08 December, 2014

The Agnostic Struggle with Religion

I don't believe in God, and I'm not sure I ever really did. When I was younger I would pray. My prayers were for silly things like, "Hey God, if you're real can you help me find this thing I'm looking for?"

I never took religion seriously, and neither did my parents. I knew they had both grown up religious. My mom and aunt attended Catholic school, and the only stories I remember hearing were about the terrible things the nuns said and did (like telling my 7 year old aunt that she was going to hell). But we never really discussed religion and or talked about God.

When I started making friends, I noticed many of them would go to church. This seemed like a fun thing to do, and I wondered why we never went. I asked my mom about church and God, and her response was one of encouragement. She wanted me to discover my own religious identity. She told me to go to church with my friends, and gave me a bible to look through. I did end up going to church several times, both Catholic and various Christian denominations, but mostly I was just... bored.

Once I knew what "atheist" meant I decided I was one of those. I couldn't ever quite grasp the concept of God; some strange dude sitting in the sky controlling, and listening to, everyone and everything. The older I got, the more passionate I became with my atheism. Religion seemed horrifying to me. How can people believe these stories? How can they deny scientific evidence? I saw the negatives - the hatred and the wars. I couldn't get behind something that has killed so many people over such a long period of time.

I did try, very briefly, in high school to become Wiccan. This was short lived. I never really believed in spells and all of that. It was just fun, and I liked the idea of worshiping the earth. And perhaps a little part of calling myself Wiccan was for shock value. I was a goth-child after all. 

Long after high school (and college part 1), I started dabbling in some sort of spirituality. My aunt was interested Buddhism, so I decided to look into it. I loved everything I read. It seemed more of a way to deal with depression rather than a religion. However, the reading was dry, and I never fully committed myself to it. I decided to downgrade my atheist title to agnostic. I wanted to be more spiritual, and being spiritual did not mean I needed to believe in a Christian God.

About two years ago now I started college part 3. My university is a Catholic one, and this scared me a bit. It was required of me to take 2, TWO, religion classes. This seemed pretty terrible. I had this image of a nun, habit and all, standing at the front of the class with a ruler yelling at me for being a horrible, sinner, non-believer. I imagined the battles I would get in to with all the other religious people in my class. I dreaded my religion classes.

As a way to avoid any potentially heated Catholic/Agnostic debates, I tried to take the most liberal sounding religion classes. Someone in one of my psychology classes had recommended taking Death and Dying - as it is helpful for people learning the therapist/social worker trade - so I decided to take it.

As the time to start drew closer I found myself getting excited. I felt ready to learn. My mind started opening to the idea of it because of all the psychology and social work classes I had taken. Religion plays such a great role in many peoples lives, and can be a great coping mechanism. I decided in order for me to be a good therapist/social worker, I needed to learn all I could about religion so I can effectively help people with a variety of religious backgrounds.

Unfortunately, my teacher in Death and Dying was pretty awful. The class was 100% online, and she was not an active teacher. I'm almost positive she set up the course and never looked at it again. We were required to read passages in the Old Testament and then talk about them in a journal. I found this extremely difficult because I was not familiar with the language nor the stories. I would reach out to her to clarify things (many of my journal entries started with, "I did not understand the passage but..."), but she never answered. This was very frustrating because I really wanted to learn something.

My second religion class was absolutely amazing. It was called "Faith, Religion, Theology" which made me nervous at first. I figured this would be the aforementioned nun scenario for sure. But on the first day, I walked into a class with this wonderful older gentlemen who exuded an almost ex-hippie-like demeanor. He was not preachy, in fact we never cracked open a bible. The book we read was called The Power of Myth which is a transcript of a PBS special Joseph Campbell did with Bill Moyers. It covers all religions, how they started, and even likens the various stories between them. The book is cheap, and I highly recommend reading it - religious and non-religious people alike!

I had (have) nothing but admiration for my teacher. He is brilliant, and well traveled. He never told us exactly what he believed, but he did such a fantastic job explaining all the different religions to us. Any question we had, he knew the answer and had a story to share. This is what I was looking for in a religion class.

