by Chelsea, WAVE board member
Photo: Chelsea at 8 yrs old
I came home from school and plopped my backpack near the entry-way closet. I ran into the kitchen moving my head back-and-forth to feel the ribbons in my pigtails brush my face. My Dad was sitting on the stairs of our Tooele, Utah house and he opened his arms inviting me to come join him. It was such a sweet moment. I remember feeling very special that I got his undivided attention.
He asked me, “What do you want to be when you grow up?”
I didn’t know. I’d never really thought about it. As my chest slowly deflated, I guessed, “I don’t know. He could be with me?”
“What?” I thought I heard him wrong.
“You are right” I said.
Such an honest and thoughtful representation of the struggle many of us have faced, or are now facing. Thank you for sharing!
dear chelsea,
thank you so much. i really really needed to hear this today. to read your thoughts gives me hope. but mostly it gives me courage.
i constantly have to reevaluate my reasons for staying in the church with so much inequality staring into my face. and it always comes down to the same principles: if i wait for an institution, a nation, a realtionship etc. to be perfect then there is no place for me in this world to go.
so, i am staying. not because the church is perfect. not because it is true (what does that even mean?). but because that is where i can find and be close to god. and because it is my church, too.
best,
rahel
Chelsea,
I really enjoyed reading this. Thanks for sharing. Have you ever read the book “Dads and Daughters”? Any dad (or mom) of a little girl ought to read that book as it helps point out the sometimes unintentional things that we say or do that can make our daughters feel like second-class kids. It has helped form my own view of my daughters’ futures. When I ask our 4 year old what she wants to be when she grows up, the list includes doctor, dentist, veterinarian, bus driver, and mom. And if anyone can do it, she can.
This is beautiful. It said so succinctly everything that I’ve felt. Thanks.
You should consider sending a version of this as a letter to your favorite apostle.
i absolutely love this, thank you for sharing this experience. having been away from the church for nearly a year for the same reasons you list above, i’m feeling a tug to come back, to try to balance it again and realize that it doesn’t have to be black and white, in or out, good or bad. i think so often within the church we come to the conclusion that we can either do it all perfectly or we need to get out.
Beautifully written Chels:) I believe in you so much! I love you & I love being your sister.
p.s.—-you could SO be the president one day. don’t write if off so fast.
…just never make a sex tape, because that is one way to kill a campaign;)
Inspiring. Know that there are lots of men in the church who feel the same way. Along with the message you’re sharing, the message needs to be shared that we men suffer from the inequality we all (often inadvertently) perpetuate. Men can never reach their divine potential – can never reach their earthly potential, the joy and progression available here and now – without relationships with women wherein we participate as equals and fully facilitate one another’s progression.
I do take some exception to your last line. I think gender should matter; just very differently from the way it does now. Gender is not like, say, eye color.
Chelsea, I LOVED this! Thank you so much for sharing. It’s so interesting to see where you’ve come from and the good you’ve taken from your upbringing and where you’re going with it.
“I wept. I felt like there was nowhere for me to discuss such things. At church I didn’t want to disrupt the spirit or diminish what little respect people had for me. Whenever I brought up my concerns with church members my faithfulness and obedience was questioned, when I brought it up with non-members it was my sanity they doubted.”
That paragraph made me want to cry for you. I wish I could have been someone you could have turned to. I’m so glad you feel you have support now and that you have direction given to you from God and that you didn’t have to leave the church to get these things. So excited for more of your writing. Love you!
I’m thankful that my parents never tried to claim that I couldn’t be whatever I wanted to be. My mother (a convert) strongly encouraged me to finish as much education as possible before getting married and hold off on children. DH and I married after our first year in graduate school and after we both finished PhDs, we have not felt the prompting to have children.
Right now, I keep as quiet as possible in church meetings because my brain-to-mouth filter is getting less effective as I enter my late 30s. Based on the direction of discussions in GD/RS, I know that my perspective is not wanted. I try to remember that I am there to renew baptismal covenants and that any relationships that develop are nice, but not required.