Have you religious views changed as you have aged?

See?

Do you tell that to all your trans friends?
Lol. I just know the language that hurts Glam. I'm old enough to have learned it and used it when I was young and stupid. I've changed my ways about you and your friends over the decades.

But stupid fucking MAGAtards have never changed their ways. So I am sure you are used to it, if that is the company you keep.
 
Lol. I just know the language that hurts Glam. I'm old enough to have learned it and used it when I was young and stupid. I've changed my ways about you and your friends over the decades.

But stupid fucking MAGAtards have never changed their ways. So I am sure you are used to it, if that is the company you keep.

You sound like the mom from carrie.
 
My family was irreligious, not church-going, but not antagonistic toward religion either.
I attended a Catholic school but my family wasn't Catholic even by heritage, and I didn't become Catholic by attending.
I became very interested in religion at around 11 and remained so until about age 26, but it was mostly that I read about different religions a lot.
These days my interest in religion and questions of religion is very minimal. I used to debate and discuss religion somewhat passionately, and now I barely consider it.
 
I had a generally positive and mixed journey into adulthood, including Christianity. I read a lot of Frank Peretti's young-adult series (among others) and found them entertaining. I can remember the plot for a lot of them even years later and still consider him intelligent even if we have different religious views. At some point, I became more critical of religion itself and started realizing there were people in my life who weren't playing with a full deck. A lot of those formative books, people, churches and websites aren't around in the same way anymore. I still believe the way a person learns can change even if they're generally the same person. Not everyone has the benefit of a fluid developmental "timeline" they can reference; I consider myself more of a behaviorist in that sense. If you said that Christian sci-fi written at a grade-school reading level might have saved someone's life later on, people might look at you like you're crazy. But is that really?
 
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