From: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com [mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com] On 
Behalf Of danfriedman2002
Sent: Monday, September 29, 2014 10:30 AM
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Leave your religion. Iive longer

 

  

 

Rick Archer,

 

Have you ever spoken for yourself? Do you have anything to say?

Please stop spamming this forum.

Occasionally I make comments, but in general, I don’t have time to do so. So at 
the very least, I like to forward things which I think folks might find 
interesting, such as the “Jerry email to John sent on Sunday” post, which seems 
to have stirred up a lot of discussion. If it bothers people (other than you) 
that I do so, I’ll stop doing so.

 


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com <mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com> , 
<rick@... <mailto:rick@...> > wrote :

interesting article yesterday in The Atlantic 

http://tinyurl.com/mzbapx4


The Health Effects of Leaving Religion
How a loss of faith can manifest itself in the mind and body Jon Fortenbury
Sep 28 2014, 11:00 AM ET

Curtis Penfold got kicked out of his apartment, fired from his job, and left
Brigham Young University all in the same week.

He left BYU--a private university operated by The Church of Latter-day
Saints--because he had started to disagree with some of the Church's views,
causing tension between him and school officials. His exit from the school
caused him to lose his on-campus job, and he subsequently resigned from the
Mormon Church. Resigning from the church resulted in getting kicked out of
his religiously-affiliated private housing, and he received angry emails
from old friends and phone calls from his disappointed parents who said he
"lost the light" and "used to be so good."

"I felt so hated by this community I used to love," Penfold said.

Penfold originally went to BYU to be around fellow Mormons. But over the
course of the two-and-a-half years he spent there, he started to find the
lack of LGBT rights in the church distasteful and was unable to reconcile
the idea of a loving God with the evil he saw in the world. This loss of
faith in God went beyond his separation from Mormonism, leading to months of
depression, anxiety over the prospect of no afterlife, and suicidal
thoughts. He's better now, but for a while there were days when he wouldn't
even leave his bed.

Like Penfold, many who leave religion in America become isolated from their
former communities, which can make them anxious, depressed, or even
suicidal. Others feel liberated. No deconversion story is the same, but many
who leave behind strongly-held religious beliefs can see an impact on their
health.

Americans are less religious than ever. A third of American adults under 30,
and a fifth of all Americans don't identify with any religion, according to
a 2012 study by Pew Research (an increase from 15 percent in 2007). But
though scientists have studied people who leave cults, research on the
health effects of leaving religion is slim.
"Just like it's hard to unlearn English, it's hard for people to unlearn the
concept of hell."

The most mainstream research on this is a 2010 study out of Pennsylvania
State University, which examined data from 1972 to 2006. The study showed
that 20 percent of people who have left religion report being in excellent
health, versus 40 percent of people currently part of strict religious
groups (such as Jehovah's Witnesses and Latter-Day Saints) and 25 percent of
people who switched from a strict religion to a more lenient religion.
"Strict" in this study was defined as "high-cost sectarian groups that are
theologically and culturally exclusive."

There are some studies comparing the health of religious and nonreligious
people. A 2010 study by Gallup showed that nonreligious people are more
likely to smoke and less likely to eat healthy and exercise than the
faithful. A 2004 study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry
showed that religiously unaffiliated depressed inpatients are more likely to
display suicidal behaviors than religiously affiliated patients. And a 2011
study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology showed that people
in economically developed societies tend to have similar levels of
subjective well-being regardless of religious affiliation. But studies
rarely seem to single out people who have left religion. Even the Penn State
study didn't clarify how recently people had deconverted. Recent deconverts
are, understandably, those most likely to see health effects, according to
Dr. Darrel Ray.

Ray has been a psychologist for more than 30 years and founded Recovering
>From Religion, an organization that connects nonbelievers with therapists
and each other. According to Ray, it generally takes depressed deconverts
two to three years for their health to bounce back. A few years after
leaving their religion, they tend to reestablish a social community and rid
themselves of guilt they may have felt over premarital sex, depression over
losing God, and anxiety about death and hell.

Ray, author of The God Virus and Sex and God: How Religion Distorts
Sexuality, said not all of his clients recover within the typical three
years, though. Getting over a fear of death after believing in an afterlife
for so long takes some of them five years or longer. And about five percent
of his clients can take even more time to stop fearing hell. Ray often
compares learning about hell to learning a language.
Related Story

When Prayer Makes Anxiety Worse

"When you were five years old and learning English, you never stopped to ask
your parents why you weren't learning German," said Ray, who uses cognitive
behavioral therapy to decatastrophize the concept of hell for clients. "You
just learn it. The same is often true of religion. When you're taught about
hell and eternal damnation at ages four through seven, these strong concepts
are not going to easily leave you. Just like it's hard to unlearn English,
it's hard to unlearn the concept of hell."

