Eddie Swartzentruber was raised in an Amish community in Minnesota but ran away at 17. Now, he’s shedding light about what his previous lifestyle was like — on TikTok.The Rochester, Minn., manfled his homein the middle of a “brutally cold” night on January 8, 2014, he said in one of his videos. In the clip, he explained that he made the decision while throwing down hay one night, and thinking to himself, “this is just not necessary.” He ran away a couple days later.“I feel like if you would think it out for a long time, you probably wouldn’t do it,” he toldCBS News.In addition to leaving behind his family and the life he knew, Swartzentruber left home without a social security card, a driver’s license and had very little money, according to NBC affiliateKARE. Now, less than a decade later, hehas his own construction company, is happily married, and hasover a hundred thousand TikTok followers.Swartzentruber told CBS News that as the Amish community “is so closed off,” there’s a lot of “mystery” surrounding what life is actually like on the inside.“Most of my videos are just responding to [a] question that I get,” he told KARE, adding that “answering a question will spark 100 other questions.“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.One topic he’s revisiteda number of times revolves around dentistry. Although Swartzentruber — whose first languages were Dutch and German — said in one video that there is somebody “that will rip a tooth out of your mouth if it’s decaying,” it’s “not an actual dentist.““And when I brushed my teeth,we didn’t have toothpaste,” he added. “I used baking soda.“Other cultural differences include watches — they’re allowed,so long as they’re not battery-operated— andcell phones, which he says people don’t have to use “for the same reason they don’t have to buy toilet paper: the mailman.“Sunscreen, he adds, isn’t really necessary because people “never show their skin.““Well, maybe sometimes if a young person feels very rebellious, they’ll go ahead and show some ankle,” he quipped in one video.When it comes to shaving, although “men have to shave their face in a certain way,” Amish women are “never supposed to touch a razor.” Andpajamas? Not really a thing.“They are definitely not allowed. You either wear your regular pants to bed or you wear no pants at all,” he said in one video.RELATED VIDEO: Kentucky Man Who Plays Dead on TikTok Lands Gig as a Corpse on ‘CSI: Vegas’Askedif he’d ever seen his parents kiss, the TikToker was emphatic in his response.“No, absolutely not,” he said in another video. “That would be considered a scandal.“Although he’s found thousands of fans on TikTok, the “amount of humor” in his videos “rubs some Amish the wrong way,” he told KARE.Still, he told the outlet that he still has a relationship with his family and he has gone back to visit the community, which “will always have a special place in my heart.“And the videos have had another added benefit: they’ve brought more people to his business.“There’s been people that call me and say, ‘Nobody’s going to take you seriously, don’t do these TikToks, they look weird,'” he said in an interview withRoofing Contractor Magazine. “[But] people see me on TikTok, they Google me because they’re curious, and they’re like, ‘Oh, yeah, our roof is leaking.'”

Eddie Swartzentruber was raised in an Amish community in Minnesota but ran away at 17. Now, he’s shedding light about what his previous lifestyle was like — on TikTok.

The Rochester, Minn., manfled his homein the middle of a “brutally cold” night on January 8, 2014, he said in one of his videos. In the clip, he explained that he made the decision while throwing down hay one night, and thinking to himself, “this is just not necessary.” He ran away a couple days later.

“I feel like if you would think it out for a long time, you probably wouldn’t do it,” he toldCBS News.

In addition to leaving behind his family and the life he knew, Swartzentruber left home without a social security card, a driver’s license and had very little money, according to NBC affiliateKARE. Now, less than a decade later, hehas his own construction company, is happily married, and hasover a hundred thousand TikTok followers.

Swartzentruber told CBS News that as the Amish community “is so closed off,” there’s a lot of “mystery” surrounding what life is actually like on the inside.

“Most of my videos are just responding to [a] question that I get,” he told KARE, adding that “answering a question will spark 100 other questions.”

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.

One topic he’s revisiteda number of times revolves around dentistry. Although Swartzentruber — whose first languages were Dutch and German — said in one video that there is somebody “that will rip a tooth out of your mouth if it’s decaying,” it’s “not an actual dentist.”

“And when I brushed my teeth,we didn’t have toothpaste,” he added. “I used baking soda.”

Other cultural differences include watches — they’re allowed,so long as they’re not battery-operated— andcell phones, which he says people don’t have to use “for the same reason they don’t have to buy toilet paper: the mailman.”

Sunscreen, he adds, isn’t really necessary because people “never show their skin.”

“Well, maybe sometimes if a young person feels very rebellious, they’ll go ahead and show some ankle,” he quipped in one video.

When it comes to shaving, although “men have to shave their face in a certain way,” Amish women are “never supposed to touch a razor.” Andpajamas? Not really a thing.

“They are definitely not allowed. You either wear your regular pants to bed or you wear no pants at all,” he said in one video.

RELATED VIDEO: Kentucky Man Who Plays Dead on TikTok Lands Gig as a Corpse on ‘CSI: Vegas’

Askedif he’d ever seen his parents kiss, the TikToker was emphatic in his response.

“No, absolutely not,” he said in another video. “That would be considered a scandal.”

Although he’s found thousands of fans on TikTok, the “amount of humor” in his videos “rubs some Amish the wrong way,” he told KARE.

Still, he told the outlet that he still has a relationship with his family and he has gone back to visit the community, which “will always have a special place in my heart.”

And the videos have had another added benefit: they’ve brought more people to his business.

“There’s been people that call me and say, ‘Nobody’s going to take you seriously, don’t do these TikToks, they look weird,'” he said in an interview withRoofing Contractor Magazine. “[But] people see me on TikTok, they Google me because they’re curious, and they’re like, ‘Oh, yeah, our roof is leaking.'”

source: people.com