Chapter 4. Poverty, Up Close and Personal
by John Bechtel on July 13, 2009
in Altruism, Beliefs, Capitalism, Cult, Growing UP, Herd mentality, Jehovah's Witnesses, John Bechtel, Philosophy, Religion, Happiness, Poverty, Search for Meaning
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This is the Kingdom Hall where I gave my first presentation at the age of five.
What follows is a continuation of a series of articles comprising a book entitled “Passion, Power, and Panties–Confessions of a Businessman” wherein the author describes being raised as a Jehovah’s Witness, spending almost ten years at their headquarters in Brooklyn, NY and then entering the ”outside” world at the age of 27. For purposes of continuity, I encourage you to subscribe in t
Sometimes being a Witness kid was painful, sometimes not. What I personally hated the most was being required to sit during the national anthem at school. I felt so conspicuous and I felt it was one of the harder beliefs to defend. Sometimes I would be derided, even kicked in the back by other kids. I also got beat up a lot on the school bus. My father had taught me that if I ever got in trouble at school I would get a whipping at home. This was my introduction to justice, but I accepted it because it made about as much sense to me as Original Sin (you’re condemned from birth for something you didn’t do). My solution eventually was to walk the two miles to and from school. I told my parents I wanted the exercise.
Our school life had three basic groups of kids: Academic (college preps), Commercial (secretaries and beauticians), and Vocational (the dumb kids). At least that’s how things were perceived. Kids can often by cruel, and since I didn’t fit into any of the three groups, I really had no group or clique to attach to at school lunches. So school lunches became hell for me. I obviously belonged to the preps, except I wasn’t going to college, so I was ostracized by them. As a minority of one, without any support group, I became an open target to the VoAg boys, who delighted in throwing food at me or whatever other mischief they could think of. The school faculty was not particularly sympathetic since they felt I brought this on myself, and my request for permission to spend the lunch period in the library was denied. There was this one particular kid who took delight in making my life miserable. He had flunked two or three years and I found him very intimidating. I had heard a story about how he had beat up a kid with a lead pipe. One Sunday afternoon while participating in door-to-door activity, I was up in rotation in the car to take the next house and there was this same guy out in the front yard. I expressed considerable concern, but agreed to take my turn. I gave this kid my entire spiel and he stood there and said nothing. When I concluded with an offer of some publications, he politely refused. The following Monday he sent one of his cronies over to me in the lunchroom to tell me never to come to his house again. The harassment in the lunchroom stopped from that day forward, however. There was, however, the sense of total alienation from the outside world; we knew we did not belong. And we knew that same sense of alienation was our badge of honor, proof positive of our righteousness.















