Dr. Marlene Winell, a California psychologist and author of Leaving the
Fold, compares leaving religion to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
She even created a term for it: religious trauma syndrome (RTS), which she
defines in an article for British Association for Behavioural & Cognitive
Psychotherapies as "struggling with leaving an authoritarian, dogmatic
religion and coping with the damage of indoctrination." Not every deconvert
goes through RTS, but she writes that like PTSD, the impact of RTS is
"long-lasting, with intrusive thoughts, negative emotional states, impaired
social functioning, and other problems." RTS is not recognized by the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, though, and some
critics say it is just PTSD, applied to religion.

Any negative experiences after leaving religion, from depression to social
isolation, can take a toll on your physical health. Isolation, according to
a six-year study out of the University of Chicago, can cause health problems
such as disrupted sleep, elevated blood pressure, and a 14 percent greater
risk of premature death. Depression can cause fatigue, trouble
concentrating, headaches, and digestive disorders; and persistent anxiety
can cause muscle tension and difficulty sleeping, according to the Anxiety
and Depression Association of America. Anxiety is also sometimes linked to
stomach ulcers, said Dr. Javier Campos.

Campos, a family practice doctor in Kerrville, Texas, says he will sometimes
ask patients about their spiritual lives, if he thinks it's affecting their
health or if they're going through the loss of a loved one. He's observed a
link between his patients' thoughts on the afterlife and their physical
health.

"If you have this thought of hell and that you're going to be punished for
unbelief, it [sometimes] translates into other sematic symptoms, such as
headaches, anxiety, and needing to be on medication to sleep," Campos said.

There are now several resources to help combat negative health outcomes
after leaving religion, beyond taking medicine for the symptoms or seeing a
therapist. Recovering From Religion has monthly support groups across the
world and is about to offer a phone hotline for those struggling with
deconversion. Journey Free, an organization based in the San Francisco Bay
Area, offers an online support group for deconverts and weekend retreats
where small groups come together to help and support each other. There are
even groups that are essentially atheist churches, where deconverts can go
to find weekly community in a nonreligious context.

Not every recent deconvert necessarily needs these resources, though. Some
who leave religion become healthier than they were before. This was the case
for Annie Erlandson.
Related Story

Burying Your Dead Without Religion

Raised Evangelical Christian in Lincoln, Nebraska, Erlandson developed
anorexia at age nine, modeling after her pastor father, who wrote a book
about his own eating disorder. But Erlandson's struggles with food were tied
to her beliefs. She was petrified of growing into womanhood, fearing she
would cause men to lust after her and sin. She thought if she could prevent
her first period, she could prevent growing breasts and minimize sin.
Finally at age 15, doctors caught on to her persistent low weight and
diagnosed her with anorexia.

After this, Erlandson began doubting Christianity, and eventually, she lost
her faith.

Like Erlandson, some people's health improves after deconverting because
they stop practicing negative health behaviors that may have been tied to
their religion. For example, leaving a faith such as Christian Science,
which dissuades medical treatment, obviously opens up more opportunities for
healthcare intervention.

Other negative health behaviors sometimes associated with being religious,
according to social psychologist Dr. Clay Routledge in Psychology Today, are
cognitive dissonance (consistent religious doubts can harm your health) and
avoidant coping. An example of the latter is the attitude that things are
"all in God's hands," which could potentially keep people from taking action
on behalf of their own health.

Unlike those who become isolated from community after losing their faith,
Erlandson's social life improved drastically after her deconversion. She
began hanging out with theatre kids and people in the local punk rock scene.

"I never really had a social group when I was a Christian," Erlandson said.
"I tried joining a youth group and just never felt like I connected with
them. I remember one time, when I was nine, being in church during a hymn
and everyone was singing and raising their hands and closing their eyes. I
didn't feel it. This wave of isolation and trepidation came over me.
Everyone seemed engaged except for me. I knew I was not like everyone else."

But not everyone's health and well-being improves after leaving a religion.
Since for many people, religion means being part of a community, and belief
in an afterlife can make death less frightening, leaving that behind can
lead to isolation and anxiety. The end of a positive religious experience
can lead to a decrease in health, as was the case for Penfold. But leaving a
negative religious experience may be a way to boost health, especially if
someone has a nonreligious community to support them, as Erlandson did. But
one way or another, a person's faith, or lack thereof, is often so important
that it affects physical, as well as spiritual, well-being.



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