The toughest thing about being a parent is dealing with
other people. Doesn't matter if they have children or not, almost everyone
seems to have an opinion on what all parents are supposed to do if they are to
be a good parent. Throw in something about yourself that doesn't fit in with the
All-American nuclear family idea from the 50's, and you've got a whole new set
of things you’re doing wrong coming your way. You could be a parent that is
LGBTQ, a different race from the person you had you child(ren) with, different
religion from the norm you were raised around, political views that are not in
line with any social norms, or even someone that is just a lover of tattoos and
other body modifications. There are so many things that will drive people to
telling you just how wrong you are for having that thing you have that they do
not also have.
I have a few of them. Politically I am a Centrist, which
basically means I hate politics and choosing a side, which often ends in all
sides accusing me of being whatever opposing side they are upset with at that
moment. I am a lover of tattoos, and am always working toward expanding my
collection (or updating my canvas, if you will). My son’s mother is not the
same race that I am, from the same country (though technically U.S. territories
are “part” of the US, it is another country), nor do we share the same native
language (and yet her mastery of the English language goes far beyond my own,
and I don’t speak any other languages). I’m also an atheist, which I’m sure comes
as no surprise to anyone reading this blog.
It is very rare that anyone brings up politics as a reason
to tell me I’m wrong. This is likely because I do not talk about politics very
often. My hatred/annoyance of them keeps me from discussing them, not because I
do not care about the state of my country, but because it is almost always
people arguing over who has the better oranges and what it takes to grow a
great orange and the best methods of juicing oranges, then they go and vote on
apples and kiwis. Same with my son being of mixed races, which is more than
likely because his mother is fair skinned and does not speak with the accent
one would expect of someone from Puerto Rico (though every last one of her
friends and family members I have met from there have an accent). I have a lot
of tattoos, but no longer wear any body jewelry, so I do not get the stares I
used to get, and the quality of my ink is amazing, which is something even the
most hateful of tattoo haters cannot deny. So I rarely get anything negative
from those people other than how ugly my skin will look when I’m 80. No, the
main thing people love to attack me for, is being an atheist. Maybe it is
atheism that keeps them from attacking me on other fronts, or maybe our culture
is truly progressing in how we accept the differences in other people. I’d like
to believe that to be true.
I am going to focus on raising a child as an atheist,
because that is the one thing about me that causes the most headaches from
other people. Plus it is the only one that I think I can write more than a
paragraph or two on before I feel like I've said all that needs to be said (I
could probably write for days on LGBTQ parenting and how amazing it is for a
child, but I have no firsthand experience in that, so I’ll save it for another
day).
So…
As a parent, I am one of the two most influential people in
my son’s life. Because of this, I am constantly working to be the very best
example I can be for him. I do this in every facet of my life. What I believe in
regards to religion is very important in who I am* and what kind of example I
am setting for him. If I keep that from him, what kind of example am I setting?
Especially when almost no other person he meets each day will keep their
beliefs from him? How is my letting him grow up not knowing that I do not
believe in god, while allowing the rest of his family to encourage a belief,
right? It isn't. It isn't right at all.
I will not hide any part of who I am from my son, regardless
of what my peers feel. I want to encourage him to always be true to himself,
and open about who he is. Hiding a part of me from him will not teach him to
come to conclusions on his own, it will teach him that there are parts of who
we are that we have to sometimes hide when they are not in line with the ruling
majority. That is the opposite of standing up for who you are, and it is not
equal to the kind of “pride” one talks about when they refuse to walk away from
a bad situation. It would be hypocritical of me to tell him to be proud of who
he is, while appearing ashamed of who I am.
I want to raise my son to be someone that is not afraid to
be open and honest with himself, and about himself. No shame in liking what he
likes, loving who he loves, believing what he believes, and being whomever he
turns out to be. I cannot do that if I am not setting the example by being
that. How can I tell him to be open and honest about whom he is if I am hiding
a major part of me from him? How can I ask him to stand up for what he believes
if I am constantly censoring myself simply to keep from upsetting people that
do not like anyone different from themselves?
I can’t ask him to be these things if I am not also these things, or at
least trying my very best to be them.
So I will tell my son my beliefs. I will not shove them down
his throat, but I will present them to him exactly as they are -- my beliefs
and nothing more. I will not tell him he has to believe what I believe, nor
will I push him toward it. I will simply share what and why I believe what I
do, and encourage him to research and ask questions to find out what he thinks
is true or not. Believe it or not, it is possible to share an opinion with
someone without needing them to agree with you.
I will let him come to his own place, in his own time, and
in his own way. However, I will NOT send him off to church on Sundays, Vacation
Bible School during the summer, or anything else that I do not agree with or
would not want to attend myself. That is not opening him up to new ideas and
experiences, that is sending him off to be indoctrinated. I will not do that to
him. In fact, I will not allow him to attend these things until he is old
enough to ask to go because he wants to and not because a family member or
friend told him to ask after making it sound like going to the park for free
candy. Their intentions be damned.
So, no, I do not have any intentions of pointing my son down
a path I believe to be false and harmful simply because I walked that path to
get to where I am. That’s stupid, and in my not so humble opinion, bad
parenting. I am his father, and it is my job to teach him the lessons that I
have learned, not sit back in silence waiting for him to make the same
mistakes. I am to clear the paths that I walk in order to make the road he is
to start out on. That way he is not repeating my lessons (though many will be
repeated) and can focus on finding his own paths to clear for his children and
future generations.
