Why I Left the Mormon Church (Pay No Attention to That Man Behind the Curtain)

2024 ж. 16 Мам.
282 518 Рет қаралды

How many times do you have to be led in the wrong direction till you realize it's all false?
A few resources I mention in the video:
*My book, How to Leave the Mormon Church: An Exmormon's Guide for Rebuilding After Religion (www.amazon.com/How-Leave-Morm...)
*My Mormon wedding explained video ( • Mormon Temple Weddings... )
*My Mormon endowment explained video ( • Secret Mormon Temple C... )
*My Mormon garments explained video ( • Mormon Garments Explained )
#exmormon #exmo #mormon #lds #utah #ldstemple #mormontemple #mormontemplewedding #exmormon #exmo #mormon #lds #utah #ldstemple #mormontemple
- where to find me -
TikTok: / alyssadgrenfell
Instagram: / alyssadgrenfell
Blog: www.howtoleavethemormonchurch...
Email me: alyssadgrenfell@gmail.com
- support my channel -
Venmo: venmo.com/u/Alyssa-Grenfell

Пікірлер
  • I can certainly see why men don’t want to leave. It’s a man’s world.

    @teemarie5478@teemarie54782 ай бұрын
    • Not for any man with a soul.

      @Zoltair_Jerry@Zoltair_Jerry2 ай бұрын
    • @@Zoltair_Jerry well most men don’t have em anyway

      @Day2Night_@Day2Night_2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Day2Night_Come on, she made an enormous effort to leave the cult of Mormonism only for you to drag her to the cult of feminism.

      @6alcantara@6alcantara2 ай бұрын
    • @@6alcantara...Feminism isn't a cult fam. Equality and respect for everyone, regardless of what's in their pants, should be seen as common logic and basic civil decency. It sucks that women have to fight tooth and nail to gain that respect, only for people like you to try and kick them back down.

      @trout512@trout5122 ай бұрын
    • @@6alcantara my guy, we are oppsite of a cult. Pro choice is feminist, and having a choice certainly is not a cult thing, babyboy

      @radschele1815@radschele18152 ай бұрын
  • I did not grow up Mormon, but I love watching your videos and learning things the general public doesn’t normally know.

    @melihartsyouu@melihartsyouu2 ай бұрын
    • Same.

      @doomsdayaddams2894@doomsdayaddams28942 ай бұрын
    • The part about your high school friends hit hard. I am not a current or former Mormon but love your channel. I recently, as an adult, realized through therapy why I “got in with a bad crowd” in high school: they were kind and accepting to me, unlike my family and previous “friends.”

      @doomsdayaddams2894@doomsdayaddams28942 ай бұрын
    • Same

      @katharinaxyl702@katharinaxyl7022 ай бұрын
    • Same

      @AnnaHirsch723@AnnaHirsch7232 ай бұрын
    • Me too

      @thomashewitt8104@thomashewitt81042 ай бұрын
  • I am still technically an active member, but I have been pushing myself away from the church for about 3 years now, I am currently 18 turning 19 and still living with my parents, the hardest part about leaving is my dad is currently my bishop and my entire family is incredibly devout and active. While I am stuck going to church (I do not have enough money to move out) I appreciate your videos as they allow me to realize I am not alone. While I am stuck with this right now, your videos have helped me cement my choice of leaving when I can

    @ionizedspark785@ionizedspark7852 ай бұрын
    • i hope that whenever you leave, your life is filled with happiness, freedom, and joy

      @nic00001@nic00001Ай бұрын
    • I was in a similar situation. I am now older and happily living my own life and I rarely think about the church. Hold fast dude, you’re nearly out of there.

      @rox8078@rox8078Ай бұрын
    • I’m in a very similar situation, it’s such a sickening feeling to constantly lie abt what I believe in fear of being scolded or ostracized or even lose people who are close to me

      @tastysand05@tastysand05Ай бұрын
    • I’ve met a few run off Mormons in the military. Find a recruiter and join up. They will take you away from the cult.

      @stephenbinion6348@stephenbinion6348Ай бұрын
    • I hope that when you do take the last step away, those whom you love the most and are most connected with will eventually understand and be reconciled to your choice, and that you will find persons to be friends with who will become your family of choice that will help you become strong in your new life. I believe you know what is best for you, and that your choices will be rewarding for you.

      @chrissnyder8108@chrissnyder810829 күн бұрын
  • As a behavioral health therapist, I want to encourage you to challenge that self-talk of “not being strong enough” because your depression flared and you had panic attacks while teaching. You were clearly in an environment where you were being harassed, not supported properly, and doing something which did not align with you. That is all incredibly stressful! Especially when you are doing it 5 days a week for weeks on end. Strength is not doing something without effort or struggle. Strength is continuing to push through while struggling. Strength is trying your best even in a terrible situation. Strength is having the bravery to question deeply held beliefs despite the possible negative consequences. Strength is being willing to be honest with your husband about not wanting to keep going to church. You struggled, you suffered, but you also survived and took some hard steps towards a better life. That is something to be very proud of. The increased depression, anxiety, and panic attacks were signals that something in your life was wrong, not that you were weak.

    @AutobotChick25@AutobotChick252 ай бұрын
    • This was very kind of you to say ❤

      @ARareAndDifferentTune_13@ARareAndDifferentTune_13Ай бұрын
    • 💯

      @robertsandberg2246@robertsandberg224617 күн бұрын
    • I know this message was for her but I felt this message too.

      @kyle19939@kyle199399 күн бұрын
    • This is definitely something I also needed to hear. Thank you! ❤

      @marianbaroi7526@marianbaroi75264 күн бұрын
  • Saying this with so much love: panic attacks and suicidal ideation do not come from a lack of strength. It doesn't mean much from a random internet stranger, but I'm proud of you. Thank you for sharing your story.

    @melinalist8159@melinalist81592 ай бұрын
    • Seconded! Those kids sounded awful for anyone to deal with!

      @desertels5119@desertels51192 ай бұрын
    • Agreed!

      @jenessarenee@jenessarenee2 ай бұрын
    • I have passive suicidal ideation all the time from past trauma. I do not hide it. I have a right to leave it on my menu, as I like to know it's there if I want it one day. It comforts me to know I can choose it, to see it on the menu!

      @Amped4Life@Amped4Life2 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely. No need to give reasons for why you didn't see it realize things as a child. You're a child, give yourself grace.

      @logicalchaos-@logicalchaos-2 ай бұрын
    • Yes, it is not something to be ashamed of, honestly.

      @biddiemutter3481@biddiemutter34812 ай бұрын
  • I enjoy your vedios. I have been a LDS member for 75 years. I served a mission from 1968 to 1970. I have had slot of calling in the church including being an Army Chaplain. 9 months ago my wife had back surgery and is just now recovering from it. We took this time to really study the church doctrine and history. The SEC fine started us going down the rabbit hole. If they lied about church finances what else have they lied about? There are to many things to list here that have caused concern throughout the decades of my membership. Truth stands up to scrutiny. It is hard to think I bought the narritive for most of my life. Thanks for your story. Best wishes to you and your family.

    @kentjohnson9195@kentjohnson91952 ай бұрын
    • I'm so sorry that you're having to go through this. Facing unpleasant truths and having to question your life is just horrible. When I did it (ex-Catholic) it felt like my heart was breaking. I really hope you can find a measure of freedom and peace for yourself and your wife.

      @ealusaid@ealusaid2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for your concern. We are doing well. We live in an amazing community of 500 people in the mountains of central Idaho. They are very supportive and understanding.

      @kentjohnson9195@kentjohnson91952 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for removing your weakness and confusion from among us.

      @JohnDLee-im4lo@JohnDLee-im4lo2 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnDLee-im4lowhat do you mean by this?

      @oliviafroelich9137@oliviafroelich91372 ай бұрын
    • @@oliviafroelich9137 Just thanking old Kent for leaving the church. Weak and confused people cycle in and out of the church all the time. He's just another.

      @JohnDLee-im4lo@JohnDLee-im4lo2 ай бұрын
  • Whoever decided that children under the age of 8 are perfectly sinless has never met a 3 year old.

    @TempestPhaedra@TempestPhaedra2 ай бұрын
    • Part of sin is intent and understanding consequences. 3 year olds don't really understand consequences. I don't think 8 year olds really do either, I think Mormonism pushes kids to pledge thier lives too early as a method of control.

      @moringsdaughter@moringsdaughter2 ай бұрын
    • Your comment is hilarious! Love it ❤

      @deaw87@deaw87Ай бұрын
    • @@moringsdaughterI think they were making a joke rather than being serious, but I agree. 8 year olds don’t really fully understand the consequences of their actions either.

