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Dewey from Washington |
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My name is Dewey, and I'm a member of two different
minority groups. I have a physical limitation (I use a wheelchair)
and I'm also a gay man. Unlike many people I have known, I
have never, ever hated myself for being gay.
I discovered I was gay in the 7th grade (thank you Richard
Gere!) and a lot of things I had been wondering about myself
suddenly made perfect sense. I had a lot of feelings without
knowing what "gay/homosexual" was. Once I discovered
my sexual orientation, it was like, "Oh, this is what
it is!" "It has a name." And it was good to
me.
I never thought that being gay was wrong or sinful, certainly
not evil. Of course, I knew that would not be "good"
to other people (namely my parents), certain aspects of society,
(the church I was raised in), etc. Of course, I couldn't discard
my parents, but (unlike Peterson) I promptly discarded my
church upbringing and teaching. Everything I saw in church
made me feel severly depressed, demoralized, and dehumanized,
anyway.
I still keep some things private and secret. I'm not an open
book. As for my parents and family, well, that's a different,
difficult story (a little patience, a little at a time, you
know?) for another time. The important thing is: I never,
ever hated myself for being gay. It's an aspect of who I am.
I never felt I should, or needed to, change or fix myself
in any way. It's just the way it is-- an aspect of who I am.
My best friend is heterosexual. Early in our "Getting
To Know You" phase, he was visiting my apartment. I have
several posters of famous actresses hanging up. My friend
asked me, "Are you absolutely sure you're gay?"
I promptly responded, "I assure you I'm gay all the way,
and I refuse to change myself to please you or anybody else!"
He replied, "Good! I don't want you to!" He's the
best friend anybody could have.
My wish for you is that you have at least one person in your
life who loves you unconditionally,; and (this is much more
difficult) that you love yourself unconditionally as well;
EXACTLY THE WAY YOU ARE... CELEBRATE! |
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Stacey from San Francisco,
CA |
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I am a GWM, 32, raised Mormon all of
my life. Wow, what a combination gay and Mormon. It would
be enough to give me a hang over if I actually drank. |
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They both had their positives and negatives
but somehow I never could get them to balance. My religion
gave me a strong belief in God and a spiritual framework to
start my journeys though life with. It gave me a sense of
direction and purpose. It helped me develop and beginning
relationship with God.
Being gay gave me an inward sense of being whole and alive.
It gave me quiet moments of reality and an inward sense of
being. It gave me strong emotions that forced me to stand
up and express my inward belief that I found nothing incorrect
or wrong about a relationship between two persons of the same
gender.
I had two worlds each strong in purpose and conviction and
impossible to balance. I spent a lot of my life looking for
a bridge between the two worlds I loved so much but never
really finding it.
Until one day I found it. I realized that they were the perfect
balance I needed. Two worlds at such opposite ends of the
spectrum that reconciliation was impossible. I realized that
I would have to take the priceless lessons each of them had
imparted to me and forge ahead learning my own truth. Through
prayer, self exploration, experiences, life lesson, learning
from the sprit and promptings I would have to find a testimony
and conviction of my own truth, whatever that was. I would
have to work out my path home with my Heavenly Father.
Being Gay and Mormon gave me the opportunity to work out my
relationship with my Savior. I am so thankful for that blessing.
I don’t really consider myself Mormon anymore than I
consider myself Gay. They are both live in parts of me because
of the valuable lessons I learned. Most of all I consider
myself a Child of God on his pathway home to his Savior.
I don’t pretend to have any wise words to impart to
anyone. Everyone’s journeys are their own. I only know
for myself what my own truth and personal journey is and I
am happy to have it. I thank God for his truth, sacrifice,
and the fact it gives me the opportunity to work out my own
with him.
I guess I have had a lot to say. Maybe that is because I have
not shared it with anyone in a long time since my journey
has been my own. Maybe it is just because I finally have something
to say. Either way, Thank You. |
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Sandy from North Carolina |
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I was born in the mid nineteen fifties, so my
story is very common for gays and lesbians of my generation.
My father was Jewish and my mother was Catholic. They believed
in God, but were not religious zealots.
From my earliest childhood memory, I knew I was different.
I didn’t have a label for it until I reached grade school.
The playground was always a terrifying place for me, because
I feared that someone would find out that I was a “homo”.
Wanting the acceptance of my parents and peers, I did my best
to fit in. While other boys were athletic, I was artistic.
It didn’t take long for the other kids to notice that
I was different, so it wasn’t long before I was taunted,
teased and tortured. In middle school I felt alone, desperate
and afraid.
