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Dear Margo | 05/21/2009 11:00 pm

Dear Margo: Religious Fanatics on the Lunatic Fringe

How can I recover my daughter and keep her from hell? Margo Howard’s bright advice …
Margo Howard

Religious Fanatics on the Lunatic Fringe

Dear Margo: Our daughter started college a year ago, and we’ve noticed during her visits home that she’s not the sweet, innocent girl we sent away for higher learning. We raised her with strong Christian beliefs, but lately she’s saying that she’s joined an atheist club on campus and is questioning everything we taught her. Now my husband refuses to let her in the house and is threatening to turn her in to the FBI. I’ve tried to cure our daughter and reconcile with her, but nothing seems to work. I’ve prayed over her at night while she sleeps, enlisted friends in a phone prayer tree and even spoken to my priest about the possibility of an exorcism. I’m at my wits’ end. How can I recover my daughter and keep her from hell? — God-fearing

Dear God: Whoa, dear. While I am sympathetic to anyone’s devotion to their religion, you need to realize that your daughter is a sentient being with the right to reject your religious views if she so chooses. Your husband is pathetically misguided if he thinks he can call the FBI to report the "crime" of your daughter joining an atheists club. Ditto for the exorcism. This young woman is not possessed, demonic or doing weird things; she is merely thinking and questioning the religion she grew up with. I would encourage you to understand that all people, your daughter included, have the right to think for themselves, particularly about something as meaningful as religion. As for hell, well, she appears willing to take her chances. — Margo, contemplatively

When the In-Laws Think They’re All Cordon Bleu Graduates

Dear Margo: I am devastated. My in-laws, without saying so, think I’m a lousy cook. Each time I invite them to dinner, my husband’s aunt and mother decide they have to come over and "help" me. At first I found this a lovely gesture, until I realized their "help" meant them taking over. I put two and two together and came to the conclusion that I must be a lousy cook. I asked my family to be honest, and they insisted that my cooking was very good. I decided to make dinner ahead of time. My in-laws barely touched their food. Some said they weren’t too hungry, others had "eaten before," all said it was "just wonderful." I decided to conduct an experiment. My sister-in-law reluctantly agreed to help me. I cooked a meal at my house, went to her house with the food an hour before the guests were to arrive, and it looked like she had cooked the dinner. The guests had seconds and thirds and raved about how delicious everything was. Now what should I do? — "Burnt" in Philly

Dear Burn: I think this is hysterical, and you should, too. For whatever reason, the in-laws want to think you can’t cook. Maybe they are nuts. As close as I can come to helping you understand what is going on is to remember an episode from my junior year in high school. I had been taking Latin for three years, and our class had to write one composition per semester (in Latin). All my submissions earned a C. I became curious about whether our teacher had simply decided I was a C student (no blonde jokes, please), so I asked Roy Sonderling, the reigning genius in the class, if he would write two papers and let one of them be mine. He said fine … and, in fact, he said he’d give me the better one. Well, I handed it in and it came back with a C. (His, of course, got an A.) So I would take it in stride, my dear. For whatever reason, they’ve put you in the "can’t cook" slot. I recommend that, in the future, whenever the in-laws come to your house, let them "help" and just think of them as caterers. Then relax and take it easy. — Margo, attitudinally
***

Dear Margo is written by Margo Howard, Ann Landers’ daughter. All letters must be sent via e-mail to dearmargo@creators.com. Due to a high volume of e-mail, not all letters will be answered. To read more about Margo Howard, click here.

COPYRIGHT 2009 MARGO HOWARD
DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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133 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Rain in Minneapolis
I’ve prayed over her at night while she sleeps, enlisted friends in a phone prayer tree and even spoken to my priest about the possibility of an exorcism.

What is the heck is a prayer tree?  Oh geeze.

By Rain in Minneapolis on 05/21/2009 11:21 pm
Jamie Barnard

A prayer tree, or prayer chain, is where one, or a few people will call several others with a prayer request or need - say someone goes into the hospital. Then those folks, after they have prayed, will call others with the same intent. It gets the news out when someone may be hurt or has just lost a loved one. I’m a church secretary, and ours is very useful, and only used for rather dire situations, ie unexpected hospital admittance, worsening health, heart attacks, family death, things like that. 

As far as this mom goes…I do wonder if this is intentionally over the top. I’ll just say this. I "fell away" and started questioning a lot when I went to college. I didn’t attend church for a few years, and I’ve just recently returned to the church. Part of my problem was that I wasn’t sure why I believed what I believed, whether it was because I really thought it was right or because it was what I’d always been told was right. I’d say, if this letter is real, that’s all this girl is doing. Be supportive, answer her questions, and let her know it’s okay for her to question things. Proving the answers to herself will reaffirm her faith and strengthen it. These over the top actions will only serve to further her alienation and solidify any resolve she may have to leave this faith in the dust. Practice what you preach, love her and embrace her while she figure these things out. 