      @emilyfisher7060@emilyfisher7060Ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂😂. I agree. Hahahaha

      @maeterith1984@maeterith198415 күн бұрын
    • 😂

      @DyanRowe@DyanRowe11 күн бұрын
  • I'm not Mormon, but I live in Utah and have done so since coming to the States (from Ukraine) when I was around 7. In third grade, we moved to Bountiful and I met my best friend at the time. She was deaf and had an interpreter because no one could speak ASL. I befriended her through her interpreter but after about a month of that I realized it was very inefficient to communicate that way so I started learning ASL. I got very fluent and we became best friends. I was literally the only kid in school who bothered to learn ASL - to the point that if her interpreter was absent, I'd be called to interpret for her. My friend was super grateful because she's never had anyone go out of their way to learn her language to communicate with her. I just knew how annoying it was to speak through an interpreter, myself (though for me it was Russian-English and vice versa), so I figured I'd invest time in learning. We became inseperable. That is, until her parents realized I wasn't Mormon. At first, they loved me and were grateful that I learned so much just to interact with their daughter, but the second it came out that I wasn't LDS, her parents forbade her from speaking to me. Imagine - they forbade the only friendship she had where she could speak without an interpreter and could share her feelings with just her friend - all because I wasn't LDS. They even told the interpreter to make sure we weren't allowed to interact at school. The interpreter refused but told them she would. She simply saw how much our friendship meant to her and refused to come between us. I was no longer allowed at their house or to speak over the phone (late 90's and via TTS). I was just baffled because they took away the one thing their daughter was the most grateful for at the time. I wish I could say we kept in touch, but we weren't able to. Her parents were thrilled when we didn't go to the same Junior High and refused to allow her to come to my house, too. Made me so sad. To forbid a friendship with the only person who went out of their way to learn to communicate with her is wild. I hope she's doing well.

    @olgs37@olgs37Ай бұрын
    • 💙

      @ritamariekelley4077@ritamariekelley40774 күн бұрын
  • I'd rather have questions that can't be answered than have answers that can't be questioned.

    @nealskelton1425@nealskelton14252 ай бұрын
    • Yes!!!

      @brittneyschultz7830@brittneyschultz7830Ай бұрын
    • ONE HUNDRED PERCENT!!!!!!! Religion be like: God loves you unconditionally, but if you do something sinful you will go to hell. Reality and actual logic be like: how THE FECK does that make any sense. If god's love was truly unconditional, there wouldn't even be a hell and everyone would just go to heaven regardless of what you do.

      @LovecraftianGodsKiller@LovecraftianGodsKiller17 күн бұрын
  • The first 8 to 9 minutes are so sad, no child should have to go through that.

    @watchdominion7356@watchdominion73562 ай бұрын
    • True, but so many of us did. I walked around with my shoulders up to my ears so afraid of temptation. After all, angels above us are silent notes taking.

      @DancingQueenie@DancingQueenie2 ай бұрын
    • My sisters did

      @CTladiesman@CTladiesmanАй бұрын
    • I don't see or hear nothing in this story but complain I don't like going But everything I was thought 🤔 I did like, singing ,the family night on Mondays,going to visit people and talk to them about the Gospel made me happy cuz i seen the people that converted and get baptized I see the change they did better in life they leave the drinking and living that life and turn to God to be faithful members and turn there life around That was good

      @user-landoParada@user-landoParada28 күн бұрын
    • @@DancingQueenie I was never afraid of temptation Never thought of that, (temptation) If it did, I guess I processed it and leave it behind if I did comited a sin by acting up on whatever the sin was I didn't think of it, now I do Im no saint but I do say that the church LDS help me b who I am now I have a big heart I help everybody always doing good to my fellow men I know a lot of people that express about LDS like if it was something bad Went is not I do love the way my parents brought me up,and I thank them For such a pleasure... Yo se qu vive mi senor Consuelo es poder saverlo. I don't know I don't mean to offend anybody,but go burn that energy u feel for the LDS at the gym,go out running Go do all the things u wanted to do that didn't do and don't tell Just enjoy it and 🤫 just don't get lost😘 💟💛💕I got love for u So beautiful lady you are Mamacita 😍🥰😘

      @user-landoParada@user-landoParada28 күн бұрын
    • @@user-landoParada Thank you my friend. You do have a big sweet heart! Vaya con dios.

      @DancingQueenie@DancingQueenie28 күн бұрын
  • I met a lot of missionaries. One of them I fell in love with and I knew he had strong feelings for me. He finished his mission, said he was going to come back to marry me but never did. 6 years later he came to my parents home divorced, ex Mormon and asking me to date him. I was married and happy. So happy watching this video that he didn’t come back. PS I am biracial.

    @laketahoe3993@laketahoe39932 ай бұрын
  • Girl. Don’t EVER say that you wish you were stronger for feeling suicidal. Ever. That is NOT a strength issue. You know that. You would never tell a suicidal person that they just need to be stronger, why would you talk down on yourself like that. You need to honor that version of yourself, she WAS strong. And SHE made YOU strong.

    @animeirl5265@animeirl52652 ай бұрын
  • I had a similar upbringing. I was "Mormon guy" in my High School in Oregon. My mission was miserable, I was badly mistreated. Then I went to BYU and lasted a year before I withdrew because I hated it. I'm glad I left the church because my kids don't have to experience all the pointless rules and rituals and mistreatment.

    @nathanbigler@nathanbigler2 ай бұрын
    • I went to a brand new private Christian college for one semester and hated it and left.

      @UlexiteTVStoneLexite@UlexiteTVStoneLexite2 ай бұрын
    • I grew up catholic and converted to Mormon. I know you mean. I grew up with no fun and rules. But when I grew up I didn’t get lost or fall into To other influences. Now you think it’s regret growing up. You will find out when you face trials. You will survive. Think of this . Special Forces selection. Bunch of bullshit and let you jump hoops. But once you hit the field. You will survive.

      @thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae24862 ай бұрын
    • Mormonism is a cult and everyone should leave to save their freedom 👍​@@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486

      @Jay-rl3bw@Jay-rl3bw2 ай бұрын
    • Hey, fellow Oregonian Exmo, yooo!

      @TheRandomCrapSection@TheRandomCrapSectionАй бұрын
    • ​@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486 which Group?

      @mitchellbroaddus9120@mitchellbroaddus9120Ай бұрын
  • Your experience of being excluded by the other Mormon girls is very similar to what many of us nonmembers experience living in predominantly Mormon areas. Nonmembers who are born and raised in Utah and southern Idaho don’t see Mormons as generally kind and loving, but arrogant bullies.

    @Vanishingirl77@Vanishingirl772 ай бұрын
    • some are arrogant bullies (but you get those in all walks of life)

      @princessadora@princessadora2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@princessadoraoh...but nothing like living under the arrogant, self rightous mormons.

      @elsieelm2763@elsieelm27632 ай бұрын
    • I grew up in southeast Idaho. I am not a Mormon. I don’t remember getting bullied; but I do remember being ignored. Which is worse in someways. I had a few friends though, which was good.

      @sewmeonekenobi639@sewmeonekenobi6392 ай бұрын
    • I agree with you. I was bullied at my church as I was a bit shy and came from an abusive background. I was also a bit shorter than the other kids.

      @kathynorris2203@kathynorris22032 ай бұрын
    • Liar.

      @WatchingwaitingG2D@WatchingwaitingG2D2 ай бұрын
  • I love how you articulated the manufacturing of guilt and then providing the antidote for the guilt they introduced into your life in the first place. One of the first things I felt lift from my shoulders when leaving the Mormon church was guilt I never should have felt, and it’s also the most lasting and hard to release 17 years later.

    @SmooochyFace@SmooochyFace2 ай бұрын
  • I have never been mormon, but I did grow up in a heavily catholic family and it was nice to hear about someone else experiencing the freedom and joy of being able to think for themselves and cast of the yoke of control. I saw a lot of parallels between my experience and yours and it has helped me think about where I am in my own journey after breaking away from the church. I love hearing about the journeys of others and to see this channel and book help others to find peace like that. You are sharing something important alyssa, keep it up!

    @faore4977@faore49772 ай бұрын
    • Same. We’re on the same journey.

      @Joanna_L@Joanna_L29 күн бұрын
    • Me, too. Left in 2010 when the unimaginable scandal broke. I've never looked back. Besides, I was shunned when I got divorced. Shame is shame and guilt is guilt. I feel finally free. 💙

      @ritamariekelley4077@ritamariekelley40774 күн бұрын
  • I grew up Muslim and deconstructed. This gave me chills how similar the themes of our lives are. It's been very long since I left the faith but it defined so much of my early life, I still struggle with the aftermath of living life entirely based on doing the so-called right thing and never bringing yourself into the equation. Thank you so much for sharing Alyssa.

    @looli1327@looli13272 ай бұрын
    • I hope you're safe, being an ex muslim tends to have a high fatality rate.

      @vidyasreeram2587@vidyasreeram25872 ай бұрын
    • I was just about to comment this lol. Hey, fellow ex-Moose.

