RE: Just converted my mom to atheism.....????
February 7, 2015 at 9:14 pm
(January 31, 2015 at 12:16 am)Rancid Wrote: (January 31, 2015 at 12:04 am)Clueless Morgan Wrote: Yes.
But don't count your chickens before they hatch. You might have sown the seed of her atheism, but wait to proclaim victory until she, you know, says she is one. :p
Haha, absolutely. She did call me the "Atheist Prophet" LOL. And she's doing research online already. She does seem rather distant, though not necessarily mad at me, at the moment. But she was quite a faithful woman and I feel like I crushed something in her I get why some people need religion and faith, y'know, it seemed to be making her happy. I had no intention of converting her when this conversation started. She did mention it's "liberating," however...
I'm starting to feel better already, at first it was just like, whoa... :'D
(January 31, 2015 at 12:03 am)SteelCurtain Wrote: Good discussions often lead to good things. Be there for her. If you have any lessons learned from your deconversion, you might want to help her out.
Absolutely. I want to be absolutely sure that she's okay. I hope I can provide that well for her.
1. even Buddha had to let go of all he believed in order to receive the truth that came to him, not the other way.
you may have helped your mom with this Buddhist step of letting go.
so that only things that are truly consistent are what prevail, naturally.
striving to hold on to them is not necessary if they are really true.
2. there is nothing wrong with reconciling between these beliefs that are different languages for universal laws.
we are all under natural laws that predict human nature and how we relate to one another.
the same laws remain true, and just detaching from one language or another means being open to all of them and not shutting any out.
3. as for your dad, you need to work this out anyway to be at peace.
your relations with your mother shape your ability to communicate intuitively
your relations with your father shape your relations and perceptions of authority, and change or control in relations with others especially romantic relations
so make sure you resolve any mommy issues or daddy issues
in order to be a balanced person
this is a natural law of human nature that all people connect and reflect
patterns we carry from our parents, and them from their parents
so make peace with the closest people in your life and everything else will work out
collectively our relations with our mothers and fathers
between husbands and wives
are projected onto relations with church and state authority figures and institutions.
so whatever you resolve locally
then collectively there is peace in society between mother figures that the church represents and father figures that the state represents.