• BruceTwarzen
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    71 year ago

    I didn’t grow up religious at all. I don’t know anyone who is religios. The closest thing are some people in my neighborhood who are in their 70s who used to he religious, because that’s how they scared children into behaving back then. They like to talk a lot and tell me about their grandchildren and how happy they are that they don’t have to go through being afraid of fire and brimstones growing up. When i see videos like that, i always have a hard time believing that these people are real and how it is to be in their brain. Donthey really actually believe all that or is it like buyers remorse, where they know it’s bullshit, but it’s too late now to admit so other people have to be miserable as well.

    • @open2db8
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      81 year ago

      I have long suspected that your “buyer’s remorse” proposition is true for most believers. Given the breadth of the effect religious belief has on the business of living one’s life and the seeming competition for being more fervent than the next guy in the pew, I suppose it is to be expected to one degree or another.

      The mental distress of coming to terms with the realization that you have wasted some part of the one most valuable commodity one has (days of life) has to be incredibly difficult to bear.

    • @TrickDacy
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      61 year ago

      I can’t even imagine what it would be like not to be tortured by these ideas for at least some portion of my life. I probably have never known anyone who wasn’t… Where are you from?

      When you tell a 4 year old child they will burn forever if they don’t do everything you say, that sticks with them.

      I feel like you don’t appreciate how gullible children are or how deeply impacted they can be by their very first experiences in life. Just even hearing this shit is deeply traumatic for a child.

      I find it really unlikely I’ll ever be religious again, but every now and then I worry I am wrong about it all.

      I’m not saying I understand being religious. Not any part of my rational brain can accept those ideas. But we all have a more primitive part of our brain that deals with emotion, and it can be very powerful.

      • @v0rld
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        41 year ago

        Can’t speak for BruceTwarzen, but I’m from a fairly large city in Germany and I don’t personally know any religious people. Side rant: Which makes the various privileges the catholic church gets all the more puzzling and annoying to me.

    • warrier120
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      11 year ago

      It’s good that your neighbors had the self-awareness to realize what they believed was dangerous, but I think there’s definitely a point where people can’t turn back. It gets even worse when they raise their children like that.

    • tygerprints
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      011 months ago

      Religion is bullshit, shoveled on a gold shovel to the poor and uneducated. Religion is simply a big business, and perhaps one of the most successful in misleading people and getting them to give up portions of their income for some kind of fictional “salvation.”

      But religion has done a good job making people feel bad about themselves, of justifying people hurting each other, and of starting wars. And the malarky it peddles just seems to grow bigger and more prominent every day.

      Sad, but that’s how life is. People exploiting others for money. That’s all human existence really consists of.