Sean and I Had the Perfect Mormon
Family Life.
Then his faith started to crumble -- and mine did, too
Jun 1, 2012
The Mormon Gates are wide open for harvest
A photo of the author with her husband
“I don’t believe in God,” my
husband whispered in the darkness of our bedroom.
My breath caught, and I was afraid
to look at him, this boy I met and married eight years ago.
I was only 19 on the day we were
sealed for eternity, the wet snow blowing into our faces as we exited the
I wondered what my pioneer
ancestors would say if they could hear me, these grandparents so faithful that
they abandoned their East coast relatives for a life here in this
But in the weeks that followed,
there was a distance between us. We stepped lightly around conversation, kept
talk to the kids, work and the mundane. Our friendly touches in the kitchen
disappeared. My acceptance shifted to bitterness and anger.
I spent my morning runs worrying
about what was being said around my Mormon neighborhood. We lived 20 minutes
south of BYU’s desert campus, and most of my running partners had husbands high
up in the Church hierarchy. I waited anxiously for them to mention my heathen
family, wondered if they’d heard that my eternity with my husband was now in
jeopardy, that in the hereafter I’d likely be pawned off to some other
righteous man as a plural wife — probably my ex-boyfriend; hopefully not
Brigham Young. And all the while I couldn’t stop thinking. Why, Sean? I
didn’t sign up for this. You promised me we’d spend eternity together, and now
you might as well be gone.
That sinister word flickered around
in my head: divorce. It manifested itself onto my notebook paper as I scribbled
out my daily morning pages. I didn’t want it, but sometimes I thought both of
us would be happier if we said good-bye.
Sean and I spent our time in the
usual way, taking long summer walks along Hobble Creek. While our two eldest
sons raced ahead on their bicycles, we followed with the baby (okay, the
two-year-old) in the stroller. Sean obsessed about death. “I’m so terrified of
losing you and the boys,” he said one day after waving hello to our
neighborhood women’s leader. He looked over at me and said, “I couldn’t bear
it.”
Confused sadness flickered in my
eyes. His fears were utterly foreign to me. We’d both been taught from an early
age that death was simply the gateway back to God. How could he not see — as I
did — that this was true? I know we’ll be together again, I wanted to
say. Instead I said gently, “I hope for your sake that you die first.
Then you won’t have to deal with the grief of losing us.”
Sean was as supportive as an atheist
could be. He even went with me for the first hour of church to help with the
Squirmy Ones. But when he’d leave early, I’d cry in the bathroom, feeling
completely alone. I never said that word aloud: Atheist. My heart clenched just
thinking it.
We rarely talked about religion,
yet it consumed us. When Sean replaced his temple garments — the sacred
underwear he’d promised to wear day and night — with boxers, I couldn’t take it
anymore. It was too much betrayal. I called up a neighbor with a husband like mine
and cried. But instead of empathy, she offered questions that stunned me into
silence. Was Sean addicted to pornography? Watching R-rated movies? What sin
had brought him to this terrible place?
My tears stopped. Her questions
were so off-base that they seemed absurd. She was sincere, and trying to help,
but she believed what the Church teaches — that a man would only leave because
he’s disobeying the commandments. She couldn’t understand this was a rational
inquiry. She saw everything as the result of sin.
This started my brain twitching. I
knew Sean was still a good person, that he still maintained the same moral
standards he had when he married me. The Church was wrong about him. What else
might they be wrong about? I shoved the thought away.
But I wanted to understand him.
This was Sean, the man who stood by me during years of clinical
depression. The man who pretended to be a dinosaur while he
chased our shrieking sons around the room. He wasn’t some heathen. I
couldn’t believe that. I wouldn’t believe it. He’d always been a skeptic, and
even though I didn’t agree with him, I knew intellectually that he’d never make
this decision without careful consideration of the facts.
As summer shifted to fall, I often
found him hunched over his iPad reading everything he
could find on Mormon origins. I started to join him in his nightly bath, and
the information would seep out. He’d pause from our usual safe topics and bite
his lip. “I’m sorry, but I just have to tell you. Did you know that …” and then
he’d tell me what he’d been reading. About how Joseph Smith
mistranslated some Egyptian hieroglyphics that are part of our canonized
scripture. About how he translated the Book of Mormon while looking at a
stone inside of a hat.
I listened half-heartedly,
questioned his sources, though I wasn’t about to go looking at them myself. Our
prophets had made it clear that anything written outside church documents was
suspect and anti-Mormon, fabricated for the sole purpose of destroying faith.
Yet Sean continued, until one night it was about polygamy, my archnemesis.
“Did you know that Joseph Smith
married a 14-year-old girl against her will? Did you know that he’d send men on
missions and marry their wives in secret when they were gone?” I sat there
silent as he kept talking, a horror growing in my gut. I knew that if Sean was
right, then Joseph Smith was a fraud. I saw no difference between his acts and
the modern-day acts of Warren Jeffs, whom I abhorred.
And if Joseph Smith was a fraud — then what did that make the Church?
I left the bath early and went
straight to bed, feeling a magmic pressure building
inside me. The scholar in me couldn’t let it go. I had to know.
I already did know.
When I finally broke down a few
weeks later, Sean was the one to hold me as I wept into my pillow and traipsed
down the familiar road to despair, wondering what my life even meant if the
Church wasn’t true.
“It’s OK, Maren.
It’s OK. I’m here,” he said as he stroked my hair, whispering into the
darkness. What felt like an end, though, slowly opened up into something else.
Over the next few days our usual
mile walk turned to four as my brain tornadoed
through discovery, my conversations stopping mid-sentence with “Whoa, then that
means …” Whoa, we suddenly have 10 percent more income. Whoa, our weekend free
time just doubled. Whoa, we can try alcohol, coffee and tea — the trifecta of forbidden drinks.
The sad whoas
came, too. Whoa, will my father ever talk to me again? Whoa, what will my
friends say? Whoa, we are going to die.
My transformation consumed me for
the next month, and we stayed up late talking every night. When I shed my
garments for slippery Victoria Secret panties, my self-esteem skyrocketed, and
our late nights shifted to other things. We were finally adults, taking our
firsts together, learning about each other without barriers.
Ironically, the Mormon Church
teaches that marriage can only thrive if God is an equal part of it. But when
we left God out of it, we were free to love each other completely, to share the
burden of our grief as two individuals with no one else.
It’s been seven months now, and I
don’t know what the future holds. I have never been more uncertain in my entire
life. But one thing is clear to me. Whatever happens, wherever we go, Sean will
be at my side, holding my hand as we face it together — and alone — for the
first time.