Rumor has it...
Reply #4 - February 20, 2014, 11:34 PM
I don't know how to define "OK" right now, my problems have just begun with custody and trying to be a supportive mother to my child. But at least I feel free and I don't have to feel shackled and suffocated. But it does feels uncomfortable that people are trying to "talk sense" to me. It's been everything from "you studied the deen, you are so privileged, how can you through away the truth" to "parents and partners leave us, but allah will never" and "I know that Islam can feel burdensome, but the problem is not Islam!". One of the more offensive was "I don't know what kind of problems you've had, but... ". It's as if I couldn't have left Islam because of intellectual reasons, the fault being with Islam. It's like, what do you want from me? Some of them I haven't had contact with for over a year. Those who I was more close to have been completely silent.
Personally, I truly believe that anytime a Muslim, especially those who have been viewed as "devout" with "yaqeen", leaves the religion, it makes people even more zealous and at the same time it makes them uncomfortable and insecure. Last time I heard about a woman leaving Islam, my friend dismissed it as "she doesn't know Islam, wallahi, we have studied the deen she has misunderstood everything". I wonder now, what they are talking about, how they are reasoning what made me leave. From what I've read in the e-mails it seems that people believe I left Islam because it was "hard" or because I had problems with my husband. They don't understand that I left my ex because I wasn't a Muslim anymore, not the other way around.
What I would want the most is that people just stopped talking about me and forgot I ever existed, they don't have to talk about me like I know they've done with other apostates before. I am happy that I am truly free now, and I feel both pity and contempt for the "sisters".
"The healthiest people I know are those who are the first to label themselves fucked up." - three