      @Tosin226@Tosin226Ай бұрын
    • It's gross how the prophet married a 9 year girl

      @user-zc4sx9ig6p@user-zc4sx9ig6pАй бұрын
    • Tell me more about it, now I feel scared tbh hehe, I will get married to an Indian Muslim

      @tamaraaleman8405@tamaraaleman8405Ай бұрын
    • oh yeah for sure, Mormonism is basically Islam but for Americans

      @blade7506@blade7506Ай бұрын
  • I grew up as a Salt Lake City Mormon. The bullying is RELENTLESS. I was bullied horribly by the wards “favorite” boy. People would bear their testimonies about how Christlike and perfect this kid was. The same kid driving me into depression. The first crack in my (admittedly weak) testimony was seeing this awful person passing the sacrament every week. I knew he wasn’t worthy according to the church. I went to church every week until I moved out of the home to live with my non Mormon husband. Funny enough, we fled to Denver! Your story has helped me process all of that religious trauma that I’ve buried deep down for years. I’m really glad I never went through the temple, and I see my family in a different light knowing what happens in there. They go every month to do endowments!! My dad has always taught me about critical thinking. Oh, the irony!

    @bethanylarsen3553@bethanylarsen35532 ай бұрын
    • P😊😊¹

      @nickbouras1201@nickbouras12012 ай бұрын
    • such a shame you didn't get to experience the temple. its the absolute best thing about being lds.

      @princessadora@princessadora2 ай бұрын
    • @@princessadorayoure on the wrong side of the internet girl im sorry.............

      @bettydraper2034@bettydraper20342 ай бұрын
    • We're also very glad you didn't sully the temple with your presence.

      @JohnDLee-im4lo@JohnDLee-im4lo2 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnDLee-im4loproving eeeeeeeeeeeeeveryones points in this comments section lol. youre embarrassing yourself.

      @bettydraper2034@bettydraper20342 ай бұрын
  • Bless your heart Alyssa!! I left my church back in 1988. I wish I’d had your voice in my ear at that time! I have NEVER regretted my decision to leave and I’m proud to have raised ethical humanities without any faith at all!💕

    @GossipRumor@GossipRumor8 күн бұрын
  • Your channel is only a few months old, and you already have 120K subs. and a huge percentage of COMMENTS and Likes. This is a WOW Success story happening in real time, and I am so stinkin' proud of you for speaking out!

    @okiejammer2736@okiejammer2736Ай бұрын
  • I had an honor code office experience where I was reported for not being clean shaven enough. At that time I had bad ingrown hairs and folliculitis so I would try and let my skin rest for 2 days in between shaving. Essentially I was told I could get a doctors note (but only from the campus doc) or leave. The campus doc said it wasn’t bad enough for a waiver, so I ended up getting laser hair removal on my own beard so I could stay enrolled. One of my biggest regrets.

    @melancholymolecule@melancholymolecule2 ай бұрын
    • my heart goes out to you :(

      @Podzhagitel@Podzhagitel2 ай бұрын
    • :(

      @OYJluv@OYJluv2 ай бұрын
    • Why does the church hate beards so much? How many past presidents had incredible beards? I'm sorry you went through this.

      @larissaasay6957@larissaasay69572 ай бұрын
    • But beards are allowed now? I know there's a few in my ward and they're on men I think of as very doctrinaire. Also a few others do Movember

      @bilindalaw-morley161@bilindalaw-morley1612 ай бұрын
    • that’s so messed up. i’m sorry this happened to you

      @mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmaria@mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmaria2 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely agree that we were solely trained to be mothers. I remember one time at moroni's quest, (for those who don't know, it's a youth camp where you reinact the book of mormon) we reinacted the scene when the young men go to war. We (the teenage girls) acted as the mothers of our male peers while they got to fight with fake swords. We weren't allowed to join. We just sat and watched. There was never a moment where the boys had to sit back while the girls had fun.

    @cottoncandy3630@cottoncandy36302 ай бұрын
    • I went with a friend to a Mormon Girl's Camp and remember being shocked that we had a whole afternoon presentation about preparing to be good mothers with girls as young as 12 there. I was also upset we were out in the wilderness and instead of hiking or learning outdoor skills, we were inside crafting religious wall plaques.

      @justkeepswimmin@justkeepswimmin2 ай бұрын
    • @justkeepswimmin you totally just summed up my entire "young womens" experience. Me and my brother were in the youth group at the same time, and when we got home, he would tell me all the fun stuff he did (making fires, archery, basketball, hiking, axe throwing) and I would be like "we made paper hearts, and friendship bracelets." I'm an adult now, but it still makes me upset, haha

      @cottoncandy3630@cottoncandy36302 ай бұрын
    • I have spent YEARS trying to heal from this “training.” 😢

      @EmilyAllanPoe@EmilyAllanPoe2 ай бұрын
    • It's also messed up that you were the same age as these boys but encouraged to act like their mothers. Really grooming you to be a mommy-maid-wife to them later so that they would never have to do the most basic household task.

      @juliee593@juliee59320 күн бұрын
  • I find this whole conversation so fascinating. Thank you for sharing. I am so happy for you for believing in yourself and living a life of self expression.

    @AIIiecat@AIIiecat2 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing this amount of personal experience and being so vulnerable. It’s really opened my eyes to how somebody gets through this experience. Hope more people find your channel!

    @helenatessmann6044@helenatessmann60442 ай бұрын
  • The racism in the Mormon church and at BYU was incredible to me once I started paying attention to it. It was another reason I left BYU

    @nathanbigler@nathanbigler2 ай бұрын
    • It's what my husband's mother preaches. I don't want to convert. He thinks it's God's will through him to bring me back.

      @BarbieDoll-ib7ws@BarbieDoll-ib7ws2 ай бұрын
    • @@fern1285they do misions, they often go to 3rd world countries trying to take advantage of the poverty & lack of education of specific places. That’s how they got to Argentina too, but we don’t fuck w religion like that lol. So we don’t see them at all anymore

      @keiviajando5168@keiviajando51682 ай бұрын
    • @@keiviajando5168acá los rajamos a patadas

      @doblepollodoblequeso@doblepollodoblequesoАй бұрын
  • Dear Alyssa, I have watched your videos since you started KZhead. You have a wonderful skill of story telling and engaging the listener. I am not Mormon and have frankly never had any interest in mormonism, but your ability to engage the listener is amazing. Your father was right that you were meant to be a teacher - just no the type of teacher you thought at the time!!

    @jugua@jugua2 ай бұрын
    • Such a thoughtful comment. Thank you for watching, it means so much 💜

      @alyssadgrenfell@alyssadgrenfell2 ай бұрын
    • @@alyssadgrenfell Hi I i’ve also never been a member of the church but I’ll take pride in learning new perspectives of the world because I love hearing people and their stories, so keep doing you,girl! You’re doing an amazing job and I,A random Internet Stranger,is very very proud of you!

      @charadreamuur7229@charadreamuur72292 ай бұрын
    • I agree, the videos are very compellin

      @fernandocrustacean@fernandocrustacean2 ай бұрын
    • I agree too, I am a non religious who enjoys listening to her life stories. It gives a peek into a world that is very different from mine.

      @Noirellion@Noirellion2 ай бұрын
    • I think the previous writer may have a point. I kind of think that you have a talent for conveying information to people. A teacher? Maybe. A speaker of some kind? I also think that is possible.

      @rmmccoy51@rmmccoy512 ай бұрын
  • I left the church in my 20’s and struggled a lot with my mental health very seriously. I was blamed and shamed for my issues by my family and every other Mormon I knew who told me that i just needed to come back to church, when in reality I was struggling and suffering because I was sexually abused by a primary teacher in the church as a child and blocked out the memories until my 30’s. I don’t talk to my family any more, and they’re sad for me and think I’m lost. I still struggle to trust myself and my own thinking skills, learning critical thinking slowly, and content like yours keeps me connected to my own heart and sanity. I can’t even tell you how much I appreciate your work. It reminds me that I’m not crazy, I’m not alone, and I’m not just a sinner or lazy learner. Thank you so much for doing what you do.

    @laurablack8700@laurablack8700Ай бұрын
    • 💙

      @ritamariekelley4077@ritamariekelley40774 күн бұрын
  • I relate so much to your story, just this semester I had to drop out of student teaching in Utah because of the intense anxiety and panic attacks I was experiencing non-stop. I chose this career path because I got the "go ahead" feeling from the "spirit" that it was what I was supposed to do. It was the worse experience. I am so grateful to have found my way out of the church and now being able to truly make my own decisions!

    @clarahaddock9057@clarahaddock90572 ай бұрын
  • In High-school I had a Mormon friend who invited me to join him every week. I did with no intentions in joining the church and had been an atheist for a few years. One thing that stuck with me was this little interaction. Me and the guys went into the gym-area of their church, but all the girls were led off somewhere else. So I asked, "why aren't they joining in the fun?" And it led somehow to the group leader dude saying "oh girls don't want to join and wouldn't like it." Which was complete nonsense because the church I went to... girls played with guys, loved playing basketball and all that good stuff. I doubt he really listened to what I said and just assumed those girls were like fallen or something. That was the last time I was invited.

