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Written by Scott Terry
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Tuesday, 25 May 2010 11:04 |
I knew I was gay when I was seven, and it never fails to amaze me how, during discussions of my sexuality, otherwise rational people sometimes allow their thoughts to blow up into ideas that I never intended. When I talk about being aware of my same-gender attraction at the age of seven, people sometimes let their minds wander off to places where I didn't intend for them to go, and they assume that when I was a child, I must have known more about sex than I should have.
So let me explain. I knew I was gay from about as far back as I can remember, but at the age of seven, I didn't have a name for it. I didn't know what it meant. I didn't have the slightest idea what adults did for sexual gratification. I didn't have the faintest concept of sex or love, nor did I know that I would eventually want to share those feelings with someone of my own gender. None of those thoughts would have entered my mind.
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Written by Scott Terry
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Wednesday, 21 April 2010 09:33 |
I was paging through some old volumes of Watchtower and Awake! back issues from the 1960s and 70s, and I noticed an odd circumstance that somehow escaped my attention when I was a Witness. After viewing pages and pages of illustrations depicting life in the New Order, I realized that there are no bald people in the new system of things. No fat people, either. No ugly folks, and no little people. No one is short and wide. No one is tall and hefty. No one is wrinkled, because everyone appears to have been frozen in time, once they hit the age of 40.
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Written by Scott Terry
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Saturday, 13 February 2010 18:32 |
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Just the other day, I was reading a Freemind's post from a reader who was having a difficult time with leaving The Truth. Karen wrote a really beautiful comment in response to Josh's story about growing up as a gay Witness. She wrote about feeling lonely, and how her life is filled with depression and how she has become a ghost of her former self as she struggles to leave the Witnesses behind, and her story reminded me of why I need to write this blog. It just seems important to help struggling people by giving them the assurance that life gets better when you get out of The Truth. It really does. Trust me.
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Written by Scott Terry
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Wednesday, 23 December 2009 19:45 |
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So here we are at Christmas, 2009. It's been exactly one year since I wrote my first blog for Freeminds.org, and it's time for reflection. And I understand that one of the primary agendas for this particular holiday is to be thankful and gracious and kind to others --- or so I've been told. I didn't celebrate Christmas when I was in The Truth, obviously, and this holiday has never become a significant part of my adult life, either. But today, I am going to focus on what I think might be some good aspects of The Truth. Something they might have given to me, and something for which I am appreciative, because that is a requirement of this day.
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Written by Scott Terry
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Friday, 23 October 2009 08:54 |
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When my sister returned to The Truth many years ago, my favorite grandma was ticked. She’s now dead, but when alive, Grams would have considered herself to be a front-row Baptist. When my sister went back to our childhood religion -- the Witnesses -- Grams said, “I don’t know why she wants to get mixed up with that cult!”
A few weeks ago, I found myself thinking about my grandmother’s comment while sitting in the audience at the annual conference of A Common Bond. That’s the group devoted to homosexual ex-Witnesses, and the lead speaker was J. Todd Ormsbee, a sociology professor from San Jose State. Don’t ask me what the J. stands for, because I forgot to ask him. He’s a brainiac from Brigham Young University, via the state of Utah, and he says lots of brilliant things you’ve never thought of and uses words like counter-hegemony. Yeah I know, I had to look that up myself.
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Written by Scott Terry
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Tuesday, 25 August 2009 20:47 |
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Last year, I was finishing the final edit of my book and began to doubt some of what I had written about my childhood in The Truth. That's normal, I think, to have doubts about the accuracy of your memories, especially when you're about to launch them for the rest of the world to read. I began wishing that I had kept more of my old Witness publications for documentation because I thought my story would sound bitter if I didn't substantiate what I wrote.
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Written by Scott Terry
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Monday, 17 August 2009 21:43 |
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Not once in my adult life have I ever felt saddened by my lack of childhood birthday presents. Not once. Worldly people who didn't grow up in The Truth have the hardest time understanding that and imagine that I must feel a tremendous amount of anguish over missing out on birthday cakes. Their take on things is usually, "Oh how sad! How terrible it would be to not have birthday or Christmas celebrations!"
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Written by Scott Terry
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Tuesday, 14 July 2009 20:08 |
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The Jehovah's Witnesses offered this conclusion when they published the Youth Book in 1976. I was twelve and I believed every word they wrote.
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