No. I could never miss being intellectually and morally dishonest
I wonder what percentage of believers went to church but didn't participate. Catholicism only took two hours of my week until I was in college and there was no one to force me to go to church. I never participated and it was just a time burden, like grocery shopping or pumping gas. I lost nothing and gained two hours per week. Is this 1/3 of christians? 1/4?
Never that into the BS theater and no, I do not miss any aspect of the religious life as I find religions abhorrent.
No. When i think back to the indoctrination, the shaming, the fear mongering, and the lies, I hate my family for allowing it to happen to me.
I have never experienced the religious life, not even during my (self-described) "religious" year. all i did that was different that year was go to shul (which was not how my family rolled) and briefly study talmud. i don't think on the grand scale of things i could even at that time be described as religious; i just wanted to learn. what i learned was to question everything (actually, questioning is a legitimate part of judaism; jewish "faith" isn't blind faith, as it appears to be in christianity). so... i don't have a religious life to miss.
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I miss the camaraderie of the social part, miss the fun holidays , participating with the kids, the holiday seasons full of happiness and hope. I used to wish it were all true , the nice story about having a loving father and guiding spirit. I would love to have one, maybe like the Godfather though who would really right the wrongs of life when they came along to knock me down. I loved the trimmings, the lights and songs, the music and smiles. I still enjoy these but it has nothing to do with religion .
I miss the friendships...but then again, once I became an atheist...those 'friends' disappeared, so guess they weren't really friends to begin with.
Overall, no. I don't miss feeling like I was not worthy of love. I don't miss feeling guilty about nearly every part of my life. And I definitely don't miss the programmed self-loathing you must have to be a good Christian.
It was hard changing my beliefs after such zeal for such a long time, but the emotional weight off my shoulders was almost immediate and so liberating.