Recovering from religious trauma in the name of recovery.
I swapped pills for pews.
Needles for kneeling.
Shame for scripture.
At first, it looked like salvation.
Safe. Structured.
Accountable.
Uplifting.
A program. A plan. A promise.
Finally—a place to belong.
But soon, the prayers
sounded a lot like pressure.
The sermons
started to sting.
And the community
felt more like a cage
than a circle.
I traded one system of control
for another.
Different language.
Same leash.
I wasn’t free.
I was performing.
For a different kind of fix.
I wore the dresses.
Smiled through the studies.
Confessed my sins
before I’d even figured out
what I believed.
They clapped louder
when I cried.
Called my pain a “testimony.”
Called my silence “obedience.”
Called my fear “conviction.”
I was clean—but still codependent.
Still starving for approval.
Still afraid of being wrong, bad, loud, difficult, defiant, angry, me.
And just like before,
I was told:
“Deny yourself.”
“Crucify the flesh.”
“Be less. Be good. Be still.”
But healing didn’t come
when I got smaller.
It came when I said:
“No.”
“I’m done.”
“This isn’t saving me—it’s sedating me.”
Turns out, the opposite of addiction
isn’t church.
It’s choice.
And I had one.
So I left.
🧠 Emotional Takeaway:
Sometimes we seek safety
in the same structures
that once destroyed us.
Religion isn’t always recovery.
And obedience isn’t always healing.
Sometimes salvation
is walking away.
🪞 Reflection Box:
I didn’t lose my faith.
I reclaimed it.
Not through shame.
Not through sacrifice.
But through freedom.
🎤 I bowed my head. I prayed. I tried—
But still, the ache stayed locked inside.
They called it love. I called it fear.
My soul was there—but I wasn’t near.
The pulpit mirrored every fix—
Control, denial, holy tricks.
I walked away. Not lost—awoke.
And breathed for real, outside the smoke.
