How did it feel growing up with strict, religious parents?
[2023-12-10 07:13:45]
It's a little blank but it's very bad. You are ashamed, basically because you are hopelessly sick and tired of making personal decisions especially in your life and through your adulthood. They think it is a decision of sin, they laugh, they corrupt you and let you be embarrassed. Especially women. Swear, infidelity, lying, if you masturbate, you say that. "It is a boy to bring her to the devil". Religious parents need to respect their religion to allow free will. Although Christians may not tolerate certain actions at home. Children should not be ashamed of their choice. Especially in adult life
When you grow with a Muslim parent (as a girl, I am by the way), you basically avoid thinking about yourself. You should follow the road. When your parents doubt that you left the road, you will see pictures and videos about what will happen if you get off the road.
True story: When I was ten years old, I did not listen to my parents well. One day I was in his room, I basically ignored them, and my parents said they wanted to see a movie with me. (This has never happened to b 4 in my life.) So I am very excited
I am sitting near the TV, but when I talk about what I saw, I think my parents are inhumane, but I have texts in Arabic. It was tremblingly controlled and finally stopped and then showed the scene with the same person, but he came out of his nose and mouth completely green, purple blood, his black crow got his skin Choose, gaze at the eyes and grab a fucking screen. Today I am 18 years old, I still remember that picture, I swear to God, my parents truly think the shit will be straight, but the reverse is true. When you grow with religious parents, I swear to God that their main strategy is fear and disappointment. I hope I gave up on my parents, and I am very calm.
It is an interesting question. Personally, I have not grown with strict religious parents. Religion but not strict. However, I have experienced dealing with the problem raised in the south. Children in a fundamentalist context deal with problems in the community as a whole, not as a parent. If only parents are fundamentalists, that is the same, but it is not the case.
Therefore, you have a typical family education child, and there are strict rules from childhood. I do not really know who is different. The world will go to hell, you can go there, you do not follow the rules. This creates religion based on fear. As you can imagine, when a child grows up and leaves the house, they naturally "retreat" and commit "sin". From there, they can continue to live outside "beliefs" or return to participate in regional religion.
It should grow in a different way in a "strict" religious setting or be considered to be the same as abuse and control. There are similarities
In the process of growth, my family did not have a solemn belief. My grandmother was a religious woman in the ceremony and her faith was always contradicted to my father. My father is an opportunist religious person and his actions promote faith at an uncertain moment. My mother is more philosophical, confusing karma and religion, and her advice emphasizes the need for good karma in her actions. I spent 12 years at the Christian school, but I did not mention Christians much to the university. By believing in Christ, a group of students will find people at the weakest moment and plant the power. Students who are not accustomed to English educational media or mixed environments are threatened by kidnapped girls and noisy boys. Jesus will help these women get stronger, give them better results, and will give them the spiritual toughness needed to deal with other parts of the world.
It is an interesting question. Personally, I have not grown with strict religious parents. Religion but not strict. However, I have experienced dealing with the problem raised in the south. Children in a fundamentalist context deal with problems in the community as a whole, not as a parent. If only parents are fundam