“No winter lasts forever; no spring skips
its turn.”
I wish it were spring. Well, technically it is spring, March 26th. What? It’s
March 26th!? Honestly, I was going to write about the nasty cold
winter weather we continue to experience here in the North East and how it is
really making me feel blah. I was going
to write about how lately I feel like I’m getting anxiety and maybe the reason
why I feel this way is because I’m not planning on going to the memorial of
Jesus’ death that the witnesses believe is the most important meeting of the
year. I really don’t want to go and I feel guilty
about it. I wanted to tell my readers
that my mother lately has been annoying, for example, last night she went on a
rant about me not loving her enough, which is a total fallacy as I would do
anything for her. I also wanted to elaborate on the fact that I
felt like I was in a rut in my relationship and we had a discussion and everything
is in the making for major (good) changes in the future. I wanted to mention that I’m confused about spirituality
and I’m having the feelings of agnosticism are creeping in again. I wanted you to know that I feel like I am disappointment
to everyone in my family.
I wanted to also say that all these little stressors are causing me to
have a dull headache and occasional nausea that doesn’t seem to go away. But I don’t
want to elaborate on any of these things because today is March 26th,
2014.
Tomorrow is the twenty first
anniversary of my baptism as one of Jehovah’s Witnesses. I was
a mere twelve year old girl who dedicated her life to the Watchtower
Society. Baptism wasn’t my choice, a year
before I was baptized my mother was baptized, that very day she told me I would
be getting baptized the next year. I had
no say in the matter. When you are twelve,
you do what you are told. I was a good
little witness for at least the next sixteen years. A few years before I turned thirty something
happened, something changed and I knew I wasn’t living up to my potential. I wasn’t giving my career my all as I was
trying to half heartily be a full time minister at the same time. I also realized I wanted to be a mother and I
knew I couldn’t raise my children to be witnesses. I looked at all the innocent faces of my students
and coworker’s and I realized god wasn’t going to kill all of them at Armageddon. I knew I believed contrary to what the Society
told me to believe. But in the eyes of
Jehovah’s Witnesses, the vow I took at the age of twelve would bind me to them.
Now a lot of choices I make now no matter how
normal or trivial it seems, makes me second guess myself and makes me feel
guilty. They have taken captive of my
mind and it is my job to get it back. It
is my goal to continue deprogramming myself, and hopefully next year at this
time will be better for me. Warm
weather is coming, and things will get better.
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