I Did Not Want to Leave
I was born into it. Before I could walk, before I could talk, before I had a single thought of my own about what was true — the framework was already there. My parents believed it. Their parents believed it. The neighborhood believed it. Every adult I trusted, every friend I made, every answer to every question I was allowed to ask — all of it ran through the same filter. My identity was built on it. My marriage was built on it. My friendships were built on it. My understanding of who I was and why I existed came from it.
I want you to hear this part clearly because it gets misunderstood: I did not leave because I was angry. I did not leave because I wanted to sin. I did not leave because I was too lazy or too rebellious or too weak to keep up with the rules. I left because I started asking honest questions, and the answers I got back kept failing the test. One question at a time. One contradiction at a time. One experience that did not match what I had been taught. The weight of it built up over years, until I could not pretend anymore.
And pretending was destroying me. I would say the right things at the right time. I would do the rituals. I would lead the prayers. And inside I was hollow. Pretending you believe something you no longer believe is its own kind of slow violence. It eats you from the inside until there is nothing left to hold up the performance.