. . . but did you ever consider that you are one of the adults now, not one of the kids? It is not the dig that you might think it is, I often made the same mistake. Growing up is not confined to youngsters
What a lot of people seem to miss, and what I think you may be missing here, is the fact that growing up doesn't mean that we automatically cease being the child that we were.
Psychologically we don't metamorph, we develop in layers. We put one layer on top of another layer but that doesn't mean that the previous layer isnt still there with all of its components intact.
Just because as adults we've consciously chosen new beliefs over old ones, that doesn't mean those old beliefs aren't still swimming around somewhere in our subconscious, informing our decisions and, to a some extent (maybe a big one) shaping our present worldview, whether we realize it or not.
I'm convinced this has a lot to do with why we see so many angry atheists these days: they want to walk away from their religious upbringing, they think they have, but they sense that some part of themselves is still there and and some level still believes everything they were taught.
It creates a lot of uncomfortable conflict in a lot of people, and even when they realize it's going on they're not sure what to do about it.
I think a lot of the hostility we see coming from anti-religious people is just a redirection of personal frustration from the fact that in spite of having left the church, for reasons they may not even understand they still have this inner-choir boy buried in their subconscious, quaking at the thought of going to hell.
That principal extends to every facet of our psychology: unless we go back to the source and try to make an objective evaluation of everything involved in our development, all the lessons, morals, values that we were brought up with are still going to have a very real hold on us, regardless of what we believe now.
One extremely useful tool in this process is identifying the lessons that your parents taught you, evaluating their worth, recognizing the part these lessons still play in your world view, and then updating, disgarding and/or replacing whatever values or morals these lessons instilled in you.
Or put another way: you have to understand that your parents are ****ed up and in what ways they're ****ed up and in what ways they ****-ed you up if you want to become un****ed.