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Rebuilding After Religion.
For the people who walked away from what they were raised to believe — and now carry the loneliness, the family that stopped calling, the guilt that will not switch off, the shame, and the years that feel wasted.
I have walked this road. I know what it costs. I am not a pastor and I am not a therapist. I am someone who left, rebuilt, and is still figuring it out — and I will talk to you honestly about any of it.
What You Might Be Carrying
The family dinner you stopped getting invited to. The friend who told you they would pray for you and then stopped calling. The parent who said they love you but also said they grieve you like you died. The wedding you were not allowed to go to. The child you have to teach things you no longer believe because the rest of the family will be watching.
The guilt that switches on automatically when you do something that used to be a sin. The shame that whispers that maybe they were right and you are wrong. The thirty years you spent believing it, defending it, building your whole identity inside of it — and the question of what to do with all that time.
The loneliness of not knowing who your people are anymore. The depression that comes when your story stops making sense. The anxiety of having to rebuild everything — what to believe about death, what to say at a funeral, what to teach your kids, who to call when you are scared.
If any of that sounds like your life, you are in the right place. None of it is unfixable. None of it is permanent. But it is real, and it deserves to be taken seriously by someone who has actually been there.
Where to Start
What did I actually lose when I left my religion?
It is not just the faith. It is the community, the family, the story, the certainty, and the version of yourself you used to be. Naming it specifically is the first step in grieving it honestly.
Should I pretend I still believe to keep the peace?
You do not have to pretend you still believe to keep the peace at family events. You also do not have to pretend you are over it when you are not. Honesty in both directions is what makes rebuilding possible.
How do I find people who understand what I am going through?
You do not need a community of a hundred. You need one person you can text at midnight who understands why this is hard without needing it explained. That person changes everything.
How do I rebuild structure after leaving religion?
When the structure your faith provided disappears, the days get long. Putting one or two real things in your calendar that you can finish gives the day a shape. Start small. Five pushups. One walk. One thing you did.
Do I have to throw out everything from my religious past?
Leaving a religion does not mean throwing out everything that came with it. Some of the values still fit. Some of the rituals still mean something. Some of the relationships are still worth fighting for. You get to choose what stays.
How long does deconstruction take?
Deconstruction takes years, not weeks. The grief comes in waves. The new identity does not arrive on a schedule. Be patient with yourself. The fact that you are doing this honestly is already the hard part.
I Have Walked This Road
I grew up in strict religion. Not the kind you go to on Sunday and forget by Monday — the kind that runs your entire life. What you eat. Who you marry. What you wear. What you think. What you believe about yourself, about death, about everything.
I did not want to leave. I want you to hear that. I left because the truth became undeniable and pretending was destroying me. And then everything shook. The marriage. The family. The friendships built inside the walls of that faith. The bipolar diagnosis I got in the middle of all of it, the psych wards, the medications that did not work. I have been at the bottom of all of it.
I am still here. I am still figuring it out. And I will sit with you honestly in whatever part of this you are in.
Two Sets of Long-Form Pages
The site is built around two pillar hubs. The first is by tradition — what it actually takes to leave the specific religion you came from. The second is by topic — the family, the spouse, the kids, the guilt, and everything else that shows up after leaving.
Leaving the Religion You Were Raised In
Long-form pillars for ex-Mormons, ex-JWs, ex-evangelicals, ex-Catholics, ex-Pentecostals, ex-Muslims, and people who went off the derech. Each tradition is different and each page treats it that way.
Read →Life After Leaving
Telling your family, the family that stops calling, mixed-faith marriage, the kids, the holidays, funerals and weddings, the guilt that lingers, finding new friends, dating, and what you actually believe now.
Read →The Six Parts of Rebuilding
Six pieces of what life after leaving actually looks like — the parts most people do not warn you about, and what has helped real people work through them.
After You Leave
I left strict religion. Not in a dramatic moment — slowly, painfully, one honest question at a time, until I could not pretend anymore. If you are walking through that, or you walked through it years ago and the aftermath still has not settled, you are not alone. There is a way to rebuild that is honest with what you actually believe now.
Read More →When the Family Goes Quiet
The phone calls stop. The dinner invitations stop. The friends you grew up with — the ones built inside that faith — they do not know how to be your friend outside of it. The grief of being shunned by people who say they love you is its own kind of pain. There is a way through that does not require pretending to believe again.
Read More →The Guilt That Will Not Switch Off
You can leave the religion and still hear the voice. You can know intellectually that you do not believe, and still feel guilty for things that used to be sins. That voice does not disappear overnight. But you can change what your brain replays at three in the morning. I will show you what worked for me.
