Leaving the Amish community, known as “jumping the fence,” is one of the most profound and challenging transitions a person can make. It is not merely a change of address or lifestyle; it is a complete re-creation of self, worldview, and reality. For those born into the Amish faith, the community is an all-encompassing universe with its own rules, language, and technologies. Choosing to leave means stepping into an alien world, often with little more than an eighth-grade education and a deep sense of cultural dislocation. The journey is a complex tapestry of liberation, profound loss, exhilarating discovery, and relentless challenge.

1. The Act of Leaving Triggers “Shunning” (Meidung)

The most immediate and painful consequence is formal shunning. The Amish practice a strict form of shunning outlined in their Ordnung (church rules). For baptized members who leave, family and community members must cease all social and business contact. This means no conversations, shared meals, or even direct eye contact. For the individual, this is an emotional earthquake, severing the bonds that have defined their entire existence.

2. You Enter a State of Legal and Cultural Limbo

Many who leave, especially as young adults, find themselves in a legal gray area. They may lack a state-issued birth certificate, Social Security number, or driver’s license—documents the Amish typically forgo. Navigating government bureaucracies to obtain these foundational pieces of modern identity becomes a first, daunting task in building a new life.

3. The “English” World Feels Overwhelmingly Loud and Fast

Sensory overload is a common report. The constant hum of electricity, the glare of screens, the roar of traffic, and the sheer pace of life are physically and mentally jarring. The quiet, rhythmic pace of farm and manual labor is replaced by a cacophony that can feel aggressive and disorienting.

4. You Must Learn to Navigate a Maze of New Technology

From using a light switch and a flush toilet to operating a computer or a smartphone, every piece of technology is a new lesson. The learning curve is steep. Something as simple as pumping gas, using an ATM, or understanding traffic signals requires conscious thought and can be a source of anxiety.

5. Simple Social Interactions Become Complex Puzzles

Amish society has clear, unwritten rules for interaction based on gender, age, and church standing. In the broader world, social cues are subtle and varied. Dating, casual conversation, workplace etiquette, and even understanding sarcasm or pop culture references present a relentless series of social tests.

6. Your Relationship with Time is Transformed

Amish life is largely dictated by the sun, seasons, and the needs of livestock and land. The modern world runs on clocks, deadlines, and digital calendars. The concept of “free time” is itself novel, as Amish life blends work, family, and worship seamlessly. Adjusting to a 9-to-5 job with scheduled breaks is a significant mental shift.

7. You Confront a Universe of Consumer Choice

Going from a world where clothing, food, and tools are limited, functional, and often homemade to a supermarket or department store is paralyzing. The sheer abundance of brands, styles, and options for something as basic as bread or jeans can lead to decision fatigue and a crisis of values about materialism.

8. Education Shifts from Practical Skills to Abstract Theory

Amish education focuses on practical reading, writing, arithmetic, and vocational skills to serve the community. Leavers often find their formal education ended at 8th grade. Pursuing a GED or higher education means grappling with unfamiliar subjects like advanced sciences, world history, and literature, often while working to support themselves.

9. You Reckon with a Newfound and Isolating Autonomy

In the Amish community, life’s path—occupation, spouse, faith, community—is largely pre-determined. Leaving grants total personal freedom, which is both exhilarating and terrifying. Every decision, from career to morality, now rests solely on the individual’s shoulders, leading to a deep sense of isolation and responsibility.

10. Your Spiritual Foundation is Shattered and Rebuilt

Faith is the bedrock of Amish life. Leaving the community often feels like a spiritual betrayal. Many experience a period of atheism or agnosticism, rejecting all structure. Others explore different Christian denominations or spiritual paths, seeking a personal faith separate from the rigid institution they left behind.

11. You Experience the Paradox of Grief and Relief Simultaneously

The emotional landscape is contradictory. There is profound grief for lost family, community, and a known way of life. Concurrently, there is intense relief and joy at escaping perceived restrictions, exploring intellectual freedom, and making personal choices. These conflicting emotions can coexist for a lifetime.

12. Basic Financial Systems Are a Foreign Language

Concepts like credit scores, bank loans, mortgages, and insurance are completely alien. The Amish operate on cash, barter, and community support. Learning to manage a bank account, build credit, and understand taxes is critical for survival but fraught with potential for exploitation and mistake.

13. Your Perspective on Community and Individualism Flips

The Amish prioritize the community (Gemeinschaft) over the individual (Selbst). Modern society often does the opposite. Leavers must learn to think of themselves as independent agents, a concept that can feel selfish yet empowering. They often miss the deep, unquestioned social safety net they were born into.

14. Healthcare Transitions from Herbal Remedies to Modern Medicine

While the Amish use modern doctors for serious issues, they rely heavily on home remedies, herbal knowledge, and midwives. Navigating a complex healthcare system, health insurance, and preventative care is a new and often expensive responsibility.

15. You Grapple with the Concept of “Career” vs. “Vocation”

Work in an Amish community is a vocation tied to family and land—farming, carpentry, blacksmithing. In the outside world, a “job” can be disconnected from identity and often requires specialization. Choosing a career path without a lifetime of contextual guidance is a daunting challenge filled with trial and error.

16. The Food Itself Changes Dramatically

Moving from a diet of home-grown, seasonal, and home-cooked meals to one potentially filled with processed, packaged, and fast food has significant health and cultural implications. The taste, preparation, and even the act of eating alone versus with a large family marks a subtle but constant reminder of change.

17. You Become a Permanent Cultural Translator

Former Amish, or “ex-Amish,” often find themselves acting as bridges between two worlds. They must constantly explain their past to curious outsiders while internally translating the modern world through the lens of their upbringing. This unique perspective becomes a core, if complex, part of their identity.

18. The Definition of “Necessity” is Radically Redefined

What is considered a necessity expands dramatically. A car, a phone, a computer, and internet access transition from forbidden luxuries to essential tools for work, communication, and navigation in the 21st century. This redefinition forces a constant re-evaluation of values and needs.

19. You May Face Prejudice and Romanticized Misunderstanding

Outsiders often hold romanticized or simplistic views of the Amish. Leavers can face prejudice for their background, being seen as backwards, or conversely, being unfairly idealized as pure and simple. This makes integration difficult and can lead to feelings of being misunderstood and stereotyped.

20. The Journey Never Truly Ends

There is no final point of “becoming English.” The process of assimilation, self-discovery, and reconciling two diametrically opposed worlds is lifelong. Even decades later, a familiar smell, a field of hay, or a family memory can trigger a deep, visceral longing for the closed world they chose to leave, forever coloring their perspective on the open one they entered.

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Last Update: April 3, 2026