My art talent caught the attention of the art teacher and
soon we were sexually involved. I dated girls all through
school, trying to find my straight self. In my late teens
I became involved with a Christian youth group, and soon after
gave my life to Christ. We were taught that God would change
us, and I began daily prayers to be straight. At twenty I
fell in love, and married a wonderful Christian girl. After
twenty five years of marriage and three Children, I found
myself still struggling with being gay. I had managed to keep
my marital vows of fidelity, but continued to hunger for the
love of a man.
Out of the blue I met a young Christian man who was struggling
with the same issues and fell in love. Determined not to ruin
my life or his I ended things before they even began. I soon
realized that I could not pretend to be straight any longer
and sought counseling. Within weeks I found the courage to
tell my wife, and to my surprise she took the news well. She
was convinced that God would heal me, and soon she was researching
conversion organizations. Having confronted the sexual orientation
issues at last, I slowly began to find comfort with myself,
and decided to tell my three daughters. To my surprise, all
of the girls were supportive, but expressed concern for the
future of our family.
In my heart I knew that divorce was imminent, but agreed to
seek marital counseling. Marriage counseling helped me realize
that I could never be free to be myself as long as I continued
to play it straight. With new found courage I decided to seek
a divorce and live openly as a gay man. I called and told
my mother I was gay, and she claimed that she had always known.
My boss and coworkers took the news well, and surrounded with
me support. While going through the separation and divorce
process, I met a wonderful man. With all that was going on
in my life, the last thing I thought I needed was to get involved
with someone. I tried my best to fight it, as did he, but
eventually we came together.
We have lived together now for three years, and life just
grows sweeter each day. My three girls and his son have forged
a family, and we have found the support of a wonderful progressive
Christian church. People often ask me why it took so long
to come out. I really don’t know the answer, but I think
what held me back was fear of rejection and fear of hurting
my family. Gay pride month means a lot to me because I never
thought I could live openly as a gay man and be proud of being
gay. |
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Ruth Ann
rah1@soton.ac.uk
United Kingdom |
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My story is probably a little different, in that
I'm not gay. Nevertheless, I grew up in a conservative Christian
church in Northern Ireland. Being Catholic was bad enough,
being gay was quite simply not mentioned!!
I went to university, got involved in some student welfare
work and discovered that around a third of those involved
were gay. So it seemed that many of my closest friends at
uni (and now) were (and are) gay.
Being a good Christian girl as I was, I asked my church leaders
for advice. Thankfully they were very supportive of my involvement
in a group were so many people were gay (which, having since
been around other Christian groups, may well be an unusually
tolerant attitude), and weren't unduly concerned by my meanderings
into gay bars and such like. Nonetheless, I think they believed
that my "involvement in the gay community" was some
kind of outreach activity, whereupon I might help save a few
people from such a terrible lifestyle.
They kindly offered me a plethora of literature recommended
by groups such as True Freedom Trust and Exodus International.
I lapped it all up, believing that perhaps homosexuality was
some kind of blip in sexual development that could be healed
- thereby avoiding the difficult question - what if it didn't
work, and what if this isn't true, and what if people who
are gay are gay to stay!
However, one of my best friends who is also a Christian came
out as gay. I recommended True Freedom Trust, but she was
adamant (thank God) that she wasn't going near them. When
it came to a close friend, I found the story wasn't quite
so simple as that.
Unfortunately, I'm also a psychology student, so I was forced
to engage more seriously with issues than most church advocates
of groups like True Freedom Trust. Both the American Psychological
Association and British Psychological Association clearly
state that there is no reason to believe that homosexual orientation
is an illness, and indeed, that attempting to change one's
orientation typically results in damage, depression and suicidality.
Upon honest reading, I discovered that homosexuals were no
more likely to have been abused as children, come from a disrupted
family background as heterosexuals, and to top it all of,
homosexuality does seem to have quite a large genetic/biological
component.
Still wanting to be a good Christian, I turned to the Bible
for guidance, read widely and thought deeply and I discovered
that perhaps things were not quite so simple as I had been
led to believe.
And as soon as I began to gain some work experience in clinical
psychology, I realised that the practices advocated by some
sectors of the ex-gay movement were far from orthodox, and
had no evidence base on which to justify their use. (Indeed,
there is more of an evidence base that would suggest their
use is damaging!)
Through searching, a few lively debates with some church leaders
I came to the conclusion that I'd been wrong - the Bible didn't
condemn homosexuality, it wasn't a disease, trying to change
it was likely to be damaging. Ultimately, I came to believe
that the only real teaching in the Bible that could reasonably
be applied to same-sex (or indeed, any) relationships was
Jesus' teaching that we should love one another. So that's
what I believe, that Christ is present in every relationship
based on mutual love and trust.
