A week or so ago, my DRE sent out an email asking for lifelong UUs who'd be willing to talk to the middle school class about our religious experiences. I forget whether the middle schoolers are doing Neighboring Faiths this year (and are currently dealing with their own religion before returning to others), or are doing an actual whole year studying UUism. In any case, Jennifer thought it would be good for them to hear from people who were born-and-raised UU (or Unitarian or Universalist, for those born before the merger), because UUism is a demographically weird religion, in that a majority of our adult members came to the religion from elsewhere.
UUism, in other words, has a strong tendency to be a refuge faith for people fleeing their childhood religions, while also being a faith that is sadly all-too-easy for its own children to just drift away from.
( I am, therefore, something of a stastical anomaly... )
UUism, in other words, has a strong tendency to be a refuge faith for people fleeing their childhood religions, while also being a faith that is sadly all-too-easy for its own children to just drift away from.