The author and her mother
As I got older, I started to wonder: Why can't I cry? Why don't I feel anything? I remember trying desperately to produce emotion as I watched my peers become overwhelmed with feeling during church camp. I willed tears to come out of my eyes. And for a moment, I thought I felt something—but it quickly dissolved, out of my grasp.I believed that the church was true, but I didn't feel what everyone else felt. I wanted to dress fabulously, not modestly. I wanted to hang out with boys and talk about boobs. Other parents considered me a bad influence on their kids, sometimes even excluding me from gatherings. And my mom was beautiful, vibrant, and ambitious, so she didn't exactly fit in to the Midwestern LDS culture either.My parents got divorced and my mom fell in love with a non-member, who she eventually slept with. Riddled with guilt, she confessed immediately, but the priesthood had her excommunicated anyway, as premarital sex is considered the worst sin you can commit next to murder. For three years she was not allowed to participate or speak in church—she essentially wore a big scarlet letter on her chest. Fitting in was harder for all of us after that.When the humiliation of the repentance process was over, we moved to Utah. We'd been performing as ventriloquists together and I'd been writing songs; this was our shot at a new life.Then we met Adam.My mom and Adam (I've changed his name) met at an LDS singles' dance. He looked strikingly similar to someone from a dream she'd had years before, she said. In Mormonism, it's common to pray for and look for signs from God, so when she met this man she'd dreamed about after all that hard repentance work—a man who had something magnetic about him, something special—it seemed clear that it meant something. It had to be a sign.
Annoncering
Annoncering
Annoncering
Annoncering