How many people found it hard to "come out" as atheist? How many are struggling as now?
I liken it to telling your family and friends that you are gay.
How many of our great scientists throughout the ages were "closeted atheists"? In Victorian times and before, anyone presenting scientific evidence that in any way contradicted the Bible caught all kinds of hell. They wouldn't DARE come out as atheist, but how many must have cracked that God nut long ago in their studies?
It doesn't take a genius.
I wonder if it was because I was born in 1948 post war baby boomer (England) people were just glad to find themselves being alive after all the bombing and the excitement of rebuilding and 'New' Everything in the fifties was 'new' 'contemporary' 'iconic' people got 'Art' on their walls and started to drink 'coffee.'
Interest was in the things 'out there'- acquiring the 'new' washing machine - I don't know anybody in my childhood who was interested in religion - religion wasnt 'new' it was 'old' taken for granted you'd get the baby christened in a church but probably have a registry office wedding as that was the' new'. My parents only went to church for births marriages and deaths and they didnt believe I do think the war knocked all that out of them - My mother was a welder on teh dockfront itn the worst bombed place in the war - they saw too much they couldn't unsee and afterwards packed it all away and began to live -
Nobody ever tried to make me believe or disbelieve anything
I'm sure the majority of my family would have preferred I was gay. When I finally let it out I saw the truth about religious indoctrination from a first person perspective. It's not a pretty sight.
I found using “agnostic” was easy but “atheist” is difficult. It could be because I was brought up strict Catholic (as in my uncle was a bishop catholic), or perhaps because I generally like to hedge my bets. But when I was being honest with myself, I knew the answer was atheist, so I switched.
I am more agnostic. If the scientific evidence proves a god, I will believe. I prefer saying I am an atheist so no one tries to say I really do believe, but that I am denial. I am not in denial. I have never had that inkling of 'spiritual revelation' at all. I searched for god for 40 years and thought I had found him, but, in reality, I just let my math/science nature return to the forefront.
I still find it hard it certain situations, for instance, I have lost business by mentioning I am an atheist, even in the most gentle way. But until we all do, we are going to advance as slowly as the LBGT community did. When they got bolder, some things started to get better, (and some worse), but they have a LOT more acceptance than they did when I was younger.