    @torrik-8722@torrik-87222 ай бұрын
    • my dad randomly converted to mormonism when i was in middle school and he used to drag me to church sometimes. it shocked me as a 12 year old girl to be split up from my dad for 2 out of the 3 hours into a room filled with other girls being taught that we had to obey our future husbands and develop motherly traits. like... what husbands? what motherhood? we were TWELVE... i wonder if the boys got fed nonsense about how they have to listen to their future wives or work hard on developing fatherly traits, or if they had the privilege to be focused on who they are as individuals. it left a sick taste in my mouth even then because i was very aware of sexism from a young age and i felt so much anger and self hate because of it

      @nic00001@nic00001Ай бұрын
    • That sounds about right ... NO questions allowed!

      @marelinem541@marelinem541Ай бұрын
    • @@nic00001 Yep, obey, obey, obey. Obey your father. Obey your husband. Obey all priesthood holders (which is really all mormon men). Never make a decision of your own. All decisions regarding your life must be made by a priesthood holder. In other words "Not by you."

      @marelinem541@marelinem541Ай бұрын
    • I was involved with the Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts for decades. When Scouting admitted girls to membership, that's when I quit. My experience is that boys and girls have different interests and abilities. Any time you mix boys and girls together in activities you have to make compromises and choices about whose interests will be served, and whose interests will be second. In Scouting there have always been Girl Scouts, and that has almost entirely been led by adult women. They have considerable freedom to decide on what kind of program the girls in their groups will have. In Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts, the emphasis was on values and activities that boys were interested in. That was often based on some kind of competition to spark interest among boys. But put boys and girls together and you will have MOTHERS who think that their precious daughters should have a program tailored to the special needs and interests of girls. If that means that such program don't have much appeal to boys, TOUGH! Girls rule is the attitude. Girl Scouts had the reputation of being a second rate program compared to Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts. I suspect that's because men and fathers were discouraged from being leaders in the program and bringing the experience in camping and the outdoors that men commonly have and women usually do not. Young boys of Cub Scout age commonly do not want to associate with girls. Now girls are foisted upon them in Scouting and they can say nothing about their objections to that. Their opportunities to learn to be boys and men is compromised. And older male Scouts are bound to be sexually active among young female Scouts on camping trips and such. There really nothing that is going to prevent that. So once again feminists have penetrated the world of boys and men and forced girls and women into that environment, much to the harm of boys and men.

      @SeattlePioneer@SeattlePioneer6 күн бұрын
    • @@SeattlePioneer Bro, go take your Donepezil and a blunt. Chill old weirdo.

      @torrik-8722@torrik-87222 күн бұрын
  • My brief experience as an LDS convert made me live in constant fear of displeasing God. I was extremely paranoid in a very unhealthy way. I'll never forget a few weeks after joining the church, and I met up with a friend to work out. I so worried all of a sudden that my athletic shorts were too short. And my friend said something I should have listened to at the time, "When a religion makes you feel this self conscious about wearing perfectly appropriate shorts to exercise in, there's a huge problem." I wish I had listened.

    @LKYme@LKYme2 ай бұрын
    • Liar.

      @WatchingwaitingG2D@WatchingwaitingG2D2 ай бұрын
    • @@WatchingwaitingG2DWhat?

      @radicalpaprika1720@radicalpaprika17202 ай бұрын
    • @@radicalpaprika1720hes in the replies of literally every comment saying they had a negative experience w the church claiming those ppl are liars paid by god-haters. its obsessive, hes still replying to 5 day old comments. genuinely, do not engage. i do not say this as an insult but as someone who is close to someone w schizophrenia, this is unwell behavior that reminds me of obsessive delusions. hell reply to both of us now w some big spiel ab how we r lying and god hates us, watch lol

      @whalesharks@whalesharks2 ай бұрын
    • Why can't you do what feels right for you? Wear what you want when you want

      @kathymitchellpollock8075@kathymitchellpollock80752 ай бұрын
    • Hindsight is always 20/20. When you're in the moment it's harder to realize that what they're saying is true. You know now, and that's what matters

      @autumnsprite@autumnspriteАй бұрын
  • Hi! I just recently found your channel. I didn't grow up Mormon, but I did grow up in the Institute of Basic Life Principles cult that was led by Bill Gothard. The similarities between that and so much of Mormonism is....wild! I know I'm just an internet random, but I am proud of you for being able to do the deep dive into examining your beliefs, living more aligned with your authenticity and finding a life on the other side. I know from experience that it is no small task to do!!!

    @BonnieNicoleWrites@BonnieNicoleWrites2 ай бұрын
    • I have a friend who grew up in that. She's almost 60 and she still carries the scars. :(

      @l.l.2463@l.l.24632 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing. Also baptized at 8, except religion never made any sense to me. Magic man in the sky and magic books always seemed unreal/unserious. At 14 my mom gave me a choice, she’d no longer force me to attend. That was the last time I stepped foot in a church. 20+ years later it makes as much sense today as it did as a child. Zero sense. Listening to you reminds me of my childhood, and my mother (who also attended BYU). Respect

    @thegoldengatesound@thegoldengatesound11 күн бұрын
  • Omg girl when you said that if you disagreed you felt you were the bad one, I felt that in my core. I grew up feeling that exact same way

    @killer_queen-em5nl@killer_queen-em5nl2 ай бұрын
    • Yep

      @lifematters687@lifematters6872 ай бұрын
    • I’m wasn’t Mormon but a different Christian sect, and man I felt the same way. I still struggle to trust my own intuition and feelings.

      @alinapritchett9276@alinapritchett9276Ай бұрын
    • @@alinapritchett9276 yeah same honestly. I’m still working through so much religious trauma, guilt, and shame. I wish you luck on your healing journey 💕

      @killer_queen-em5nl@killer_queen-em5nlАй бұрын
    • ... and that's the way it supposed to work. It's designed to do exactly that. If they can load you down with enough shame and confusion, they know they can get money out of you for the rest of your life.

      @marelinem541@marelinem541Ай бұрын
  • My mother was born into a Mormon family on a large farm in southern Alberta, however she married my Lutheran father during WWII. After my father returned after the war they moved to the east where he was from, and there were very few Mormons. After a couple of years she just stopped being a Mormon - no drama. So fortunately when I was born I wasn’t exposed to Mormonism. I became aware that she was a former Mormon when I was around 12. I was amazed that she could have believed any of this stuff. She was a really wonderful mother, everyone loved her. She was kind and considerate and had a lot of common sense. She limited her family to 2 children, never smoked, but drank coffee and a little wine. Her 9 siblings (7 boys and 2 other girls) are all super-Mormons. I have 53 first cousins on her side of my family whereas I have one first cousin on my father’s side. She was devoted to my Dad who died in 2009. Mother died last year just 3 months shy of her 100th birthday. I miss her every day. I think that her Mormon upbringing gave her an innate decency and ethical character, but I’m glad I wasn’t raised in that cult.

    @lynneb1189@lynneb11892 ай бұрын
    • In other words, a Mormon upbringing produces "innate decency" and "ethical character", "kind and considerate", "common sense", etc. But you're glad not to be a part of it. Hmmmm

      @JohnDLee-im4lo@JohnDLee-im4lo2 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnDLee-im4loyou are responding to everyone’s comments on this video. struggling with your testimony friend? go and find some time to spread the gospel instead of arguing online.

      @britt7345@britt73452 ай бұрын
    • @@britt7345 Just observing your amusing cognitive dissonance from a distance...Good Fruit=Good Tree...just sayin'...BTW, Im not your friend.

      @JohnDLee-im4lo@JohnDLee-im4lo2 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnDLee-im4lo bc it’s a cult 👍

      @Jay-rl3bw@Jay-rl3bw2 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnDLee-im4lo also it’s really funny how you act all righteous but ur going against ur church by being on KZhead rn

      @Jay-rl3bw@Jay-rl3bw2 ай бұрын
  • I have just discovered your videos today and i just want to say how much i love that you discribe how most people would react being in your place, but how you felt in those moments. That is a wonderful way of making people understand how it is to get through that stuff. Thank you for opening my eyes!

    @codrinaanghelinei2250@codrinaanghelinei22502 ай бұрын
  • Disclaimer: I am a member of the church. I really appreciate your comments and perspective. Say what you need to say, we need more dialogue.

    @alpinedjservices5199@alpinedjservices5199Ай бұрын
  • religious trauma is a horror story. I wasn't a church going kid but my best friend was, and he told me in no uncertain terms that because I wasn't baptised I would forever burn in hell. That is so damaging to a child.

    @acceptance7968@acceptance79682 ай бұрын
    • I thought Mormons didn’t believe in Hell

      @GrandmaKnightLife@GrandmaKnightLifeАй бұрын
    • The arrogance of Christianity is indeed truly stunning. Appalling, but stunning nevertheless.

