| When we were in the
Worldwide Church of God, we
weren't allowed to grieve normally. If a loved one (who wasn't a member
of the WCG) died, well, we were to tell ourselves that we would
"see them again in the 2nd resurrection," so we felt that we
didn't have that much to be sad about. Members would tell us that we
really seemed to be taking it well and holding up good. No wonder. It
was all buried deep down.
I remember a lady in WCG whose husband
was a member and who committed suicide at home while she was attending
Sabbath services. He left a note to his boss and his daughter, and that
was it. The wife came back to services next week not even acting like
she had just lost a husband. She was her same laughy, jokey self. Others
commented on how she certainly was a "strong woman."
When my mother died, I guess I
did almost the same thing. After all, the WCG was my "family"
and relatives were only ones that were "deceived." After she died, I
looked forward to seeing her again in the "100-year period"
(not realizing there is no such thing), and I cried a few tears at the
funeral and again by myself afterwards. Then I was seemingly "over
it." The day she died my friend even told me that I seemed to be
taking it so well.
All this has to do with
mind
control and the hypnosis that was used on us and the way they taught us to
cancel out any thoughts in our mind which we had learned shouldn't be
there. Forget the past. It works pretty good--until we exit the group.
After I exited WCG and it
finally hit me, I must have grieved for a long time over my mother's
death. I remember walking back in the woods one time for almost two
hours, where no one else was, wearing her jacket, and talking to her
about everything, while I cried over every last thing I had lost. Those were
all emotions that were stuck down inside at the time she had died and
which I thought I was handling so well.
WCG, PCG, and all the other
similar offshoots, have caused so much suffering that it is nearly impossible
to comprehend all of it. It is only afterwards that we keenly feel how it all
has affected us personally. When my dad died, I had been
out of the WCG for two months. Thank God, I was able to spend a good last
year with him, restoring the lost relationship I previously had. This
probably came about because I was in counseling at the time for other
issues and I received a lot of insights. My dad and I never were real
close--I think I could only count about two times on one hand where he
ever gave me any encouragement--but at least my emotions toward him
changed that last year and I was able to accept him as he was, go over
to his house, and enjoy the love he was trying to give. I'm glad he saw
I had left the WCG. He never hung it over my head either. My dad died
just one month after he found out he had cancer. I'm glad I told him I
loved him, one week before he died.
We exiters can experience a
very deep grief when we fail to draw close to the ones that should
matter the most--our own families. The times of closeness we could have
had with them we forfeited because of a pseudo family that we gave our
time and our life to. The
Worldwide Church of
God, Philadelphia Church
of God, Living Church of God,
Restored Church of God and similar ones, can never be our
true families. If you leave, they leave you. How is that true love?
Their "love" is only based on the organization and how
everyone performs and measures up. All we can do is ask a loving God to forgive us,
tearfully apologize to other members of the family that are still alive,
and grieve our losses.
By Nina (former WCG
member)
July 18, 2003
| "And ye
now therefore have sorrow: but I will see you again, and your heart
shall rejoice, and your joy no man taketh from you."
~
John 16:22 |

Poems/Free Verse &
Comfort in Music (comfort for the broken hearted; no audio)
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