I am spiritual and I don't believe in a deity, and that's what I taught my children. Karrie, I don't question your right to expose your child, at whatever age, to the things you believe to be true, even though in this context, as you know, I think they're false (let me talk to the kid at 16 though...), why do you question my rights in what I expose my children to? I tried to teach my children to do their own thinking, not to accept pronouncements from authority, not even mine, without analysis, and I also tried to teach them how to do the analysis, because the school system was doing a terrible job of it. It seemed to me to be teaching what to think, not how to think. That created some pretty hard times in their adolescence because in their youthful arrogance (I remember my own well) they thought they understood things they didn't and they challenged almost everything I said, but as a true skeptic I welcomed that and we all learned a lot, about each other and the world, and I consider it all worthwhile when I look at who they are now in their mid twenties. And they both arrived at the atheist position from a formerly religious position (inculcated by the school system and their peers) on their own. And just in case you're wondering about my influence, I should tell you that I'm an atheist, their mother is not, and they heard from both of us about equally on this.
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