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I Am An Atheist

I was born into a Muslim family and believed in Islam until I made the conscious decision to leave at around age 14 or 15. I'm almost 16 now.

But if anyone asked, I would say I left at 13. Because that's when I developed a new perspective on certain issues and new morals, and they were generally incompatible with the morals and perspectives Islam teaches. I wouldn't have realised that until I was around 14 or 15.

I can't give you an exact number because I went back and forth on whether to identify as an atheist or what. So my beliefs at particular points in my life can just be big old blurs. It's hard to ditch ideas you've grown up with all your life. It's a confusing period of time, when a part of your identity becomes insecure. Especially since I was thinking about my gender identity at the same time. But that's another story.

There's this article I remember reading about that reminds me a lot of how I dealt with religion. If I remember correctly, the writer was on a trip to North Korea. The authorities there had set it up so that the people on the trip would have developed a skewed perspective on what the country was like. For example, the hotel there would have had marble floors and chandeliers, but there would have been a problem with running water because the authorities can only cover up so much.

Similarly, on the inside, being a part of Islam felt like there were so many good things about it. I can't even think of an example of one of the things I considered nice about Islam, but there was a lot of it. There were a lot of chandeliers and a lot of marble floors. I believed in it and I defended it.

But when I take a step back, I now notice the running water issues.

I notice all the problems deep rooted within Islam, and it's actually not hard to realise when I reflect on what I truly believed I was when I was religious.

Just an example; I thought I was a feminist. I thought things like the hijab were for a woman's own good. In hindsight, it's obvious that I was nowhere near a feminist when I think about the judgments I would have made about certain women. I was far from it. I was the complete polar opposite. I won't talk too much about it because I would have to go into a lot of detail and I'd like to keep this on the surface for now.

Religion does that to you, though. You don't consider that maybe the marble floors are fake.
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firefall · 61-69, M
It definitely is extremely hard to reject the things you had inculcated into you as a child growing up, and you seem to have made exceptional strides in that direction, much younger than most, so congratulations on that. I imagine it must make things at home for you quite awkward?

I think a lot of nonbelievers get conned into going with the social aspects of a religion because 'its part of their culture/heritage', which to me has always sounded like an enormous bullshit alert - I dont speak only of Islam on that matter, various christianist sects and jewish fragments are at least as bad at it, inter alia.
It's okay at home. I can make excuses to get out of prayers and the hourly Quran reading sessions my mum tried to make me and my brother do even since we were little. I don't even really need to anymore, she doesn't really ask. I'm very very lucky, I recognise that.

At school however, it's a different story. I go to a school heavily populated with Muslim students, even though it's a secular school. When I bring up a question in discussions, it's often met with ridicule. I'm not very well-spoken in real life so that makes things pretty difficult too. I deal with it though. 😁 I feel a strong sense of security with my new identity as an atheist and nothing really diminishes it.
firefall · 61-69, M
@UglyFireBreathingKat: Ah, I'm glad to hear your parents are so amenable to reason: some of the scare stories out of places like Bradford, Luton, and Slough can be quite hair-turning.

I'm really glad you are so staunch and secure in your identity now, that's something to deservedly take great pride in, very well done. I can see you'd be under quite a lot of pressure and attack from muslim students in that situation.
Yeah, I've heard horror stories about people's parents taking them out of college, people being threatened with knives by their own siblings, etc etc. And those are just in first world countries.

Yes, there was definitely a long period of difficulty, confusion and insecurity but I'm glad that such confidence followed. With that level of security, it's so much easier to not be swayed by my peers, so there's absolutely no reason to worry about them. 😁 I'm actually rather amused at how scandalised they felt about my atheism when it first went around, but we generally don't focus on it anyway.
firefall · 61-69, M
@UglyFireBreathingKat: Thats really good, I'm gld to hear it