Posted by:
robertb
(
)
Date: May 12, 2012 07:29PM
I wrote this sometime back and report it now and then. It is one "how-to" way approach the transition out of Mormonism from a Narrative Therapy perspective.
In 1987, after 12 years of LDS membership, a mission, temple marriage, employment at the Missionary Training Center, graduation from BYU, a wife and four children, I found myself considering suicide. I became a Mormon in 1975, just out of high school. I had felt lost and suicidal, then too, in spite of having been accepted the colleges I had chosen. Everyone who knew me would have been surprised to see my name in the obituaries.
However, I was introduced to Mormonism on a road trip. I was drawn into the dramatic story of the Mormons, who had left the known behind and risked all they had to live in a society created on their own terms. I was drawn further by the Plan of Salvation taught by the missionaries. When I was baptized my life was infused with direction and purpose. I adopted the Mormon story and a Mormon identity.
For a few years I felt better; however, I gradually reached a point where I couldn’t continue to live in a borrowed story and from a borrowed identity. Although Mormonism had given me time to sort out my life to a point, some psychological tasks can be put off only so long before they take a profound toll on us in the form of depression, dependence, or a kind of semi-dissociated state. I had reached that point.
Fortunately, I began seeing a skilled non-Mormon therapist who nonetheless saw a lot of Mormons. We spent nearly two years together, meeting weekly. I learned that if I paid attention to what I was thinking and feeling and I was curious rather than judgmental, I would find out who I was and what I wanted.
Until then, my priority had been to avoid people becoming angry and disappointed in me and rejecting me. Those thoughts, feelings, and behaviors I knew or believed would be unacceptable, I denied, disowned, and kept under wraps. In Mormonism there are many ways to be unaccepted. Near the end of 1989, I decided that to remain a Mormon was to betray myself and to risk even more serious problems than I had already experienced. As frightening as it was to leave, it was more frightening to stay.
My association with other ex-Mormons through the Internet has made me aware both that everyone’s story is different and we also have much in common. Given my personal experience in transitioning out of Mormonism and my profession as a psychotherapist, I’m particularly interested in how we go about reforming an identity after leaving the Mormon Church. Some of use leave with our identities pretty much intact, while others of us painfully struggle with who we are and how we fit into this new non-Mormon world. The Mormon story was our story. We were part of it. It was part of us. Perhaps it was us. Therefore, when we leave we may feel we have lost a large part of our story about ourselves—our identity. Such a loss is profoundly unsettling.
However, we can develop a post-Mormon identity that keeps the best of who we were while “writing back in” aspects of ourselves that can create a richer and more joyful identity. The rest of his paper describes one way to further help make that happen.
Uncovering and Telling a New Story of Ourselves
Even as the longest biography of us could not hope to tell everything about us and might leave out important aspects of our life as we ourselves might wish to tell it, so our lives as Mormons is not the only story, the whole story, or the truest story about us. As Mormons those events, thoughts, and feelings of our lives believed not to fit within the official Mormon story tended to be suppressed, hidden, ignored, shamed, and feared--written out of the story of ourselves, written out of our conscious identity.
However, when the elements which have been edited from our life to serve the Mormon story are recovered, identified, and honored, they can serve as a framework for the telling of a new, more authentic and enlivening account of who we are and who we are becoming. The process below is one way of recovering and retelling our personal stories so that they may be more satisfying, enlivening, and true to us. The process described below will help with that discovery and incorporation:
1. Draw a line down the center of a piece of paper. It could be standard-size paper, a note book, or something much larger, such as an easel pad or newsprint.
2. On the left side write a title that represents your life or some key aspect of your life as a Mormon. I will use “Old Story.” You can be as creative as you like, however. The focus of the title may be as broad or narrow as you wish. On the right side put down whatever title that best expresses for you the new life you are beginning to live or you hope to live. I will use “New Story.”
3. On the left side under “Old Story” write down the events, the thoughts, and feelings that made up that story. Include both positive and negative items—anything that is important to you. You can use sentences, single words, drawings, pictures, or collage. Feel free to add to this column at any time.
4. Identify current thoughts, feelings, and events you like or are proud of which no longer fit the Old Story. Place these on the right side under New Story. Don’t worry about order. You can use single words, drawings, pictures, or collage. Feel free to add to this column at any time.
5. Identify what you are doing to move your New Story along and put these in the right column. Some questions along this line might be
• How did I prepare to take this step?
• What was the turning point that made this possible?
• How am I doing now that was different from before?
• What exactly am I doing?
• What image is guiding me or what am I saying to myself to keep going?
• If I made a plan, what is my plan?
• Am I doing this on my own or do other people play a part in making this happen?
• Who encourages the changes I’ve made and how does he or she show do it?
6. Identify how your New Story helps you identify important values and goals. Some questions might include
• What positive things does it say about me as a person that I would do this?
• What personal characteristics does it show?
• What have I learned about myself and other people that I did not know before?
• What does this show about my values?
• What does this show about my goals?
7. Identify times in the past when the elements of your New Story have surfaced even briefly. Identifying these times helps you link your New Story to the past, showing that the changes you are making have been part of you all along rather than an aberration or a mistake.
• Were there times I had done something like this before?
• What would be some examples?
• Did I or someone else predict this change? Who was friendly toward this change?
• Which incident in my past stands out as a good illustration of the changes I would be making?
8. Extend your New Story into the future. Doing this will help give you hope and vision, which are important for sustaining change. Some questions about the future might be
• If I look at the changes I’ve made as a trend in my life, what would the next step be?
• If I were to send a letter back to myself from the future, what positive changes would I tell about?
• What do I want my life to look like in a year or five years or ten years, given the changes I am making now?
9. When you have written down the elements of the Old Story and New Story you want to work with, identify the elements of the Old Story that you wish to keep as part of your New Story. Move those elements from the Old Story to your New Story by circling them and drawing an arrow from each circled element to your New Story side of the page. This brings together the positive elements of the Old Story into your New Story, creating continuity for your New Story.
10. Finally, when you have completed this process, hang the paper on a wall or put it somewhere accessible so you can use it to remind you of your New Story. You can add to the New Story from time-to-time as your life unfolds. Writing our New Story and sharing it with others, perhaps on Recovery from Mormonism or in another setting, often strengthens our new identity and encourages us in continuing with our new life.
Telling Our Own Stories
As Mormons we were encouraged to meet monthly and tell the Mormon story as our own story. This monthly retelling is a powerful method the church uses to strengthen Mormon identity, often at the expense of what is really true to its members. Recovering our story from Mormonism and telling it as we experience it rather than telling it as we were expected to tell it is a powerful way to stand up for ourselves and recover who we are. I hope that the ideas and process presented will move us a little further along toward living the story that is most true and enlivening for us.
Material for this article was adapted from Narrative Therapy: The Social Construction of Preferred Realities by Jill Freedman and Gene Combs