P
PaulDupre1
Guest
I well remember some of the women in the wards I was in. They had these plastered-on smiles that looked so desperate. Their husbands were often abusive or just plain crazy, but the women and children couldn’t let on. In order to be considered faithful they had to pretend that everything was hunky-dory, hence the desperate plastered on smiles.Isn’t that sad they are only happy if everyone stays Mormon. I heard that Utah has the highest rate of depression too. It is hard to live up to an image.
I knew of several families in which the father was terribly abusive and even sexually assaulted the daughters and beat the wife. But the hierarchy covered it up and pretended that all is well in Zion.
I was 2nd counselor in the bishopric when I tried to get the bishop to take action against a father whose family I home-taught. It was obvious that the father was beating his wife and sexually abusing his 3 daughters (one of the daughters confided this to me in another setting). But this “brother” was a very successful business owner and one of the big tithe-payers in the ward. So nothing was done. My bishop told me that if I pursued this inquiry he would see me disciplined.
No wonder LDS woman are so depressed. Depression is anger turned inward. Where else can an LDS woman turn her anger but inward on herself?
God help them.
Paul (formerly LDS, now happily Catholic)