      @bookernoel6471@bookernoel6471Ай бұрын
    • They believe in 3 kingdoms, of differing glory, and “outer-darkness(which is hell). The 3 kingdoms are celestial, terrestrial, and telestial. Only the best Mormons go to celestial. Goodish people go to terrestrial, and bad people go to telestial. I was taught that those who denied god despite knowing of his existence were reserved for outer darkness. This scared me and made me question how much I wanted to know about the church, because once that ignorance was gone, if I questioned it or said no, I was going to outer darkness. Super healthy philosophy. But hey, they’re forward thinkers for the three kingdoms let me tell ya!

      @lwell8016@lwell8016Ай бұрын
    • @@GrandmaKnightLife "I thought Mormons didn’t believe in Hell" He didn't say the other kid was mormon.

      @marelinem541@marelinem541Ай бұрын
    • I have a similar story 😕 When I was little, the girl who lived across the street from us quickly became my friend but when I said 'damn it' after hurting myself, she looked me dead in the eyes and told me I was going to burn in hell... Religion is so fking ridiculous.

      @Smevin0305@Smevin030518 күн бұрын
  • I'm just at the part where you're talking about being "perfect" before turning 8 and wishing to die before then to have a perfect soul... as someone with a very catholic upbringing it is so healing to hear other people describe the same thoughts I used to have

    @heatherethereal@heatherethereal2 ай бұрын
    • Wow. Sorry your experience growing up Catholic made you feel that way. When taught/and shared correctly, Catholicism is beautiful and full of forgiveness.

      @texasgal4732@texasgal4732Ай бұрын
    • @@texasgal4732 It actually was taught/shared to me "correctly" trust me. Traditional roman catholic family going to Latin mass every Sunday covering our hair with veils is as "correct" as it gets in the church. The sermons every Sunday were "correct" according to teachings, the way we were raised in the home were exactly according to the ten commandments. I know all about the beauty and forgiveness, beauty and forgiveness were everywhere growing up. the only thing, what does a young child need to be forgiven for? Why was I raised being told that my soul had a black stain on it before I ever had the chance to take my first breath? Why was I to repent to an old man in a small dark box and tell him about my sexual encounters before I ever told my best friend? Why did a small child need "forgiveness", to be saved? Forgiveness and beauty were not without an intense and overwhelming culture of shame and ugliness. All I needed to be saved from was the church. Weeping and gnashing of teeth, eternal hellfire, all encompassing darkness and pain- my greatest fear since before I can remember. Children do not deserve that.

      @heatherethereal@heatheretherealАй бұрын
    • I share this feeling, same here. I’m glad I no longer believe anymore, you’re not alone in this 🫂

      @hypo.critter@hypo.critter27 күн бұрын
  • 9th grade is one of the toughest to teach, regardless of the instructor’s experience level. Glad you survived the experience!

    @sharkattackmedia@sharkattackmedia2 ай бұрын
  • i just got your book and i’m about halfway through it. ive loved it so far! keep doing what you’re doing. i’ve learned so much from you

    @2VeeOrNot2Vee@2VeeOrNot2Vee2 ай бұрын
  • Hi, am not Mormon but an active Christian but I love watching your videos as they make me think about what’s God and what’s man

    @jaysuitey9757@jaysuitey97572 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for watching!

      @alyssadgrenfell@alyssadgrenfell2 ай бұрын
    • 😅hint* it's all man. Every religion is a cult.

      @joanfedora7414@joanfedora74142 ай бұрын
    • It's made me think a lot about the certainty that if you pray and are led by and rely on God, you CAN'T do wrong or make mistakes. When history makes it very clear that... yes we can. Christians (and people of all religions) have done horrible things under the banner of heaven. We need to be a whole lot more humble about how we move through the world.

      @ealusaid@ealusaid2 ай бұрын
    • I am Catholic ( born in a Catholic family and adopted and raised by a Catholic family) and this video made me realize the importance of stopping to be honest with myself and assess what i really believe vs what i was taught to believe. All religions become culty by the sheer group pressure to not question the doctrine. If you do not honestly question everything, there is no free will.

      @oaktreedialogues6318@oaktreedialogues6318Ай бұрын
    • God was created by man too so really it's all man

      @gunkulator1@gunkulator1Ай бұрын
  • I remember being encouraged/forced to attend BYU-I as my parents decided they would only assist me with payments if I decided to go to a church school despite how I felt about them. Due to feeling ostracized and not really relating to the people there, as my ideas were already not in alliance with the church on issues such as LGBT, diversity and race issues, I fell into depression and stopped leaving my room except to go to the restroom and to eat. I remember the one thing I was looking forward to was my GF at the time coming to see me and because of the fact that she couldn’t stay in the dorm we decided to stay in a hotel. A few weeks later I got a call from the honors office, which I assumed was for my attendance issues, as they didn’t notify me of the reason before I showed up and when I did I ended up being yelled at, questioned as to what I was doing at the school, told I was wasting church resources as well as being asked disgusting and unnecessarily questioning such as if I had sex and how many times it happened that night. To make it worse it was during thanksgiving break, where I was alone in my dorm with no support around me, not even roommates. I just remember laying in my room crying for hours as I was so worried I had disappointed my parents as well as the overwhelming stress as to what I was going to do as I was to be off the premises 42 hours from this happening. I was treated like I was the worst person on campus by someone who had no idea of my character or what was going on with my mental health at the time and I can only imagine what the harm this approach has caused, especially to people who have issues with suicidal ideation.

    @kerrytappana2495@kerrytappana24952 ай бұрын
    • How did they know u had gone to a hotel that is so creepy. I’m sorry you had to go through that.

      @kr1ssee@kr1ssee2 ай бұрын
    • i'm so sorry. i hope you're able to heal even if it takes a long time

      @nic00001@nic00001Ай бұрын
    • I went there too (same deal with my parents, we didn’t even talk about other colleges) and wanted to end my life every day. I didn’t relate to anyone, and I had my own tangle with the honor code office because my mother called them on me. I feel validated reading your story.

      @rox8078@rox8078Ай бұрын
    • Wow I’m so sorry you went through that, I have anxiety just from reading that

      @ARareAndDifferentTune_13@ARareAndDifferentTune_13Ай бұрын
    • Don't you think the school is ENTITLED to make such rules? I'm sure you knew about them in advance, yet you chose to break them. You made a mistake by going to BYU in the first place, I'd say. What was your experience about sexuality at other colleges or universities that you attended later? Did girlfriends routinely spend the night with college boyfriends? Did men and women share common dorms and adjacent dorm rooms perhaps? Do you suppose that such practices, along with a lot of alcohol and drug use, caused sexual assaults to take place that would not have taken place at BYU?

      @SeattlePioneer@SeattlePioneer6 күн бұрын
  • Thanks for sharing your story! I grew up with a Mormon friend and my parents were always very friendly with our local missionaries we had them over a lot, but we all thought Mormon beliefs were weird, we just thought they were nice people. Hearing about the other side of things really explains a lot that went over my head when I was young!

    @Patchouliprince@Patchouliprince2 ай бұрын
  • So happy for you, Alyssa. Thank you for sharing your journey with the world. You are an incredible person with a gift with words, please continue to share. ❤️

    @wyris2345@wyris234520 күн бұрын
  • To me it's interesting when members are uncomfortable with those of us who have left sharing our stories, saying that we're negative or "can't leave it alone". However, it's clear that growing up in the church was an enormous part of your life that has influenced who you are; it's a part of your history, so of course you can talk about it. I like the idea of breaking this culture of silence we grew up in, where you're only allowed to share your thoughts, feelings and experiences as long as they align with the teachings of the church. I say this also because my dad would often complain about exmos talking about the church, but now that I'm one, I don't feel that I should be banned from talking about my experiences, especially after I put so much time into the church and it's such a part of my history and life experience.

    @sarahpinho1114@sarahpinho11142 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. That saying is designed to shut people up. They want us to just go away and don't talk about.

      @lifematters687@lifematters6872 ай бұрын
    • Exactly this! Now whenever I read a comment about “exmos can’t leave the church alone” I tell them it’s suspicious that they view exmos telling their experience as a threat. Anything that’s true should be able to stand up to criticism. Funny(not really)

      @lwell8016@lwell8016Ай бұрын
    • @@lwell8016 agreed

      @sarahpinho1114@sarahpinho1114Сағат бұрын
    • @@lifematters687 yeah and its sad right, if we love people as our brothers and sisters we should accept them and their experiences

      @sarahpinho1114@sarahpinho1114Сағат бұрын
  • The mental gymnastics that your parents and the church put you through is wild. So heartbreaking to hear your experience of school. You couldn’t win, whatever you did! Your parents made normal ‘growing up’ things into a crime, and I hate that. Thank you for being so brave to share your story in such an in depth way!

