In 1986, I started high school as a year 7 kid. I kept some of my old friends and gained some new ones. One friend I seemed to spend more time with was a Christian girl. I knew her from primary school, but we didn’t have much to do with each other back then. However, we’d been placed in all the same classes together, and out of those people, we had the most in common with each other.
In high school, I grew to really value her friendship. She was a good person, and smart, too. Scripture continued to be taught to us. In the early years, it wasn’t so bad, as the scripture classes were smaller, and the hecklers of the class prevented the teacher from getting any messages out to us. But there came a time when our entire grade was put together into one big scripture class in the school hall. Try heckling that, motherfuckers!
It seemed that the older we grew, the more brutal the ‘hell warnings’ became. By now, I had also started going to a youth group that my Christian friend invited us all to. Since she wasn’t allowed to do a whole lot in a social capacity, we would go to these youth group sessions, so we could do something fun with her. Also, youth group was fun. We’d go bowling, to the movies, to see (Christian) bands, all sorts of stuff. We got along well with most of the other people there, and some of us in the group became romantically interested in some of the males there.
At the end of each session, the youth group leaders would give a sermon. Those of us who weren’t there through the church and rather, were there to socialise, became fidgety and whisper to one another about something more interesting. This was discouraged. It became clear early on, that ‘we have given you these fun things to do, the least you could do is to give us a few minutes of your time and listen to what we have to say’. Oh-kay then…
So, on a Friday night after having some fun, we’d listen to talks about ‘eternal life’, ‘thinking about your future’ (ie, will you go to hell), and horribly, a lot of it sunk in. So I would lie in bed at night and start panicking about death all over again. I made a decision to do the bare minimum required to get away with avoiding hell, just in case it did exist. Not that I was entirely convinced. But there was always that ‘what if’.
Sometimes, we would go to ‘youth alive’ concerts in Sydney, and the trips were organised by youth group. I fucking hated these things, but they were usually on in the school holidays; the point where you were so bored you could blow your brains out. Youth alive concerts meant to me, that I could catch up with all my mates at once (as a group, we didn’t all see each other together often in the holidays), and have something to do.
These were huge concerts. I’m not sure if one was in the entertainment centre, but I do remember one was at the Hordern Pavillion. Just to give you an idea of the magnitude of these things. There were a lot of charismatics there, or ‘happy clappers’ if you want to be politically incorrect. People like the ads on telly I saw as a child, acting as though they were high on drugs, waving their hands around, picking up the ‘frequency’ of ‘god’. For fuck’s sake. I just wanted something to do.
Of course, I knew none of the songs they performed. That was cool. I just danced to some of it, anyway. I remember one time, I was sitting next to a man in our group, and he was standing up with both hands in the air. What he was doing I do not know. Trippin’ out, maybe? There ended up being a row of ‘em from our group, all standing up, hands in the air, hands clasped together. I was hunched down, trying to blend in with the chair. Moments like these made me feel so uncomfortable. Why did they have to carry on like this??
But it got even better. Oh, yes. He decided to tell me to stand up. Being the polite person I was, I did. He grabbed my hand high into the air. I let him, and looked down to the ground, my other hand over my forehead. Then, he looked at my friend next to me (who, like me, was here for the ‘something to do’ factor and didn’t want a bar of the religious element) and motioned to me to grab her hand. I had been internally pleading that he wouldn’t do this to me. Christians who go out of their way to make a non Christian feel uncomfortable to make a point, shit me to tears. Not all Christians are like this. To those who are not, thank you. I tried to get my friend’s attention. The music was so loud, I couldn’t say to her, ‘sorry, but he’s making me grab your hand’. So uncool. Us mates never held hands.
She didn’t look (clever thing) so I grabbed it and thought, ‘fuck!’ She looked at me like, ‘what the fuck?’ My Christian friend on the other side of this friend would later recount this story in tears of laughter at how miserable I looked, and how our other friend’s hand just flew up into the air all of a sudden. My friend that was smarter and possibly more ballsy than I, pulled her hand down, and for the rest of the song I was standing there, with one arm attached sky high to the other people tuning into ‘god’ through the air. Or whatever. I’m sure I looked as miserable and humiliated as a wet cat.
I remember another time at one of these ‘youth alive’ concerts, another friend of mine (atheist or agnostic, but decidely not interested in this) and I had been rolling our eyes for the duration of this concert far too long. The Christians in the entire stadium were now worked up to fever pitch. There was a guy on the microphone talking in his compassionate, ‘ask Jesus into your heart’ voice, and there was uplifting, slow music playing in the background. My mate and I knew what was comin’ and we weren’t sticking around for it. Shit was about to get full on.
We both decided to head outside for some fresh air and some peace and quiet. You know things are dire when a pair of teens start seeking that. Before we made it to our aisle, the man on the mike said, ‘and anyone who wants to ask Jesus into their hearts, I want you to come down here, right up the front, to the front of the stage, to show that you’re ready to give yourselves to Jesus!’ In horror, my mate and I gave each other the look: ‘fark!‘ and we bolted down the aisle.
