God did things like that, and much worse to draw out faith from his followers. What I'm confused about (and have always been) is how the in the New Testament, we were taught that Jesus was sacrificed so that God wouldn't have to do those awful things to us anymore. After Jesus's sacrifice, the Old Testament was there to prove that the prophecies were true, and that we were to follow the teachings of Jesus. That was my teaching, my understanding, and my interpretation of the stories. What I come away with is this:

    1. If Jesus truly died for the people's sins, God should stop punishing his people and bringing his wrath down upon the earth.

    2. If God is continuing to punish his people, it seems as though Jesus's sacrifice was for nothing?

    3. If God sees fit to continue to punish his people based on the sins of his non-followers, why does he kill the innocent and the members of his flock? Why doesn't he just kill the non-believers? I feel like if God really wanted to send a message to the non-believers, he would start picking them off one by one...or as a big group all at one time since we've read in the bible that he's more than capable of doing that. I feel as though punishing his believers is counter-productive, and in essence is resulting in driving some of them away. Tangent: Those of us in healthcare are very familiar with patient satisfaction scores, usually rating their care from 1 to 5. When administrators look at the numbers, they usually rule out the 1's and 5's...the 5's are already super satisfied and don't really need any additional follow-up or attention. The 1's are the people who will never be satisfied, and no amount of effort will change their minds. The focus is the 2-4's...these are the people with room for improvement, and those are the ones the hospital focuses on, with the goal being that they will all be 5's at some point...at the very least, 4's. So from that, you can assume that Christians and believers are 4's and 5's. Atheists are 1's. God shouldn't be wasting his time punishing the 4's and 5's...they are already right there with him. If he truly wanted to make a difference and pull more people to his side, he needs to either punish them and reward them, as he did with Job, or he needs to just wipe the non-believers out, thereby scaring the ones on the fence to his side.

    Perhaps in reading the teachings of the New Testament versus the New Testament, I found different meaning, or was taught it in a different way. I'm not saying anyone is "wrong" in what they believe or what they have been taught, but that we obviously have been taught/believe different things. It's hard to wrap my head around it. It just doesn't make sense to me.

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  7. Love this discussion. One of the changing points in my thoughts on religion was when I married a man whose family is from Egypt. If you are born in Egypt, there is greater than a 90% chance that you will be a Muslim. That really got me thinking. Let's be honest? I'm Christian because that's all I knew growing up. That's what the majority of the people are if you were born/raised in Eyota. (AKA BFE) I think it's wrong to think one group of people is better or more correct than another type of person. We are all the products of our environment, and when raised in a Christian home, you will most likely be Christian. Same is true for Islam, and all of the other religions. Do I have a better chance of getting to heaven because I happen to be white and born here? I doubt it. What if (extreme idea coming, watch out) we all believe in the same higher power?

    Regardless, I am tolerant of whatever label a person has or doesn't have. I will never think I'm better than someone else or more worthy of goodness because of what I believe. I also don't believe in Hell. Sometimes I think living is the hell, and we are all doing it the best we know how.

    Oh, and these are words of someone teaching my children's Sunday School classes. ;)

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  8. *In my earlier post I meant reading the teachings of the Old Testament vs. the New Testament.* I'm sure you were all able to figure that out, I'm just OCD about that stuff...hahaha!

    And I agree, Leah, this discussion is awesome. I wish there were more people willing to weigh in the way we all have here. I don't know if it's fear, uncertainty, or indifference that keeps people from talking about their faith, about the state of our country, about matters that hit close to home that seemingly have no explanation. We accomplish nothing by burying our heads in the sand. Talking about things and getting them out in the open is the only way to learn from each other. Not a single one of us has all the answers. But I truly feel that if we're willing to work together, we can succeed.

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  9. honestly, i cannot understand why more people have not come to this conclusion..or beginning..now i know why i like you guys.. kubbon

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  10. Stef, I just got around to reading your post after seeing you yesterday, and remembering I meant to go back and read it.

    Have you read Lamb by Christopher Moore? If not, I definitely recommend it. Some of your ideas reminded me of the book. It's funny, and thought-provoking.

    I always love to hear your perspective. You're well-spoken and honest, even when you know your honesty may offend others. I'm definitely not one of the offended. I've had many of the same thoughts over time. Thank you for sharing your journey.

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