    @Dreaming5@Dreaming52 ай бұрын
  • I am so happy for you! You are so open and honest. Thank you for this video ❤

    @shoupshermanwaypaprota5510@shoupshermanwaypaprota5510Ай бұрын
  • I grew up Baptist, not Mormon... but so much of your story you shared here hits really close to home with me.

    @NursissisticOfficial@NursissisticOfficial4 күн бұрын
  • I am finding your videos very interesting as someone quite removed from religion. Thank you for sharing, you don't try to skew people's opinion and i appreciate it

    @DreamyDuskywing@DreamyDuskywing2 ай бұрын
    • she gives false and/or incomplete information

      @princessadora@princessadora2 ай бұрын
    • @@princessadora Where?

      @yveltalsea@yveltalsea2 ай бұрын
    • @@yveltalseashe doesnt, this is one of the 4 accts that leaves hate under a bunch of the positive comments on her videos to try to claim shes being paid by god-haters to badmouth the church. do not engage lol

      @whalesharks@whalesharks2 ай бұрын
    • @@whalesharks nah don't worry, I just wanted them to answer what part was a lie, because it's obvious that all of it is true. Of course, they can't come up with anything that isn't true in the video, which is why they cant respond lmao.

      @yveltalsea@yveltalsea2 ай бұрын
  • To use an analogy....when LDS talks about a "Stake" or "Stake of Zion", it's basically like a Catholic "Diocese", and a "Ward" is basically a "Parish."

    @raakone@raakone2 ай бұрын
    • Oh that’s super helpful as a Catholic watching this video! Thanks!

      @risxra@risxra2 ай бұрын
    • If you watch enough of the videos on other cult like religions you can find similarities of control in all of them. For instance purgatory a place to go until you have enough candles lifted, masses said, novenas said, you essentially have to be prayed into Heaven. None of this is scripture! Not one single word or practice can get you into Heaven except Jesus Christ shed blood on Calvery. And take the free gift of His sacrifice. One on one. Just look and analyze the differences.

      @kkormanik@kkormanikАй бұрын
    • Thanks. That's really helpful

      @aminaadamu9342@aminaadamu9342Ай бұрын
    • Nothing like Catholicism

      @viridianhughes219@viridianhughes219Ай бұрын
    • @@viridianhughes219 No one said Mormonism was like Catholicism. There's nothing wrong in using analogies to make it easier for people to understand.

      @aminaadamu9342@aminaadamu9342Ай бұрын
  • Alyssa I have your book and I'm loving it! Thank you for sharing your amazing story! You are such a beautiful person

    @emmaleelevitz1488@emmaleelevitz14882 ай бұрын
  • I’m so happy I found you!! I look forward to reading your book. My late husband was TBM and I got remarried to another TBM. I’ve left the church 6 months ago and my TBM husband wants to leave me. I’m excited for my new life free from Mormonism!!❤

    @SuzanneTheBossBabe@SuzanneTheBossBabe2 ай бұрын
  • I’ve never been Mormon, however I was Pentecostal for 12 yrs. I’ve recently left the church. I enjoy hearing your story.

    @jenjosephson5561@jenjosephson55612 ай бұрын
    • Former Pentecostal here. I still believe in God, I just don't believe in the church.

      @CraftyBestie@CraftyBestie2 ай бұрын
  • I was the first 'gentile' hired by a Mormon family who ran a business. Being referred to as a 'gentile' when I am Jewish, was humorous. Because they liked me, they asked me to read the Book of Mormon - but not as a requirement for being hired. After a month on the job, they invited me to their home for dinner - naturally it was a large family. I was asked if I had read the Book of Mormon. After I replied that I had, and had it on my shelf for books of mythology. I was asked if I would ever consider joining. My answer: A year and a day after I am dead, you will have my name to baptize me. I understand I have a choice; I'll give you my answer then.

    @annemariewhittaker1384@annemariewhittaker13842 ай бұрын
    • I love every aspect of your story!

      @GlennMoyer@GlennMoyer2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for sharing! Your humor really shines through, lol. I am ex Mormon, now a Christian. I still want to know- how exactly does the deceased person give their consent? Do they send a letter from beyond? Seriously though, it's disturbing.

      @taram9409@taram94092 ай бұрын
    • A Jewish person being called gentile is honestly hilarious and I don't think they would even know why😂

      @dolfuny@dolfuny2 ай бұрын
    • Lol, touche'!

      @heatherthompson8837@heatherthompson8837Ай бұрын
    • The best of all is that they referred to you as a “gentile” there’s enough humor in that alone. ;)

      @MJA-st2yi@MJA-st2yi26 күн бұрын
  • Thank you so much for sharing your story! ❤️❤️❤️

    @jamkwasowski5207@jamkwasowski52072 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for telling your story! I feel like I could listen to you for hours and hours!

    @valp618@valp618Ай бұрын
  • Oh dear, the Southern Baptist church I grew up in, you also were encouraged to get Baptistized at 8. Except, I never did. Even tho we had classes to prepare us, we also had to walk down the very long aisle of our large church and publicly profess our faith. I was just too shy to do that and my parents didn't pressure me.

    @sharonsmith583@sharonsmith5832 ай бұрын
    • I also grew up SBC and responded to the altar call at 8. There was so much social pressure to go up around that age! If you were 5, that was like some sign of holiness, but if you waited till you were 12, you must have been some sort of hellion. 😂 What are you repenting from at 8?? I was super shy, too, which in and of itself wasn’t ok to be as a Southern Baptist kid. I never fit and I’m so glad I eventually realized I didn’t have to.

      @bengriffin9830@bengriffin9830Ай бұрын
    • @@bengriffin9830Wow, that sounds so messed up! Glad to have grown up in an evangelical environment where it was considered a completely private matter, just something that's between you and God, and without any expectations as to at which age this should happen. Today, I'm not even so sure that you really need a particular conversion experience. It's nowhere in the Bible that it has to be a response to an altar call or something similar. I'm pretty sure a lot of my Lutheran ancestors will be in heaven, too, even though most of them may never have "given their hearts to Jesus" in a conscious way because they never heard of it being necessary. It's so sad that people often reduce faith to their own ideas instead of just being inviting and assisting others on their journey towards God.

      @roesi1985@roesi1985Ай бұрын
  • having s -- cidal thoughts and panic attacks is not a lack of strength or a sign of weakness. it's perfectly understandable for your mental health to suffer under being in a situation that you believed God and your family wanted you to be in, while having a crisis of faith and having to deal with a lack of support. ❤

    @entativet@entativet2 ай бұрын
  • I love your content. And I would definitely love to hear more from your impressions, experiences, etc. on a longer format than KZhead Reels. Leaving the church is definitely the initiation of a depressingly long emotional and physical hurdle, especially since you've got to restart your life all over again .. That's a tough go, but from your experience, which I highly value, you definitely make awesome content. We'd love to see you more on a longer format too (love the Reels btw, but would love to hear more from you) !

    @ritab.9215@ritab.9215Ай бұрын
  • I find all of your videos so fascinating! I’d also be interested in hearing what it’s like growing up male as a Mormon. What kinds of things are they taught? Is there a similar pressure? What’s boys’ camp like?

    @monicamagtoto5309@monicamagtoto53092 ай бұрын
    • I’ll have my husband come on for a future episode to share!

      @alyssadgrenfell@alyssadgrenfell2 ай бұрын
  • I love how you and your husband grew together. I’m a little envious of the way your love has encouraged both of you to change and push forward. I wish my own marriage had worked out like that, but the dogma we needed to break wasn’t religious. We had already left religion before we met each other. I love all your uploads, thank you for being so vulnerable and sharing your story. 💖

    @madipogo@madipogo2 ай бұрын
  • Some of us never learn the lesson of living your own best life. I am 73 and learning that lesson. I lost my religion for several year but now am finding new motivation and understanding of my faith. I have finally found my own voice and am no so concerned with how others see me. You are a courageous woman and I hope you are able to find peace and contentment and happiness.

    @piggyacres@piggyacres2 ай бұрын
  • Good for you. I have a new friend who also left that church. You are helping me understand more clearly what she and her husband went through.

    @LostMountainRestoration@LostMountainRestoration2 ай бұрын
  • Oh my gosh yes!! I remember going to “purity” conferences and such, and not really feeling like I agreed with what they were saying, but not having the tools or support to understand why. Now I think purity culture is disgusting, no lack of thoughts on it now.😂

    @freelancecat@freelancecat2 ай бұрын
    • Sounds like they provided you with useful food for reflection.

      @SeattlePioneer@SeattlePioneer6 күн бұрын
    • @@SeattlePioneer not at all. They did however make sure that even though I’ve been married for 8 years now, I still feel insecure about my body and sex life. Oh and my family drove me to the point of being almost suicidal because I lived with my boyfriend after my dad kicked me out at 18 and I had no where to go, so they stopped talking to me because it was a “sin”. Literally fuck all of it, it’s disgusting and harmful, and I’ll never step foot in a church again because of my family and the hypocrites at every church I’ve ever attended. But thanks.🤗 keep spreading that awesome Christian love.