By Jamie Barnard on 05/21/2009 11:53 pm
Lucia Garza
I completely agree with you and admire the sensible and honest way you phrased your answer. "Practice what you preach…" we should all remember that, religion or no religion. Thank you!
By Lucia Garza on 05/22/2009 12:54 pm
Mr. Allsburg
Or (the alternative you ignore) she will realize that she’s been indoctrinated into a set of irrational beliefs that her parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents were brainwashed in earlier generations to believe, and she will break the chain of irrational belief and let herself be guided by reason and empirical evidence instead.
By Mr. Allsburg on 05/22/2009 6:45 pm
Elizabeth L
Wow what nutjobs this kid has for parents, I have said it before and I will say it now almost all problems in the world would be reduced or disapear if we got rid of religion what a waste of time. As for the in-laws confront them strait up and ask them what the problem is if you don’t get a reasonable answer don’t invite them over anymore.
By Elizabeth L on 05/22/2009 7:29 am
Lucia Garza
I believe that sometimes it’s not about religion, it’s about intolerance or fear of the unknown and in some cases religion is used as a an excuse. Some people need to believe in a higher power because it gives them hope so, to them, religion is not a waste of time. Sadly, it seems the parent who wrote about her daughter’s possible "trip to hell" because she decided to question her beliefs (a healthy and smart thing to do since we should all have the right to do so) is not being very tolerant.
By Lucia Garza on 05/22/2009 1:03 pm
Jennifer Mc

Margo, as always, I adore your humor and your perspective.

also, not that you had any doubts, but your advice to the God-fearing mother whose husband is threatening her daughter with a call to the FBI(wait, what?) if she doesn’t, um, come back to the Lord’s way was spot-on. I’ve been the girl who fell away from the path. I never went atheist, but my mother has been worried about my soul’s path to hell for a long time. she’s finally realized that the person I’m still in the process of growing into actually might not be hell-bound.

I hope "God-fearing" takes your advice to heart.

By Jennifer Mc on 05/21/2009 11:31 pm
Cool One
Margo’s been had. The first letter isn’t real; it’s from someone who wants to push the idea that everyone who is religious is a crazed, irrational control freak.
By Cool One on 05/21/2009 11:31 pm
Anne McElvain
I wouldn’t be so quick to write it off as a scam. My uncle is a beyond-devout Catholic, and at every family meeting, he prays over my sister and me and reminds us that we are going straight to Hell for not being good Catholics.  He has a spiel he says, as if he’s repeated the words a hundred thousand times in his 74 years, full of florid Catholic phrases. It obviously means something to him, but it sounds like a broken record to the rest of us.  His entire existence is defined through the lens of the church, and if you don’t live the way he does, he frets and stammers and explodes with a litany of warnings about our spiritual demise. Then he curses us, and condemns us all to an eternity of Hell, alongside all the gays, Jewish people, Muslims and abortionists.   Seriously.
By Anne McElvain on 05/22/2009 1:28 am
Cool One
I know there are nutcases out there, about religion, politics, anything people hold dear. However, even among the very few who would consider an exorcism (!) as a "cure for atheism", I don’t know of any who would consider the FBI as a solution. If anything, I know parents - religious ones - who have considered the FBI when they thought their kids were in religious cults.
By Cool One on 05/22/2009 6:52 am
Amanda C
However, even among the very few who would consider an exorcism (!) as a "cure for atheism", I don’t know of any who would consider the FBI as a solution.

i know several in the southern parts of my state. unfortunately, a few are from my family tree.

it is not unusual.

By Amanda C on 05/22/2009 3:06 pm
Kim Horton
I’m tending to agree with you on the first letter there is something about it that just doesn’t jive with me. 
By Kim Horton on 05/22/2009 6:31 am
C. Aune
The second letter doesn’t seem so kosher either…..both seem fake as three dollar bills to me, but they make for fun reading, no ;)
By C. Aune on 05/23/2009 10:21 am
Sue Bailey
This is entirely the sort of letter my parents might have written when I was this young lady’s age, so I wouldn’t necessarily assume it’s a spoof. It’s the problem with any kind of extreme views (religious, political, whatever): they start to look exactly like parodies of themselves.
By Sue Bailey on 05/26/2009 2:05 pm
Jennifer Mc

also, I’m not ashamed to admit it. I totally know what a prayer tree is…

it’s where a bunch of praying people get together and when something happens that requires God’s hand, the person who hears about it first calls 3 people and then they call 3 people and it goes on like that. those who are extra-religious call 5 people.

it’s kinda like a pyramid scheme.

By Jennifer Mc on 05/21/2009 11:37 pm