No one else had gone down the front yet to give themselves to Jesus. So the man on the mike was extremely excited to see us run down the aisle. ‘Look! We have our first people coming down to the front!’ This was a nightmare. Everybody cheered us, and a blinding spotlight was shone upon us. Now, I know I said I was a polite kid, but it had dawned on me by now what a liability my people-pleasing was becoming. My mate and I both agreed to just piss off out the door. Still, no one had walked up to the front of the stage. Awkward.
Anyway, not our problem. Besides, when we poked our heads in later, there were loads of people crowded around the stage. I think by the time I had these two high-pressure incidents, I just stopped going to Youth Alive concerts anymore. I’d rather sit at home with nothing to do.
I also got myself a boyfriend at Youth Group. I was 16, he was 21. I could only manage this relationship for two weeks, one, because he started talking to me about ‘asking Jesus into my heart’ and wanting me to take Mike Warnky tapes home to listen to (yeah, I can see my parents being thrilled with that) two, because he actually wanted to meet my parents. His reasoning was that once my parents learned of his new found love for Jesus Christ, that would put their minds at ease. Oh really. You just have no idea buddy.
I remember when he first started asking me about where I stood on Christianity and I said, ‘yeah, I want to, but I don’t really know how’. Which was a blatant lie. I didn’t want to start an arguement and I was still going through my, ‘what if hell is real?’ thing. You don’t get a Christian’s hopes up like that. I can see where I made my mistake. The situation made me realise though, that I was of two minds about the whole thing. I didn’t want a nasty afterlife, but I also didn’t see why I had to live a life I didn’t believe in now, particularly since it clearly was going to involve acting ‘high’ when I wasn’t and making a fool of myself.
A few months after I left school, I decided it was time to make a choice one way or the other. Was it gonna be my way or the avoiding hell way? I wasn’t going to these events so much now that I was old enough to go to pubs, and was only putting in an appearance once every few months so I could spend some time with my Christian friend. There were a few friends I’d made there that I was happy to see (including what would be my future sister in law) but the rest of them? I really had nothing in common with them anymore, and wasn’t particularly invested in spending time with them. Some were highly alert to the fact that my friends and I weren’t ever going to take on their religion. I’d see their eyes widen and their hackles go up as we approached.
I think by the time I left school, my Christian friend was asked to pass on the message that we were too old to go to youth group. This was as we neared closer to the age of 18. Then we were invited to ‘young adults’ functions, which my mates and I only did once or twice, because many of the Christians would sit in one group and we’d sit in the other. Of course, my future sister in law was always brilliant towards us.
I ended up deciding to discard ‘god’. I wanted to live my life as a good person, and to do certain things that ‘god’ deemed a ‘sin’, that I didn’t. Premarital sex, drinking, blaspheming. It’s very hard when you’ve been raised in a home that feeds you on a healthy diet of Jesus Christ, God etc as curse words. I didn’t see the point of giving that up. With enough time and space away from any sermons, I began to realise that no, I don’t believe in the Christian god, or in heaven or hell. Once again, being a good person, making mistakes along the way, was more than enough for me.
I miss my Christian friend. In high school, she’d invite us to youth group, youth alive, and later, young adults. She’d bring me these god magazines to take home, and made me promise to ask her if I had any questions. I always took them politely and read them from cover to cover. All I felt when I read them was deeply sad. There were teens writing in, torn up because they were masturbating or gay, and being chastised for it. That if they didn’t want to burn in the eternal fires of hell, they’d need to pray and put a stop to the ‘behaviour’ they were engaging in.
I kept an open mind the whole time through high school with that friend. She wasn’t my best friend, but she was right up there. She was one of my best friends. I spent many years learning her way of life, and seriously considering it. Then I chose my way. I chose happiness. My Christian friend and I made small attempts, efforts at catching up. It became clear very quickly that she didn’t want a bar of the real me. She didn’t approve, and she couldn’t save me. I still respected her beliefs, but the time came where she could deliver no more god mags to me, there were no more events I would go to. I’d had enough. And in time, she had enough of my ‘lifestyle’. My partying, my premarital sex, my drinking. In all fairness, there were many times I could be self destructive, but when she gave up on me in the end, I wasn’t told it’d happened and I didn’t know why.
It wasn’t an official thing, either. She wasn’t there one minute, gone the next. She drifted away slowly until I realised that too much time had passed and she was no longer there. I was gutted. I rejected ‘god’ and lost a friend. A good one, I thought.
Other Reading:
Religion
A Small Child, Free From Religion
You’re Not Listening to That God Bull
The Day I Found Out I Was a Freak
The Scriptures Begin For Me: Let the Mind Fuck Begin
Adult Spirituality – No Longer an Atheist
No Easter Bunny, No Santa, No Tooth Fairy
No Scripture For My Kids