      @freelancecat@freelancecat6 күн бұрын
    • I was an atheist at age twelve. My father kicked me out of his house at age 17, before my senior year of high school. I lived in a parking garage in downtown Seattle during my senior year of high school My father was an atheist as well. No need to blame a church.

      @SeattlePioneer@SeattlePioneer6 күн бұрын
    • @@SeattlePioneer I literally don’t care what you have to say. And there’s no blame- it’s facts.

      @freelancecat@freelancecat6 күн бұрын
    • > It's not unusual for people to get in tough situations. You are really not special.

      @SeattlePioneer@SeattlePioneer6 күн бұрын
  • I left the church many years ago but to this day I hate it when I have a layover in SLC because inevitably I get sat next to a chatty missionary and I have to tell them that I already know everything they believe and it’s just not for me.

    @jallen1917@jallen19172 ай бұрын
    • I live in Utah and been through the airport several times never seen a missionary not even a welcoming party at the exit doors. Seen people there just no obvious signs welcoming a missionary home.

      @BrianWaller-qe7gr@BrianWaller-qe7gr2 ай бұрын
    • I grew up LDS and thought I knew everything they believe but I am learning more about the church’s teachings now that I didn’t know.

      @GrandmaKnightLife@GrandmaKnightLifeАй бұрын
  • Hey, I really enjoyed your video and relate to a lot of stuff (grew up in a different strict religion, JW) I was wondering if you would make videos/talk about the ‘Utah bubble’ and also tithings and financial stuff with the church? ❤❤

    @shannonalexandra160@shannonalexandra1602 ай бұрын
  • You speak with such clarity and conviction. It’s so refreshing.

    @nannynadia@nannynadia2 ай бұрын
  • It’s a niche experience to be a middle school or high school teacher as a young woman. I relate to that. A lot actually. The lack of respect, directly mocking me and making fun of me to my face (thinking I wouldn’t know or something like that…? It always blew my mind that they thought I was that clueless. I have ears and eyes and I wasn’t born yesterday, I know when I’m being made fun of). I came down hard and so I got the reputation of being basically a b*tch. And I didn’t care. They thought I was the absolute worst because I would send them to the principal’s office for disrespecting me. But that’s ok; we’re going for the long-term gains. I’ve had students come back to my classroom and sincerely apologize for the way they acted in my classroom. That’s what gets me through. Long term gains. They can think I’m a b*tch for right now; I care more about cultivating respect and shaping their character.

    @McGheeBentle@McGheeBentle2 ай бұрын
    • Pp😊

      @sophiabalounsi7832@sophiabalounsi78322 ай бұрын
    • You are lucky you could send students to the principals office. We weren’t allowed to where I taught in Florida.

      @celiamartin2907@celiamartin29072 ай бұрын
    • ​@@celiamartin2907--and that's the biggest reason why great teachers say to hell with it & leave their beloved teaching careers in Florida because they as teachers are offered no support or respect from the woke school administrators. No discipline, no learning. No support, no teachers. No good teachers, society crashes.

      @maryn8139@maryn81392 ай бұрын
  • The Emmett Till anecdote was awful. Then I remembered some shitty little school in Utah tried to make Black History Month "optional." I don't blame you for quitting teaching.

    @LittleMissLounge@LittleMissLounge2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for the inspiration. I've long thought about writing my own memoir but am still stuck in the same thinking you talked about on this video. I think it's about time.

    @dire67@dire67Ай бұрын
  • I'm so happy for you! I was never Mormon and have never known any Mormons (I'm non denominational Christian) but I just find your story fascinating! I've always wanting to write a book- that's a lifelong goal of mine- so you are an inspiration as well and I wish you nothing but the best and continued success.

    @ICTmamaB@ICTmamaB2 ай бұрын
  • I was baptized in the Mormon church as an 8 yr old but soon after, my little brother passed away and my parents strayed from the church. My mom was always sad I think that she left, saying she had blind faith. They were sealed in the church but I never really knew what that meant until now. I still struggle to understand how they believed in Joseph Smith and his teachings. Thank you for letting me finally know what goes on behind closed doors. You are brave, beautiful and strong.

    @dasheast1@dasheast12 ай бұрын
  • Hi Alyssa, I left the JW religion, it is very similar to the mormons!

    @donyboy73@donyboy732 ай бұрын
  • Loved the book. Love your TikTok. Anxiously awaiting book #2.

    @lisasj67@lisasj6726 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing your story! It sounds incredibly tough! As someone who recently got diagnoses with ADHD, I feel like I see some of these patterns of undiagnosed ADHD here (being the kind, sensitive, shy dreamer nerdy girl who loves creative things and reading and has massive insecurities and depression since childhood) and it must have been so hard to on top of that deal with an incredibly controling churche and belief system. I am glad you got out.

    @TheJanaRina@TheJanaRinaАй бұрын
  • As a born and raised member who is exmo now, I relate to this so much. On the outside, I see how crazy it all is and how problematic a lot of the history and doctrine is.

    @larissaasay6957@larissaasay69572 ай бұрын
    • I was raised Catholic and left a long time ago. Left all religions about 25 years ago. A friend of mine was talking about how Scientology was a cult and the crazy stuff they believed. I said that it didn't seem any crazier than what any other religion believed. I realized that every religion has crazy stuff in their doctrine that from the outside it is astounding that anyone believes it, at least to me. Sure, some have a really controlling element-most of them fundamentally but the cult identification it really based on how they treat you when you leave. And somewhat how all encompassing the experience is when you are in it.

      @kirielbranson4843@kirielbranson48432 ай бұрын
    • ​@@kirielbranson4843 my parents have been involved with Scientology i find it to be crazy. Unlike you i became a catholic 12yrs ago. Im 34yo now and quite happy about it. Unlike scientology im not pushed around or coerced. I go to Church, do my devotions but no one is looking over my shoulder forcing me to do it or to give money. I help the church projects i agree with because i can and want to.

      @etcwhatever@etcwhateverАй бұрын
    • @@etcwhatever I do think the controlling stuff is part of cults vs accepted mainstream religions. But when listening to a bunch of the deconstructing videos I think some of the mainstream ones are also controlling. Purity culture is a big one. The Catholic religion will always have a special place in my heart because I grew up with it. Went to a Catholic high school and college. Studied science there and learned about evolution, astronomy, physics and biology and computer science. The religion never felt restrictive. It seemed to have gotten over its growing pains like the inquisition and such. I just stopped believing it.

      @kirielbranson4843@kirielbranson4843Ай бұрын
    • @@kirielbranson4843 im not american so im not fully sure what the so called purity culture involves. I do think its honorable though to be virgin until marriage. Not out of coercion but out of choice. I was a virgin when i got baptized at 22. And no i didnt got married i was engaged twice 😅 for me living chastely has been the best decision i ever took after my mess ups. Its not easy but i find it peaceful and rewarding. I think its important for people to value their bodies dignity and to not sleep around. If they do though and a younger lady gets pregnant...i think any loving parent should support them in having and raising the child. Many Catholic priests actually say that getting pregnant young isnt a reason to get married to some guy...this is why now children from single mothers can be baptized. Anyone can make mistakes and should still be a part of the catholic community. For me the line needs to be drawn if people are trying to follow the rules or not. Some people like to live in sin and want to change the Church. Im against that. If they dont want to follow the rules to the best of their abilities then they can go somewhere else. No one will shun them socially like the amish or something but they need to go somewhere else instead of promoting heresy.

      @etcwhatever@etcwhateverАй бұрын
    • @@etcwhatever the purity culture in America has caused a lot of trauma for young people. I have even see gay people say they didn't understand they were gay until after they got married and realized they weren't experiencing the miracle of marital bliss. They thought everyone experienced feelings for the same sex because that was just a sin they had to fight against. That once they got married they would be blessed. It goes further than that and many young people married at 18/19 because that was the only way they could experience even holding hands. Plus women believe they should drop everything and start having children immediately because that is what god wants for them. It is a one size fits all that causes so much shame when young people break any rule - holding hands, kissing, and yes, sex. They are encouraged to confess all this, in some religions, in great detail, to elder men in the community. Then are set apart until deemed "good" again. Many times not thought of as good enough for the "best" mates. The purity culture fosters perfect chastity while limiting information. There are a lot of people who have left their religious organizations who have spoke out about how much it harmed them and set them back.

      @kirielbranson4843@kirielbranson4843Ай бұрын
  • My aunt is Mormon… only person in my family. The rest of us aren’t religious. I am a lifelong atheist. These videos fascinate me. Glad you are free!

    @lorrainehagan9044@lorrainehagan90442 ай бұрын
    • So am I

      @kathybrem880@kathybrem8802 ай бұрын
    • I am a devout Christian and I would consider myself Evangelical even though I grew up Catholic. I've never known a Mormon person, at least that I'm aware of.

