Sunday Takes a Mallet to My Head

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A guest post from Ashley

On Sunday morning Georgie, my 5 year-old daughter, noticed me wearing a dress at the breakfast table.  “Are you going to church?” she asked me.  “Yes,” I told her.  I had been asked to substitute for the Primary pianist.    She wanted to come with me and ran to her room to pick out her fanciest dress. We didn’t go to Sacrament Meeting, even though I was dressed in time. Instead we read a book together on the living room couch.  When the time came for the second hour we pulled ourselves away and walked hand-in-hand on our ten-minute path to be there in time for Primary.  It was a perfectly cool spring morning, green with sunlight, and Georgie talked my ear off about school, Jesus (her recent obsession) and her beloved kindergarten teacher.  I savor these one-on-one moments with my children.  I knew that I was  running behind  so I did my best to urge her on despite hanging on every one of her perfect little 5 year old words.

When we arrived, the chorister was standing behind the piano, trying to conduct and play the opening song at the same time. I was late. And oh, how I regretted my tardiness. Here I was, the previous Young Women’s President, now less-active sister, showing up after sacrament meeting, with only one of her three children in tow, late for her teeny, tiny, substitute responsibility. (And if they could see that I was wearing a sleeveless dress underneath my sweater…gasp!) I felt as if everyone was sizing me up, judging me, whispering. Usually a very confident person, I avoided their eyes, smiled at their foreheads, and slunk behind the piano. Georgie clung to me. The chorister introduced two visitors and announced that we would be singing a welcome song. I didn’t hear her, as my thoughts were too focused on my failure.  “Sister,” she said sweetly, “we’re singing a Welcome Song.”

“Oh, gosh!  I’m sorry!”  I found the page and began to play. I engaged in some positive self-talk in my mind and managed to regain some composure. The rest of the hour passed without any difficulty, but for the remainder of church I felt  acutely aware of my status there: Community Loser.

With every passing  week  over  the last  three years, my insides have  groaned louder and louder as Sunday approached. I would be  having a pretty great week, feeling good about who I am, and then BAM! like a gopher from an arcade game, Sunday takes a mallet to my head. As soon as I pass through those heavy, glass doors the words “You don’t belong here” seem to chip at my shoulder. Chip, chip, chip.  “If they really knew me, what I believe, what I don’t believe, what would they think? What would they say?”  Sunday’s church attendance triggers my regression back into a sniveling, insecure, emotional teenager. And  I am a 31 year-old fully grown mother of three who, on weekdays, happens to really like herself!

The thing is, I know where I am and I am at peace here.  I am on a journey that feels valid to me, and, contrary to the beliefs of  my more orthodox Mormon brothers and sisters, I don’t think my journey has an end.  I will be ever searching, considering, praying, seeing, and learning until life, as I know it, is over (and, hopefully, beyond that). When I  go to church on Sunday it seems as if I am expected  to feel  as if  I have arrived.  And I resent that.

I remember when my Mormon life was fulfilling,  when I believed in it and made all of my decisions according to its tenets.  And more importantly,  I remember when it believed in me.  Is it this memory that drags me back, reluctantly, almost every Sunday?  What is this place that used to give my life meaning and direction but now seems to offer nothing but a social life and a good dose of “We think you suck”  every week?  Why is it still here and what do I do with it?