Photo:Janelle Putrich PhotographyOlivia Plathis detailing how the new Duggar family-centered docuseries,Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets, hit a little too close to home for her.TheWelcome to Plathvillestar, 25, spoke about how the Prime Video docuseries about the Duggar family and their controversial religion, the Institute in Basic Life Principles, was “triggering to watch,” given her similar experiences with faith, in an Instagram Story post on Saturday.“That was my life up until a few years ago,” Plath said. “A little triggering to watch, but also there is solidarity in having other people speak up and say, ‘Yep, you’re not crazy, happened to me too. I know about this.’ That is healing in a way.”Plath then shared that she received an “overwhelming response from people saying, ‘Please, let’s talk about this,’ ” which she said prompted her and her sister Lydia to decide to talk about their experience as “ex-[fundamentalist] and ex-cult kids” more in-depth during an Instagram Live on Monday.TLC“I will say, the realm in which my public life exists, there’s a lot of things I can’t say,” the reality star admitted. “There’s a lot of things I want to say about religion, about my past, about the world that I went right back into, and I hadn’t known to say them in the public space that exists for me, so I’m gonna get on [Instagram] instead.”“I’m jumping on to say my experience, to be honest, was decently negative. There’s a lot of things that I laugh about now, because what else are you supposed to do?” Plath added, then clarifying that she is “not really religious anymore.”Premiering in November 2019,Welcome to Plathvilleinitially followed Christian fundamentalist familyBarry and Kim Plathand their nine children, including their eldest sonEthanand his wife Olivia. Initially, the show featured their lives in rural Georgia while largely abstaining from technology amid today’s digital age, but that has shifted as the family has evolved. (Ethan and Olivia now live in Minneapolis;Barry and Kim are now separated.)The four-part limited series focusing on the Duggars, which premiered on Friday, meanwhile, explores thewholesome family’s troubling ties to a radical religious organization.In doing so, it shows how the organization has shaped — and negatively impacted — the once-beloved TLC brood, which has since faceda bevy of scandals.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secretsis now streaming in full on Prime Video.
Photo:Janelle Putrich Photography

Janelle Putrich Photography
Olivia Plathis detailing how the new Duggar family-centered docuseries,Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets, hit a little too close to home for her.TheWelcome to Plathvillestar, 25, spoke about how the Prime Video docuseries about the Duggar family and their controversial religion, the Institute in Basic Life Principles, was “triggering to watch,” given her similar experiences with faith, in an Instagram Story post on Saturday.“That was my life up until a few years ago,” Plath said. “A little triggering to watch, but also there is solidarity in having other people speak up and say, ‘Yep, you’re not crazy, happened to me too. I know about this.’ That is healing in a way.”Plath then shared that she received an “overwhelming response from people saying, ‘Please, let’s talk about this,’ ” which she said prompted her and her sister Lydia to decide to talk about their experience as “ex-[fundamentalist] and ex-cult kids” more in-depth during an Instagram Live on Monday.TLC“I will say, the realm in which my public life exists, there’s a lot of things I can’t say,” the reality star admitted. “There’s a lot of things I want to say about religion, about my past, about the world that I went right back into, and I hadn’t known to say them in the public space that exists for me, so I’m gonna get on [Instagram] instead.”“I’m jumping on to say my experience, to be honest, was decently negative. There’s a lot of things that I laugh about now, because what else are you supposed to do?” Plath added, then clarifying that she is “not really religious anymore.”Premiering in November 2019,Welcome to Plathvilleinitially followed Christian fundamentalist familyBarry and Kim Plathand their nine children, including their eldest sonEthanand his wife Olivia. Initially, the show featured their lives in rural Georgia while largely abstaining from technology amid today’s digital age, but that has shifted as the family has evolved. (Ethan and Olivia now live in Minneapolis;Barry and Kim are now separated.)The four-part limited series focusing on the Duggars, which premiered on Friday, meanwhile, explores thewholesome family’s troubling ties to a radical religious organization.In doing so, it shows how the organization has shaped — and negatively impacted — the once-beloved TLC brood, which has since faceda bevy of scandals.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secretsis now streaming in full on Prime Video.
Olivia Plathis detailing how the new Duggar family-centered docuseries,Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets, hit a little too close to home for her.
TheWelcome to Plathvillestar, 25, spoke about how the Prime Video docuseries about the Duggar family and their controversial religion, the Institute in Basic Life Principles, was “triggering to watch,” given her similar experiences with faith, in an Instagram Story post on Saturday.
“That was my life up until a few years ago,” Plath said. “A little triggering to watch, but also there is solidarity in having other people speak up and say, ‘Yep, you’re not crazy, happened to me too. I know about this.’ That is healing in a way.”
Plath then shared that she received an “overwhelming response from people saying, ‘Please, let’s talk about this,’ ” which she said prompted her and her sister Lydia to decide to talk about their experience as “ex-[fundamentalist] and ex-cult kids” more in-depth during an Instagram Live on Monday.
TLC

“I will say, the realm in which my public life exists, there’s a lot of things I can’t say,” the reality star admitted. “There’s a lot of things I want to say about religion, about my past, about the world that I went right back into, and I hadn’t known to say them in the public space that exists for me, so I’m gonna get on [Instagram] instead.”
“I’m jumping on to say my experience, to be honest, was decently negative. There’s a lot of things that I laugh about now, because what else are you supposed to do?” Plath added, then clarifying that she is “not really religious anymore.”
Premiering in November 2019,Welcome to Plathvilleinitially followed Christian fundamentalist familyBarry and Kim Plathand their nine children, including their eldest sonEthanand his wife Olivia. Initially, the show featured their lives in rural Georgia while largely abstaining from technology amid today’s digital age, but that has shifted as the family has evolved. (Ethan and Olivia now live in Minneapolis;Barry and Kim are now separated.)
The four-part limited series focusing on the Duggars, which premiered on Friday, meanwhile, explores thewholesome family’s troubling ties to a radical religious organization.
In doing so, it shows how the organization has shaped — and negatively impacted — the once-beloved TLC brood, which has since faceda bevy of scandals.
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secretsis now streaming in full on Prime Video.
source: people.com