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VillavicencioColombia

Catholic majority (~75%) with growing Protestant/Pentecostal (~17%) movement and a small secular minority.

Localized version for English

Villavicencio sits inside a Catholic country where families still organize around baptisms, first communions, and church weddings even after weekly Mass has collapsed. The wider Colombia religious landscape: Catholic majority (~75%) with growing Protestant/Pentecostal (~17%) movement and a small secular minority.

Villavicencio is a mid-sized city — large enough to have at least some non-religious community infrastructure, but small enough that the dominant religious culture still shows up in most public life. You can find your people; it just takes more looking.

As a regional hub within Colombia, Villavicencio provides enough scale that leaving organized religion is possible without leaving your city — though the support networks may be more informal and harder to find than in a national capital.

Leaving religion in Villavicencio is not a legal risk, but it is often a family crisis. Parents grieve, spouses panic, siblings take sides. The work is relational, not institutional — but relational work can be the hardest kind.

Elder X has been through the religious exit himself — the family rupture, the guilt that would not stop, the psych wards, the isolation of being the person nobody in your family understands anymore. If you are in Villavicencio and that description lands, reach out. Not therapy. Personal advice from someone who made it to the other side.

Leaving organized religion is not a single decision — it is a sequence of decisions, spread over months and years. The theological part happens fast. The relational part, the identity part, the part where you figure out what you actually believe now and what you are going to do about it — those take longer. Villavicencio is the backdrop for that work, but the work itself is yours. And you do not have to do it alone.