So last spring, I needed to pick my final classes. After finding my required classes, I had one elective left. I scanned the schedule for interesting classes (read: easy classes). I needed something that wouldn't be too much work, but would still hold my interest. The pickings were slim, but I was happy to find World Religions on the list (with the very same teacher as Faith, Religion, Theology). Now, had this been 10 years ago, I would have cringed at the idea of taking a religion class, never mind an extra religion class. But this is what I picked. And this is the class I'm currently in, and it is fascinating!

I've learned a great deal in just 8 weeks. We studied: Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and two small units on Daoism and Confucianism. Many of the religions just flow together. Judaism lead to Christianity, Christianity lead to Islam (believe it or not!), and Hinduism lead to Buddhism. Hinduism is insanely confusing, but interesting. Islam is actually a lot like Judaism and Christianity (it's the extremists that give it a bad name much like any other religion).  Buddhism has a billion different sects, does not believe in a God, and pulls a bit from Daoism and Confucianism depending on the region. And, unfortunately, not one of them put women in high regard (even though women play a large role in most of them) - not even my beloved Buddhism.

As you can gather from my opening line, I have not necessarily been swayed, even with all my newly acquired knowledge. However, my thirst for learning religion grows. Instead of looking at religion in a negative way, I'm seeing it in a much more positive light. I see the good it does for so many people. The hatred and the wars are a horrible and unfortunate side effect, but I can finally see and understand why people believe the things they believe. I've even become envious of those who do. I would love to believe, but I can't. It's just not written in my DNA. All I can do is learn, and that is more than enough for me. The fact I'm even wanting to learn is a feat in and of itself.

Another "side effect" of all this knowledge is I've found myself getting angry with Atheists. I've always mostly sided with them, as my beliefs are closer to theirs than they are to religious individuals. However, I've seen atheists be downright mean to people. They berate religious people for believing in what they believe. I can understand this to a point, particularly when a religious person is being pushy, hateful, or ignorant. But in most other scenarios I think it's counterproductive, and frankly hypocritical, for an atheist to make people feel bad for believing what they believe. Yes, some of the stories are completely ridiculous, but if believing those stories isn't hurting anyone then what's the harm? There's no reason to make anyone, regardless of religion, feel bad for believing, and there is also no reason for anyone to push their own personal views on anyone else.

So through all this spiritual discovery, I've created my own ideas. "God" (to me) is the universe... which I suppose makes science my Jesus. I do not believe there is some physical being who decides my fate and the fate of the world. The universe creates us, it kills us, and while some sort of afterlife sounds lovely, I don't believe there is anything after we die. Our energy leaves our body and becomes part of the universe again. I do sometimes "pray" which means I try to send out messages of positivity in hopes good things will happen, but I'm not positive there is any point to doing so other than making myself feel better.

We all want to know why we're here. We want to think we are here for a reason, that our lives have a purpose. Death is terrifying, and we struggle to find a meaning for it, and what lies beyond. Is the Christian God the actual God? Is Islam the right religion? Or is there really nothing and Atheists are the ones on the right track? The fact of the matter is we will never know who is right and who is wrong. There will never be anything definitive telling us what to believe.

If this is the only chance we get, if there is no God and no afterlife, then what we do now is of the utmost importance. Do what makes you happy, but not at the expense of others. Believe in whatever you want to believe in, but never judge another for what they believe. Promote peace and love, and work to extinguish hate. All these things, more so than religion, are the most important practice.

“When you find yourself in one of those mystical/devotional frames of mind or in an emergency and you feel you want to pray, then pray. Don’t ever be ashamed to pray or feel prevented by thinking yourself unworthy in any way. Fact is whatever terrible thing you may have done, praying will always turn your energy around for the better.
Pray to whomever, whatever, and whenever you choose. Pray to the mountain, pray to the ancestors, pray to the Earth, pray to the Tao (but it won’t listen!), pray to the Great Mother, pray to Jehovah, Allah, Buddha, Jesus, Lakshmi, Siva, pray to the Great Spirit, it makes no difference. Praying is merely a device for realigning the mind, energy, and passion of your local self with the mind, energy and passion of your universal self. When you pray, you are praying to the god or goddess within you. This has an effect on your energy field, which in turn translates into a positive charge that makes something good happen.”


