Home→Forums→Relationships→I escaped my parents' indoctrination but my younger sister hasn't…
- This topic has 7 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 2 months ago by Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
August 30, 2018 at 5:44 am #223705AnonymousInactive
This is not so much for advice, but more to reach out for reassurance and understanding. I don’t have many friends in my life who can understand my position.
I left my religion (Islam) 6 years ago. I was born into a very traditional, strict south-Asian family and in area of London (UK) where there is a very tight-knit community of people with my background. I am a first-generation child and my parents moved here a few years before I was born. I am a middle child so unsurprisingly I had social issues in my childhood (an outcast, bullied for being a nerd etc.).
I studied hard my whole life, got my grades and got a job which enabled me to be financially independent, but I was still living with my family by the age of 22. I was brought up Muslim, forced to wear a headscarf (and made to believe that it was my choice). I was indoctrinated from such a young age that I never questioned my own beliefs. It took a very negative experience in my life to question things and find my own identity outside my faith. Eventually I realised that I was an atheist and I have been since. I moved out and got my own flat, started to go out, partying, drinking, living life, meeting people. I have a healthy relationship now of almost two years with my current boyfriend.
Leaving the family to live alone was forbidden, and doing so made me an outcast of the family and the entire community. I lost all my friends and my parents disowned me. They said I was the child of Satan, that I was a whore, I brought shame to the family and that I am the cause of all the pain and suffering they are going through. My mum threatens to kill herself all the time unless I come back home and live a quiet Muslim girl life (headscarf, arranged marriage, kids etc.), she is the master of emotional blackmail.
Nevertheless, I have never felt freer, I feel happy, confident with my choices and am proud of standing up for my own beliefs. The hardest part of leaving was leaving my then 12 year old sister behind. I knew she would be indoctrinated as well and lo and behold she has. We haven’t been in touch because my mum thinks I am a bad influence. It makes me so sad to know that my sister never had a choice and now she echoes all of my mums words to me. I reached out to her recently and I got a lecture back from my sister who is 12 years younger than me saying that she can’t respect me for what I have put my family through. It hurts because I wanted to be the big sister that she looks up to. My opinion is that I had to be true to myself and live my life authentically, but her opinion is that love is sacrifice, and I should have made a decision to sacrifice my happiness for hers. These words sounds just like my mothers words.
I think we are strangers to each other now, and they all blame me but I blame my parents. Don’t get me wrong, I am not intolerant of religion – if it brings you peace, hope and meaning then great, but what I don’t like is that they can’t tolerate me, that I don’t get the same tolerance back. It’s either their way or the highway.
I am sad and angry that my parents did this to my innocent younger sister and I think I knew this would happen to her and that’s what made me feel so guilty to leave her behind, but I couldn’t just kidnap her! I was patient and waited for ages for her to forgive me and understand my choices but the longer she is around my mum, who feeds her lies about me, the more she grows to hate me.
Sorry it’s a long story. I wonder if anyone has any similar experiences and has any kind words to deal with all my confusing emotions?
Lots of love.
Afrin
xxx
August 30, 2018 at 6:32 am #223709AnonymousGuestDear Afrin:
My thoughts: your parents chose to offer you and your sister “their way or the highway”. Your sister chose their way; you chose the highway. It takes courage to choose to depart from your parents’ way, to risk their disapproval and total removal from the family. And then to endure that pain of separation and keep living your life away from them. It takes strength to accept and endure the pain of your sister disapproving of you and give up the dream of her looking up to you as her big sister.
Like you wrote, you weren’t able to kidnap her, you were not able to remove her from your parents. She wouldn’t have left willingly, so yes, you would have had to kidnap her.
Even though the two of you share the same parents, the two of you experienced life at home a bit differently. She experienced many of the same events you did, but at a much younger age. There are events you experienced that she didn’t because she wasn’t born yet. Somehow it came to be that her distress about living without her parents’ approval is way more intense than yours. And fear is our greatest motivator, she fears the distress of being cast away to the highway, fears it too much.
She finds comfort with her parents. I hope you find some comfort knowing she has her own comfort, that she is not as distressed as she would have been if she chose the highway.
anita
August 30, 2018 at 6:33 am #223711AnonymousGuest* didn’t reflect under Topics
August 30, 2018 at 9:22 am #223735InkyParticipantHi Afrin,
You did the greatest thing of all: You gave her tacit permission to do the same thing. That terrifies her. That terrifies your parents. It is just that easy to leave a religion dozens of generations old.
Maybe you thought that it would be easiest to “get” your sister back in your fold since she is twelve. Guess again! She needs your parents and will for several more years. Her turning angry towards you is an instinctive self defense mechanism.
I would give up on her and leave her alone… for now. Then when she is in her late teens/early twenties you reappear. The cool older sister. The one who is living all her forbidden dreams. The parents will be older and more tired. She’ll be an adult.
It will be better, you’ll see.
Best,
Inky
August 31, 2018 at 2:14 am #223809AnonymousInactiveHi Inky, Anita,
Thank you so much for your responses. It really is food for thought. What really struck me is that I never thought about looking at the situation from a 12-year old’s eyes – it must have been heartbreaking for her to see her mum hurt by my seemingly selfish behaviour, and it was easy for her to get angry at me. And it gives me comfort to know that she is happier being with my parents without having to go through what I did.
Also, she is going to be 18 now. She was 12 six years ago when everything happened. That’s why I reached out to her recently because I thought it was a decent amount of time – but looks like she is hating me more now than before, which isn’t what I expected. I have left her alone now, but I don’t know if or when things may change.
Afrin x
August 31, 2018 at 4:35 am #223829AnonymousGuestDear azu:
You are welcome.
Because arranged marriage is one thing you mentioned about your parents’ religion and practice, I suppose your sister, being eighteen and devoted to your parents, will be soon arranged to be married, then have children, no? If so, things are not likely to change (“I don’t know if or when things may change”)
anita
August 31, 2018 at 5:07 am #223841AnonymousInactiveHi Anita,
She is a smart girl so she will be going to university next year. Maybe that will be another chance for her to grow and gain some further perspective…. If she graduates and is still with the family then it is highly likely she will be on the path to an arranged marriage.
Afrin
August 31, 2018 at 5:32 am #223845AnonymousGuestDear Afrin:
You took the path less travelled, and I am impressed. The fact that your sister lives in the UK, not in an all Islamic country, and the fact that she will be attending university in which she will have more exposure to life outside the tight community where she now lives, do hold some possibilities. So I can see more reason for hope on your part.
Parents who discourage independence in their children have huge power over their children way into adulthood, and that power cannot and should not … be underestimated.
anita
-
AuthorPosts