The Natural Man Response When Your Child Leaves The Church

When your child tells you they no longer believe in the Church, the pain can feel overwhelming. Your heart races. Fear takes over. Suddenly, you are trying to figure out exactly what to say and how to respond without making things worse.

Many LDS moms carry deep heartbreak when an adult child steps away from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Some feel sadness and confusion. Others feel fear about eternal families, guilt about motherhood, or panic about saying the wrong thing.

However, your reaction does not mean you are failing.

It means you are human.

Understanding what is happening inside your brain can completely change the way you navigate hard conversations with your child. In fact, learning emotional regulation and intentional communication can help you create more peace, love, and connection, even during painful moments.

If you are struggling with an adult child leaving the Church, I would love to support you. Schedule a free Connection & Peace Call here

Why Your Brain Reacts So Strongly

Every person has both a lower brain and a higher brain.

Your lower brain, often called the primitive brain, exists to keep you safe. This is where the amygdala lives. The amygdala is responsible for fear responses, survival instincts, and emotional alarm systems.

Meanwhile, your higher brain, also known as the prefrontal cortex, helps you think clearly, regulate emotions, solve problems, and make intentional decisions.

The challenge is that your lower brain cannot always tell the difference between physical danger and emotional danger.

As a result, when your child says:
“I’m leaving the Church.”
“I no longer believe.”
“I don’t want religion discussed around my children.”

Your nervous system can react as though danger is happening right in front of you.

That reaction often creates:

  • panic
  • fear
  • urgency
  • emotional overwhelm
  • catastrophizing
  • defensiveness
  • a desperate need to fix things quickly

Spiritually speaking, this connects beautifully with what the scriptures call the natural man.

Scripture

Mosiah 3:19: The natural man is an enemy to God}

The natural man does not mean you are evil or bad. Instead, it describes the part of us that reacts from fear, self-protection, pride, and survival mode.

Every mother experiences this at times.

Therefore, the goal is not perfection. The goal is awareness.

Awareness allows you to pause, self-correct, reconnect with the Spirit, and intentionally choose how you want to respond.

Understanding The Motivational Triad

Your primitive brain constantly tries to do three things:

  1. Seek pleasure
  2. Avoid pain
  3. Conserve energy

This is called the motivational triad.

When your child shares heartbreaking news, your brain immediately searches for relief, certainty, and control because helplessness feels unsafe to the nervous system.

That is why thoughts like these often appear:

  • I failed.
  • What happened to my eternal family?
  • What did I do wrong?
  • I need to fix this.
  • I need to say the perfect thing.

Although those thoughts feel painful, your brain believes it can reduce the pain if it solves the problem fast enough.

Consequently, many moms move toward:

  • correcting
  • preaching
  • defending
  • overexplaining
  • blaming
  • panicking
  • trying to force spiritual outcomes

Not because they are bad mothers.

Instead, they are hurting mothers trying to regain emotional safety.

Unfortunately, fear-driven reactions rarely create connection. More often, survival mode creates the exact thing we fear most, distance.

Seeking Relief Does Not Always Look Obvious

Many people think “seeking pleasure” means chasing fun or indulgence. However, in the motivational triad, seeking pleasure often means seeking relief from emotional discomfort.

For example, some people:

  • doom scroll for hours
  • emotionally eat
  • overwork
  • overthink
  • binge watch television
  • obsessively research
  • rehearse conversations repeatedly
  • try to control outcomes

The lower brain does not really care how it gets relief. It simply wants relief as quickly as possible.

Unfortunately, temporary emotional relief is not the same thing as lasting peace.

That is why emotional awareness matters so much.

How To Respond Instead Of React

One of the most powerful things you can do during hard conversations is pause.

Not because you are avoiding reality.

Instead, you are allowing your nervous system time to regulate.

Fear is loud. The Spirit is usually calm.

You are allowed to process your emotions before responding. In fact, emotional regulation often creates safer and more loving conversations.

Additionally, you are allowed to feel sadness, grief, confusion, disappointment, and heartbreak.

Feeling emotions is not weakness. It is part of being human.

However, unfelt emotions rarely disappear. Instead, they often come out sideways through anger, resentment, criticism, or emotional exhaustion.

Inside my Confident and Whole coaching program, I help LDS moms learn how to process emotions in healthy ways while strengthening connection with themselves, God, and their children.

You can learn more about Confident and Whole Here

The Story You Are Telling Yourself Matters

After painful conversations, many moms immediately begin creating fear-based stories.

Some thoughts may sound like:

  • My eternal family is ruined.
  • God abandoned my child.
  • I failed as a mother.
  • This is all my fault.

However, asking better questions can change everything.

What if your story is not over?

God is still working in your child’s life?

What if agency was always part of the plan?

Love matters more than panic?

Changing your thoughts does not mean denying reality. Instead, it means creating a more intentional and truthful perspective.

For example, a healthier story might sound like:

  • I deeply love my child.
  • Can I stay connected without controlling them.
  • I do not need to react from fear to prove my faith.
  • God loves my child even more than I do.
  • I want my child to feel safe with me.

As your thoughts shift, your emotions and responses begin shifting too.

Connection Matters More Than Control

One of the most healing questions you can ask yourself is this:

“How do I want my child to feel when they are with me?”

Safe?
Loved?
Respected?
Connected?
Seen?

You do not have to surrender your faith in order to love your child well.

At the same time, you do not need to operate from fear to maintain your beliefs.

You Are Not Alone

If your child has left the Church and your heart feels heavy, please remember this:

Your story is not over.
Your motherhood still matters.
God is still aware of you and your child.

Inside Confident and Whole, I help LDS moms move:

  • from fear into peace
  • go from emotional overwhelm into emotional resilience
  • from panic into presence
  • and from control into connection

You do not have to walk through this season alone.

Schedule your free Connection & Peace Call here

And if you are ready for deeper support, healing, and one-on-one coaching, Confident and Whole was created specifically for moms just like you.

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