― Stephen Russell, Barefoot Doctor's Guide to the Tao: A Spiritual Handbook for the Urban Warrior

23 April, 2014

Diagnosis Unknown

On December 31st I came down with the flu. Fantastic timing really, being the first year I had actually found a New Years Eve party to go to that wasn't at my home. It was only natural my body would decide then was the best time to be the sickest I have ever been as an adult. So, needless to say, I was pretty stoked when my fever quickly climbed from 99 to 102.

I had hoped a nap would make me feel slightly better so I could join my friends and boyfriend at the other party, but no, it became pretty clear to me that would not be an option. Luckily, I have the best friends, family, and boyfriend anyone could ask for...They moved the party to my house so I could be a part of their celebration even if I couldn't leave my room.

On January 2nd I broke down and went to the doctor. I had yet to receive my new (awesome) health insurance card, so I had hoped I could beat this without an office visit. They made me wear a mask, and was diagnosed with the flu. Many prescriptions were written and I was sent on my way.

That evening I was sitting in my living room when I noticed a flashing light in my right eye. "Great," I thought, "Now I'm getting a migraine." I already had a fever, so might as well have a migraine too! I braced myself for the inevitable onset of pain, but it never came. In fact, when I woke up in the morning the next day the light was still there. I called my mom for about the millionth time since I came down with the flu (because seriously, all you want is your mom to take care of you when you're sick, even when you're an adult) to complain about the light. She suggested that maybe it was the medication I was taking and that it would hopefully go away in the next few days. I thought that sounded about right, and patiently waited for the light to go away.

But it didn't. So after my insurance card came (about February-ish) I decided since I have awesome health insurance that I should maybe see a doctor. My first visit was to a new eye doctor (who is great, by the way). He put those crazy dilating drops in my eyes and looked inside.

Which I thought was HILARIOUS.
He told me I had stretchmarks in the back of my right eye, lattice dystrophy, and a vitreoretinal tuft. He told me not to do things where I could hit my head (specifically, no boxing), and that the flashing light should go away in a month. I scheduled an appointment for a month and waited.

Well, it didn't go away. So when I went back to the eye doctor he gave me two potential diagnoses: the first would be an atypical migraine, and the second "way down at the bottom of the symptoms list" would be MS. My heart dropped a little when he said the latter. He said "not to worry," but he was ordering an MRI just to rule it out.

So my next step was the MRI. I met with my primary care doctor (who seemed less than pleased at the possible MS diagnosis) so she could help get the MRI process going. She also scheduled my an appointment with a neurologist (so many doctors).

While I waited for the MRI to be approved by my insurance, I completed (and aced) a visual field test at my eye doctor and was told that it "definitely wasn't an eye thing, and was probably a brain thing."

I had the MRI (was not thrilled about it), and got the results a few days later. The newest diagnosis was a slight chiari malformation (aka a saggy brain as I liked to call it), but NOT MS. So I went to the neurologist who assured me the chiari malformation is SO minimal I would never show any symptoms, and the light was definitely not caused by it. BUT he found something else behind my right eye - possibly a benign tumor (fantastic!). So he ordered another MRI (ALSO FANTASTIC!) to investigate.

So I had the second MRI (And got this cool picture of my brain that refuses to post here for some reason). Oh, yeah, I also got every blood test known to mankind done. And the results? Normal. Everything normal; blood and MRI (with the exception of a slight vitamin D deficiency). I have an asymmetrical something-bone in my skull which they believed was the mass the neurologist found behind my eye.

I am relieved and confused. Because while everything has come back fine and normal, I still have this light, flashing away, in my right eye. Luckily, it doesn't really bother me. I barely notice it if I'm using both my eyes. I started this whole process just to have an answer as to why it would be happening, and here I am months later not being any closer to an answer. Although, on the positive side, I do know I'm tumor and MS free!

I had planned to post this entry since I've kept this whole process on the down-low, but my plan was to post it after they had found out what the problem was. Now that I'm thinking I wont really get an answer, I figured now was as good a time as any to write this. I have a few more things to wait for, as my neurologist seems pretty determined to help get me an answer, but I'm not real confident I will get anything definitive at the point. I'm frustrated and grateful all at the same time, but we shall see what the future holds!