Atheists & Agnostics
Related: About this forum40% of Black Atheists hide their beliefs. . .
. . . from their families.My apologies if this is a duplicate in any way.
This article was posted on the recently created site, OnlySky Media Worth checking out.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)and I certainly use it on people who don't have any business prying into my beliefs or lack of them.
Friends know I don't believe q word of it, I'm very forthcoming with people I know and trust.
Acquaintances, coworkers, and just the occasional prying asshole are told to drop it by my presenting the atheist closet response.
PortTack
(34,651 posts)really puts them on their heels. I dont gesture or anything. If they really want to know me, they wont be deterred, otherwise they werent a friend to begin with.
Farmer-Rick
(11,407 posts)But being in the Bible belt, I very rarely tell strangers.
Me and the UPS guy were really getting friendly and I liked the guy. But then I made the mistake of telling him I was an atheist. He's gotten very distant. Even the Jehovah Witnesses stop coming round when I told them there was no evidence for a god. That's one way of of getting rid of them.
Collimator
(1,873 posts). . . But I am not Black so I kind of feel that I am meandering off topic on my own post. Still, this little story does happen to involve a Black woman, so, who knows? Whatevs.
Back last autumn, I was waiting on a ride in front of a little town center when I woman came up to me. She was standing practically at my knee and some other behaviors that I had noticed before gave me reason to believe that she had some low-level mental health issues that caused her to ignore certain social conventions. (Such as how close one should stand next to a total stranger.)
What she said to me certainly raised my eyebrows. "Black people are terrible!", or words to that effect. As noted above, she herself was Black, so I couldn't even draw forth the mighty sword of ally-ship and tolerance. Instead, I sat there and looked confused.
Turns out, the behavior that I had noted before was this woman trying to solicit a ride home from people in the little shopping center. At least one of the people who had refused her was Black, thus eliciting her comment.
When I learned why she was unhappy, I commented that trying to get a ride with a stranger was dangerous. I cut off her serene, confident response of, "I believe in God--" with a cheery, confident response of my own. "I don't!", I said with a perky smile.
Needless to say, she wasn't expecting that. With my gray hair pulled up under my hat, sitting there all plump in my Holly Hobbie dress, I look like Aunt Bea taking a break from grocery shopping on Main Street in Mayberry. Aunt Bea isn't supposed to be an unbeliever!
We exchanged a few other words but I can't describe her facial expression because she was hurrying away from me. Yep, this woman who was willing to risk catching a ride in a car with a complete stranger in an area of Baltimore County that is not as safe as Mayberry RFD, was afraid of a sweet old lady because she didn't believe in God.
It may not be very kindly and Aunt Bea of me, but I sort of enjoyed that little interaction. That poor woman certainly did not want to hear what I have to say about the Bible, even though I made a polite offer to explain everything that was wrong about it to her retreating back.
Good times.