Read More →The Years You Think You Wasted
Five years. Ten. Twenty. Thirty. The hardest grief is not what you walked away from — it is the time you spent inside it. Hear me clearly: those years were not wasted. They are the reason you can spot what you spotted, and the reason you can help the next person who walks this road. You are not behind. You are right on time.
Read More →Building Yourself Without the Rules
You spent your life being told what to eat, what to wear, who to marry, what to do with your money, what to think about death, what to say at funerals. When all of that goes, the freedom is real and it is also paralyzing. Rebuilding means choosing — for the first time — what you actually want, on your own terms.
Read More →Finding People Who Get It
The loneliness after leaving organized religion is specific. It is not regular loneliness. It is the loneliness of losing a built-in community, a built-in story, and a built-in identity all at once. The path back to belonging exists. It just looks different than it used to. Find people who walked this road and lived to tell about it.
Read More →This Might Be for You If...
Anyone who walked away from the religion they were raised in — men, women, anyone — is welcome here. There is no version of leaving that is too late, too messy, or too complicated for this conversation.
Reach Out
Tell me where you are. What you grew up in, what made you start questioning, where you are now. Be as specific as you can. There is no wrong way to start this conversation.
I read every message myself and reply within a day or two. No team, no filter, no autoresponder.
If You Want to Go Deeper
The site is free. Email replies are free. If you want a regular ongoing conversation, there is a paid option at $250/week — one hour phone or Zoom plus unlimited texts. Start with an email. No pressure either way.
Start With an EmailNot therapy. Personal advice and conversation.
Not in English?
Write in your own language. I read English natively, and I use translation tools for everything else. It is not perfect, but it works. The faith you left and the family you grew up in look different in different parts of the world — and that is worth talking about, not glossing over.
By Country and City
Leaving Catholicism in Boston is not the same as leaving the LDS church in Salt Lake City, or leaving Islam in Riyadh. Find pages that take where you are seriously.
United States
International
By Country
Photos
Each image slot includes the exact AI prompt. Use Midjourney, DALL-E, or Stable Diffusion.
hero
Turning toward the light
AI Image Prompt
A person standing at the edge of a vast landscape at dawn, turning away from a dark religious structure in the distance, facing the light, cinematic, hopeful, 8K, no text
Alt text: Turning toward the light
deconstruction
Deconstruction reading
AI Image Prompt
Stack of religious books - Bible, Book of Mormon, Quran, Watchtower - mixed with secular books, a coffee cup, a journal with handwritten notes, morning light, editorial
Alt text: Deconstruction reading
mental health
Therapy session
AI Image Prompt
A person sitting in a therapist's office, afternoon light through blinds, hands clasped, vulnerable but safe, respectful documentary style, no text
Alt text: Therapy session
community
Support group
AI Image Prompt
Diverse group of people sitting in a circle in a living room, coffee mugs, genuine conversation, support group atmosphere, warm lighting, candid
Alt text: Support group
sunrise
City sunrise
AI Image Prompt
Sunrise over a city skyline, golden light breaking through clouds, new beginning, wide cinematic shot, 8K, no text
Alt text: City sunrise
pushups
Morning pushups
AI Image Prompt
A person doing pushups on a living room floor at dawn, first light through windows, discipline, rebuilding, documentary style, no text
Alt text: Morning pushups
writing
Journaling beliefs
AI Image Prompt
Close-up of hands writing in a journal, coffee nearby, morning light, "What do I actually believe?" visible on the page, intimate, shallow depth
Alt text: Journaling beliefs
road
The road ahead
AI Image Prompt
An empty road stretching toward mountains at golden hour, a single figure walking, symbolic of the journey ahead, wide cinematic shot, 8K, no text
Alt text: The road ahead
Videos
Content briefs for video production.
Rage 2 Rebuild: What This Is and Who It's For
Elder X explains what this site is, who it's for, and why he started it. For people who left the religion they were raised in.
The First Thing to Do After You Leave Religion
Practical first steps after walking away from your faith. Name what you lost, fill your calendar, reach out.
Deconstruction: What Nobody Tells You
The parts of leaving religion that nobody talks about - the grief, the anger, the loneliness, and the slow rebuild.
Elder X Full Story
The complete personal journey through strict religion, deconstruction, bipolar, psych wards, and rebuilding.
The 3AM Question: What Do You Actually Believe Now?
How to sit with the hardest question after leaving religion, without rushing to an answer.
Explore More.
Every page here is for the same reason — to help you find your way through this. Start wherever feels right.