Goat wrote:
Well, pro-Israel Jew -> pro-Israel Atheist -> anti-Israel Atheist -> anti-Israel Commie Atheist -> Muslim is quite a few hops.
I don't wager that 'pro' or 'anti-Israel' is really a large shift in ones philosophical spectrum because it's not something one spends a lot of time thinking about and it's not something that really -changes- one's overall worldview; on another note I had essentially been an atheist since the age of eleven or whereabouts, so I don't think you can really include that in those hops. Philosophies you hold prior to fourteen are never important, and even the ones after fourteen are often unimportant.
Goat wrote:
You remind me of a typical movie Atheist -> lost his/her belief in the divine through personal tragedy and regains it after something extremely tenuous happens.
There were no tragedies. Similarly, while it may be tenuous to
you I can assure you most definitely that it is in no way tenuous to me.
Goat wrote:
I suppose what I'm asking is, have you actually thought about this, or are you just doing what your emotions tell you? My emotions told me to jump off a bridge once, and as much as I love Stefano King, basing my life's philosophy around something he said which is bullshit a good amount of the time is not what a sensible person should do.
I will be blunt: my emotions are dissimilar to yours. I have never been very expressive and my moods have always been very consistent; the one time I struggled with depression it was largely over within months. Ever since then I've been stalwart and rock-steady in those terms; had no overly depressive thoughts or incredible mood-swings. My reversion has been genuine and I believe my experience was genuine as well, and given that I used to view people who claimed to have religious experiences with the same eyeglasses as I used to view people who claimed to have been abducted by aliens, my own experience was quite frankly very mind-blowing.
So while I understand your skepticism, in no way is your own experience very applicable to my own. I hope at the same time that you find the faith that is waiting for you one day, and that your inner voice guides you to the truth as mine has.
Goat wrote:
Ouch. It'll come as a massive shock, assuming they're like every other Jews I know. I predict shiva being sat, bluntly.
I'm trying to ease them into it by first hinting that I do believe in God and then saying that I'm looking into all the Abrahamic religions, which is unfortunately a falsehood, but I have to tell them eventually.
They're not Orthodox, so I don't anticipate Shiva. I expect a lot of arguments with my stepfather, though, and will do what I can to alleviate them.