      @DelusionalDemocrats@DelusionalDemocrats2 ай бұрын
    • I'm more of an Agnostic, I was baptized Lutheran and have some relatives who are Catholic. I'm open to the idea of an "All-Powerful Eternal Creator", but think that organized religion often destroys/corrupts any grains of Truth that the Creator may provide.

      @morrigankasa570@morrigankasa5704 күн бұрын
  • You have a talent for storytelling. I didn’t grow up religious but have been drawn to this typa content for years. Now I have a BF with a Mormon family and this is even more interesting. I’m glad I’m educated on it and understand on a whole new level what it FEELS like to be so religious.

    @avathag@avathag2 ай бұрын
  • I left the church thirty years ago-one year after I returned home from my mission. The ostracism from my “ward” was pretty intense and back then, there wasn’t any online resources to help people decouple. Sharing your stories helps! Keep it up.

    @wacokidd@wacokidd2 ай бұрын
  • I don't know how you survived such heavy inappropriate guilt as a reasonably healthy human being. Kudos to you Alyssa!

    @sheilakennedy5405@sheilakennedy54052 ай бұрын
  • Your story about questioning your testament reminds me of how I grew up. I was raised secular, a decision that was made by my parents, who grew up in their respective religions (Catholic and Jewish) and decided that they wanted us to choose what felt right for us when we were ready. We were judged by family members and friends: "They aren't baptized? Don't you want them to go to heaven? How else will they have a moral compass?" while I witnessed these friends & family members shoplift, cheat, or show blatant bigotry. Knowing the difference between right and wrong doesn't necessarily come with religion, but the fundamental human compassion for others.

    @elphaba1300@elphaba13002 ай бұрын
  • The way you felt during that teaching time, the depression and all - nothing to be ashamed of, nothing to be "not proud of". Perfectly understandable, completely natural to feel that way in such conditions. Fortunately, you made it through and here you are: doing all this great work and shareing your story and thoughts with the world. :> Thank you! Take care!

    @aleksanderzagrodzski2450@aleksanderzagrodzski245019 күн бұрын
  • You got me in the feels! Out here crying. Thank you thank you thank you Alyssa. Just thank you !

    @medslarge@medslarge2 ай бұрын
  • Hearing you have children makes me so curious about how leaving mormonism has affected your family. Did you have your first son before or after you left the church? Did you tell your church about your past or are they still too young to understand? Do they interact with your parents who are still mormon (like do your parents try to take them to church with them?) If they are still too young, how do you think you'll handle that in the future?

    @simmie_xx9444@simmie_xx94442 ай бұрын
  • Your voice does matter! I resonate with all of this so deeply! Healing from mormonism has been such a difficult thing for me. I'm grateful for creators like you who make me feel less alone in the heaviness of it all.

    @jessicasalter8925@jessicasalter89252 ай бұрын
  • Wow, can't believe how much more polished you have become with regard to your presentation skills over the past couple of months...You've obviously worked very hard and deserve much credit! Grew up in Denver and had many Mormon friends and girlfriends growing up, going to their dances and playing in their basketball leagues. Through some of those friendships and much reading, I learned about many of the practices you discuss in your videos. Much respect to you for having the courage and strength to break away and follow your own path as I know how difficult a process that is. Really enjoy your videos and appreciate you sharing your story...You should be extremely proud of yourself!

    @schaffer5653@schaffer5653Ай бұрын
  • Your Denver story is funny because Denver used to be called Little Italy of Denver Denver was a full Italian enclave from the late 1800s - 1950s. In fact, so many Italians lived there that it was called "Little Italy".

    @PeterBoaMan@PeterBoaMan13 күн бұрын
  • Cue the inevitable comments about leaving the church but not being able to leave it alone 😂

    @LongJourneys@LongJourneys2 ай бұрын
    • Or crying they’re being mocked just because she talking about her experiences.

      @mommyofkittens4809@mommyofkittens48092 ай бұрын
    • You can leave the church but you WON'T EVER leave it alone. How's that?

      @JohnDLee-im4lo@JohnDLee-im4lo2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@JohnDLee-im4loWoop there it is!

      @PlasmicPenny@PlasmicPenny2 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnDLee-im4loope he tried it

      @Podzhagitel@Podzhagitel2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@JohnDLee-im4loif your imaginary friend was real you wouldn't need to be over here trying to defend them

      @UlexiteTVStoneLexite@UlexiteTVStoneLexite2 ай бұрын
  • When you first leave the church it feels a lot more serious than it really is, I still love hearing other peoples experiences in the church being a former lds church member myself, extremely fascinating

    @Jose-st3fq@Jose-st3fq2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Alyssa. This is so fascinating-/ I will buy your book!

    @susanshillito7790@susanshillito7790Ай бұрын
  • Abit late, but truly enjoyed your story. All the best for your book, your channels, your family, and especially you 😊

    @Dawn_Aramoana63@Dawn_Aramoana63Ай бұрын
  • I stumbled upon your videos because I'll be going to Salt Lake City as an university exchange studnet soon and wanted to know more about the cultural differences. As an atheist who grew up christian but never really religious it's so interesting but shocking hearing about other people's live stories and how they often wouldn't even be possible in my country.

    @lilaluna8922@lilaluna89222 ай бұрын
    • SLC is becoming more and more secular in comparison to other parts of the state. Provo, Brigham, and Cache Valley are still very Mormon, and I unfortunately cant promise you wont run into some bigotry.. but I do want to let you know that besides all that bad there are a ton of good things here. You will find some good people to show you around and hang around with! So many different types here, just have to find them!

      @azurekuzma3598@azurekuzma35982 ай бұрын
    • The University of Utah is nothing like BYU…. I was doing a keg stand and smoking weed literally my first day as a student. Go Utes !!!!!!

      @scottallen8499@scottallen8499Ай бұрын
  • Be proud of yourself. For all those that have left be proud of how hard you worked to be free ❤️

    @heathermichael3987@heathermichael39872 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for making these videos, Alyssa. Even though I’ve never been Mormon I find your advice to be helpful and your message to be empowering and inspiring.

    @viviana_s@viviana_s10 күн бұрын
  • Love your content! Grew up in Mormon country Billings, Montana where there is a huge white, illuminated Moroni lighting up the night skies. At 77, I love seeing your journey of discovery. So grateful my parents had the philosophy of letting me decide for myself in time. All the best !

    @gloriagarrison8055@gloriagarrison80552 ай бұрын
  • I was 20 when I joined the church in 2010. For me, the cracks started to form the first time I went to the temple. I expected it to be the ultimate spiritual experience. Instead, it felt phony and creepy. During baptism for the dead, the names somehow got mixed up, and another girl baptized my grandmother. I wanted to yell "stop" as soon as they said her name, but couldn't bring myself to interrupt the "sacred" ceremony. So I just silently wept until it was my turn, and they put me under water for a bunch of people I never knew. Deep down, I thought, "If the church is real, how could that mistake have ever happened?" Everything else was not what I expected either. I remember thinking how odd the men looked in all white suits, as if dressed up for a rap music video. I've seen a picture of Tupac wearing the exact same thing. 😂

    @LKYme@LKYme2 ай бұрын
  • Your content is so beautifully authentic and well thought out! I’m so glad people have you as a resource. Cheering you on!!

    @Topazdolphin23@Topazdolphin232 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for your openness and for sharing your interesting experiences. 👍

    @nicofruehinsfeld2004@nicofruehinsfeld20045 күн бұрын
  • The ending of this video is so beautiful. I can hear the joy in your voice! Thank you for sharing your story.

    @Katie-fy7ku@Katie-fy7ku2 ай бұрын
  • Despite being raised Mormon and being active til my early 20s, I’ve learned a lot from your videos. I’m not familiar with Moroni’s Quest and never experienced a purity conference, which sounds awful. I don’t remember being pressured into just being a happy homemaker, but it was probably there. Two things stand out for me- my mom had another member tell her in the church hallway that if she didn’t get sealed to my dad in the temple, she’d go to hell. I was FURIOUS. It was none of her damn business for one plus why would you say such a nasty thing in a public area like that?! The other thing was having a bishop I didn’t like in the first place come to my home and ask if I had anything to confess to him. By then I’d moved in with a friend and stopped attending church. Pretty sure my dad gave him my address. Again- none of his damn business. Anything I needed to “confess” was between myself and God. I never formally left the church. I mostly stopped going because I lost interest. Other than those two particular experiences, the majority of people were lovely. My parents were devout members until they passed away. They never gave me a hard time. They weren’t thrilled, lol, but it didn’t hurt my relationship with them. Since then, I’m a heathen who’s lived in sin, been married and divorced, has tattoos, lives on diet Coke and curses like a sailor sometimes. 😁

    @melanies.6139@melanies.61392 ай бұрын
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