One thing that is often brought up in parental conversations
is: “You were raised with religion, and you were able to come to your own
conclusions and leave it. Don’t you think your son should do the same? Shouldn't
you allow him to come to that conclusion the same way you did? Isn't it more
rewarding that way?” The short answer to that is “no.” The long answer to that
is, “Fuck no, you goddamned dolt.” You see, for [most] atheists that
deconverted from the religion they were raised in, it is fucking horrible
giving that up. We’re often accused of only being able to be atheists because
of a traumatic experience, when the truth is leaving behind the religious faith
we’d always known is extremely traumatic. Not just because of the fall out that
often happens with friends and family, but because that is giving up a core
part of your being. Mix that with being from a country in which odds are pretty
high that you will instantly become the black sheep (if you weren't already) by
no longer believing what everyone around you believes, and you've got one hell
of an internal battle going on inside your mind that should not even be going
on.
My response to this question is often countered by being
told it should be something that is difficult to go through and decide like
that. They say, “Whether or not you believe in a god is the most important
ideological decision anyone will ever make.” To which my palm magically
transforms into a placeholder for my face. Belief is not a choice, it is the
conclusion drawn from the data processed by your mind. But more than that, the
battle going on inside the mind is not whether or not to believe in a higher
power, but whether or not we should accept it. The fight is in trying to deny
the conclusion you've already come to, because it isn't the conclusion you
expected or that the people you love came to. It is in trying to hide it, and
in trying to make it go away so that you can just be normal [again] like
everyone else. I imagine it is quite similar to someone fighting the
realization that they are gay. At least that is what I have been told by LGBTQ
atheists and how it sounds when talking to LGBTQ friends about their
experiences coming to grips with finally admitting who they were to themselves.
I know many believe that in an ideal world, one would keep
their personal beliefs personal and let each other person in the world decide
what it is that they want to believe for themselves. Luckily, this is not that
ideal world, and very few people my son meets are going to keep their personal beliefs
personal. If they did, we would not have the literature that we have, the
music, movies, TV shows, etc etc. We would not have the art that we have. We
cannot grow without some kind of challenge, and we get that through sharing
personal parts of ourselves with one another. Granted, this is not always done
in the best of ways, but most of the time it is.
What is frustrating about this, is the knowledge that when
it comes to people who do and do not share their personal beliefs with him, it
is the atheists that are the least likely to share. Even those that know I am
an atheist are going to bite their tongue more often than not if the subject
arises around him. If they do share, it will not have any detail, because most
will not know what I believe other than what I do not believe, and have no clue
how social stigmas impact my parenting style. Plus it can feel pretty damn
uncomfortable sharing that with a child. Because you never know what parent is
going to get upset with you, you try to avoid speaking about them at all costs.
Hell, I don’t even talk about it with my brothers without feeling like I am
going to upset their mother. I will answer their questions, but I have never
told them to stop believing in a god because Christianity is all bullshit anyway.
No matter how much doubt they had at the time of coming to me, I never gave
them any kind of a push. Just encouragement to keep asking questions and
learning as much as they can in order to come to the most accurate conclusion
they can. Mostly, though, I let them know that no matter what, they were loved,
not alone, and would be okay. Their mother and my father and most everyone else
in our family are Christians, and not a single one of them would have spoken with
them in the same manner. Had they been approached by someone showing the kind
of doubts they have shown me, they would respond by telling them they are being
tested by Satan, telling them that they don’t really have doubts because they “know”
god is real, and whatever else they could think of to keep them from walking
away from Christianity. All with good intentions, and no realization at just
how cult-like it is to do that to someone.
I can’t blame them for that kind of thinking, though. If you honestly
believe people that do not have faith or belief in your god are going to burn
in Hell for all of eternity, and you do not try and warn them, you’re not a
very good person. I’m not talking about pushing something onto them long after
they have told you to stop, but just reminding them why they once believed or
offering them something you think might be super insightful in hopes of saving
them. Yes, I will get frustrated with this, and I will even make fun of you if
your “insight” is ridiculous enough. I won’t, however, lose respect for you so
long as you are being respectful in your presentation (which I cannot make fun
of you if you accomplish this). I understand that with this mentality, hearing
that an atheist is sharing their beliefs to someone at an influential age is
probably equal to someone trying to sentence your child to death, which I
imagine is scary as fuck. I can’t accept it as absolute, though. I cannot look
at the reasons, understand why they are this way, and then refuse to try and
change them. If I am to believe that someone with those beliefs should share
them with me, then I also have to believe that my opinions and beliefs should
be shared with them. Neither are any less important than the other. We need to
hear each other in order to accept each other and especially if we are to love
one another.
As I am writing this, I am realizing so many ways in which I
still censor myself for others. I can no longer do this. I’m not going to start
running around telling every kid I see that there is probably no god, but I am
no longer going to avoid the question when a child asks (or anyone else for
that matter), regardless of whom the child is or who their parents are. I’m not
hiding it anymore.
So long as he keeps smiling, I don't care what he does or does not believe in.
*Atheism is not important to me as in it defines me, but in
that it is a major reason why I am as open and accepting as I am (or am not,
depending on who you ask). However, I do not believe it would be very important
at all if I were raised in a country that is predominately atheist. I've posted previously about this here and here.