On Death (and life)

Cynthia touched on it in the first part of her post “Freeing Self-Deceived Fundamentalists“. My family has glorified death for a really long time. I remember Columbine, like she was talking about – being something almost revered – not remotely tragic. When things were shitty(-er than normal) or if I was making a life choice my mom didn’t agree with she would say “well the end times are coming and we’ll be raptured soon [so we won’t have deal with XYZ]”. Going to heaven was all my parents really cared about, they instilled a sense of life being almost useless into me, unintentionally.


Why bother living here when life will be so much better after you die?
When parents neglect or kill their children because they think god told them to or that they’re saving them.
When parents talk about how brave Abraham was for almost murdering Isaac.
When I remember that my parents coped with my two still-born siblings by talking about how lucky they were that they got to be in heaven while we had to suffer on earth…


I used to be afraid, or worried sometimes……..that something like that would happen. That “god” would tell my parents to murder us, and they would. Or that I would be murdered (martyred) because I was a (true) christian in America, and I WOULD look down that gun barrel at columbine and say “Jesus will save me” or “Get behind me satan” or whatever clever bible phrase I could come up with before my imminent death. And my parents wouldn’t mourn – they’d talk about how much better off I was dead than alive, how everyone needs to be a christian so they can wait out their miserable existence and go to paradise.


It’s really depressing thinking about it. But it explains a lot about why, I guess, I’ve rarely been afraid of dying and have always just been kinda nonchalant about it. It’s not a good thing, because it adds intensity to depression: why bother living, anyway? Now that I don’t believe in god and don’t believe that suicide would nullify my non-existent salvation.
But when I was a child…

The emphasis my parents put on dying and going to heaven always bothered me.

It was like they were SO READY for our lives to be over.
They didn’t want to live.
They communicated that living was a waste of time. After all, we’re citizens of heaven, not earth, so why care about the world?

And that always fucked with me because I wanted to live, and I felt guilty for wanting to live, fully, and make the most of my time and help people while I was here, and even, (gaspenjoy my life here. Because some part of me understood that being here mattered, even though I didn’t – and sometimes still don’t – know why.
I was so hurt when my mom would rather I die/be raptured than marry my spouse. She said, hopefully, that Jesus would probably come back before I even had that chance.

I can’t explain to you with words how much that messes with a person. When your parents whole life revolves around the end of their, yours, and everyone else’s life………when rapture is the answer to things that you don’t like…and pretend like everyone who wants to live and love now is silly because obviously they should just be working on getting into heaven.


Everything my parents do is motivated by being the best christians so they get all the heavenly kudos.
I think my parents were really really depressed.

And I think that messed with me in a lot of ways, too.

Comments

  1. Dani Kelley Avatar

    This. All of this. Particularly after just coming from a family member’s funeral. I feel this so much, and have been wanting to write about it (and if/when I do, I’ll definitely be linking to this if you’re okay with it!)

    1. Kierstyn King Avatar
      Kierstyn King

      <3 (totally feel free to link)

  2. […] following is reprinted with permission from Kierstyn King’s blog Bridging the Gap.  It was originally published on November 28, […]

  3. Lila Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your experiences. To have something so similar to my experience get explained is a relief. My mother literally prayed for my death after they kicked me out and to them I have been dead for thirteen years, they told people I died, I no longer exist. Death was so prominent in my upbringing – all around us. I thought my family was cursed with the “death disease” and worried who would die next… the fear so paralysing and creating so much despair. So much despair and sorrow. Still with me today even though I’m not Christian any more and have access to health care now and no body is beating me so forth.

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