Localized version for Polski
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Life After Leaving
Leaving the religion you were raised in is one piece of work. Living the life that comes after is a different piece, and it takes longer than people warn you about. The family that stops calling. The spouse who still believes. The holidays you used to look forward to. The kids who are asking what happens when people die. The guilt that does not switch off when you stop going to services. The friends you have to figure out how to make from scratch.
These pages are about that. Each one is on a specific piece of the after. None of them are short. They are written to be read slowly, on a Tuesday night, by someone who is in the middle of one of these things and needs another person to take it seriously.
Telling your family you no longer believe
For people deconstructing who do not know how to tell their religious parents, siblings, or spouse what they actually believe now. Honest writing on timing, scripts, and what to do when the first conversation goes badly.
Read →When the family stops calling
For people whose family has cut off contact, formally or quietly, after they left their religion. The grief, the confusion, and what to do when the people who said they loved you stop showing up.
Read →When your spouse still believes
For people in a mixed-faith marriage where one spouse deconstructed and one did not. Honest writing on whether the marriage can survive, what to talk about, what to avoid, and the kids in the middle.
Read →Raising kids without religion
For parents who left the religion they were raised in and now have to figure out what to teach their kids about death, ethics, meaning, and the grandparents who still believe. Practical, honest writing.
Read →Holidays in your old religion
For people who left their religion and now have to navigate Christmas, Easter, Ramadan, Passover, or other holidays inside a family that still observes them. How to be honest without blowing up the family dinner.
Read →Funerals and weddings in your old religion
For people who left their religion and have to attend a funeral, wedding, baptism, or bar mitzvah inside that religion. How to be present, be honest, and be the person you actually are now.
Read →The guilt that does not switch off
For people who left their religion and still feel guilty for things that used to be sins. Why the guilt persists, what it actually is, and what reliably helps it loosen.
Read →Finding friends after the church
For people who lost their friend group when they left the religion they were raised in. Honest writing on how adult friendships actually form, and why the loneliness after leaving is not permanent.
Read →Dating after religion
For ex-religious people learning to date, partner, and build intimacy outside the rules they were raised on. Purity culture damage, shidduch shadows, and figuring out what a healthy relationship actually looks like.
Read →What do you actually believe now
For people in deconstruction who do not know what they believe anymore. Why the question is harder than it looks, why you do not have to answer it on a deadline, and a few things that have helped people find their way.
Read →Still in the Middle of Leaving?
The After pages assume you are already out, even partially. If you are still inside the religion you were raised in, or in the active middle of leaving it, the pages by tradition may be more useful first. Each one is written for that specific exit and the texture it has.
Leaving by TraditionTell Me Where You Are
What you grew up in. What is hard right now. What you wish someone had warned you about. I read every message myself and reply within a day or two.