Lessons Learned as a Post-Mormon Mom - Leah Young - Mormon Stories Ep. 1458
Beyond the Fairy Tale: What Post-Mormon Parents Learn About Rebuilding Life After Faith Loss
When a parent's foundational belief system collapses, the stakes feel impossibly high. Not only must adults navigate their own spiritual disorientation, but they must also guide children through the wreckage, all while society, former community, and often family members watch with judgment. According to the Mormon Stories podcast interview with Leah Young, a post-Mormon mother and certified life coach, this crisis paradoxically becomes the terrain where genuine growth emerges. Her story illuminates what happens when families leave the LDS Church not from rebellion, but from intellectual and moral conviction, and how they reconstruct meaning afterward.
Understanding the Post-Mormon Family Transition
The popular narrative around faith deconstruction in Mormonism often emphasizes loss: lost community, lost cosmology, lost identity. Young's testimony confirms this pain is real. She describes the initial shock of confronting troubling historical and doctrinal claims as feeling "cruel," even causing her to think "it would be easier to die." Yet her experience also documents something the LDS Church rarely discusses, that the dissolution of a high-demand religious framework can catalyze authentic connection and psychological maturation for families willing to sit with the discomfort.
Young, based in central Ohio, has become a visible voice in post-Mormon circles, partly through social media engagement and partly through her work as a life coach serving people in faith transition. Her prominence in the Mormon Stories podcast (Episode 1458) stems not from sensationalism, but from her willingness to articulate what families actually experience when deconstruction occurs.
The Three Dimensions of Loss That Become Gifts