Around the same time that I came to these conclusions, Jeffrey
John was appointed as Bishop of Reading in England, and quickly
resigned due to uproar in the Anglican church that hit international
headlines. Everywhere you went, Christian circles were in
a twist about gay Bishops and gay marriages!
I realised that in the church circles I moved in, I was probably
not going to be welcome to think that being gay was not only
ok, but gay relationships had the potential to be beautiful
expressions of love. And as for putting into practice my newfound
belief in Christ teaches us to celebrate loving relationships,
and help those around us to overcome hurtful or damaging relationships...well
that was just plain heresy!! (I'm so glad the British church
has given up burning people at the stake - if they hadn't,
I may well have been on one!)
I realised that my friends in same sex relationships were
not going to have those relationships welcomed and supported
in the Christian community. I realised that actually, perhaps
I wasn't going to be welcome to do those things as a member
of the Christian church. Everywhere I turned I met with awkwardness
and disapproval.
So I left. I left the kind of churches I'd grown up in. I
went through a long phase of doubting and at times, loneliness
as I became cynical about just about everything I'd ever believed!
In some ways lost my faith and found that my friendships with
many Christian friends were growing distant.
In that time, I found a considerable refuge in a few of my
friends who were gay, particularly my close Christian friend
who had come out. As I rather emotionally apologised for advocating
True Freedom Trust and not being able to accept her sexuality,
she offered me the kind of understanding and forgiveness I
needed.
Having felt so alone and as though I had lost my faith, her
kindness and the understanding offered to me by several other
of my friends who are gay enabled me to accept myself.
Although they probably never realised it at the time, their
friendship and understanding towards me was a major factor
in my not becoming entirely bitter and cynical. As many of
them had found rejection in the conservative church, they'd
also explored spirituality in a much more open and relaxed
way. They too inspired me to continue on my spiritual search
and explore the possibility of faith outside the conservative
church.
And since I've found and been welcomed in gay affirming churches
and spiritual groups that have welcomed my very honest and
at times, painful questionning and through that I'm developing
a more thoughtful and open minded faith.
I thought I was going to help gay people find Jesus - perhaps
it is ironic, that when my faith was dangling by a thin thread,
and the only words I had to say about the church were cynical
and even bitter - it was their kindness and acceptance that
enabled me to find Christ again and continue in my journey
with a new sense of self acceptance, love for others and appreciation
of life. |
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Robert L., Ohio RLeuze@rcn.com |
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Your e-mail reminds me of
my own experience with "changing my sexual orientation."
I had intended to speak to you of it at Midwinter but didn't
have the opportunity.
I moved to New York City after college; because my attempts
at forming relationships with two men in particular had
ended very badly, I entered psychoanalysis to figure out
if there was any hope left for me, for love.
This was the early sixties. My analyst believed that it
was a certainty that I would become heterosexual -- homosexuality
being, you see, an issue of stunted (or arrested) development.
Not wanting to remain either stunted or arrested (it was
partly a question of pride), I began to buy it.
After several years of individual and group therapy with
my psychoanalyst, I fell in love with Sarah, who also was
in the group. We'd known all about each other for years
by that time, so we figured the cure had worked! So we got
married and still are; however, we realized after a few
years that the cure hadn't worked after all. Questo é
la vita!
Oops, I meant, c'est la vie. (How's my translation? Not
too off, I hope.)
So I did find love, but it wasn't what I'd expected.
But my analyst did accept me as a person, so I didn't suffer
the extremes that you did. The one time he did challenge
me to never have sex with a man again, I left his office
and had sex with somebody the same evening; he never made
such a suggestion again! (Did you see the new movie "Latter
Days" yet? There's a strong scene where the ex-Mormon
missionary undergoes some pretty terrible "treatments"
to change him.)
And, in truth, my feelings toward men were so ambivalent
that my marriage with Sarah was probably the richest relationship
I ever could have sustained during my 30s, 40s, and 50s.
So I don't entirely condemn my psychoanalysis; certainly
my marriage remains rich, rewarding, and loving, and I cherish
it.
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Keriann P.
E-mail: thershegos@hotmail.com
Nevada, USA
I had just recently turned seventeen when my whole life
changed. Torn between my familiar Mormon upbringing and
my undeniable homosexuality, I had only stuck a toe out
of the proverbial closet when my mother found a note in
my pants pocket from me to my (then) girlfriend. Within
two weeks the whole family was moved up to Orem, Utah to
get me away from the "evils" and "temptations"
of Las Vegas, where we had lived happily for roughly four
years. Little did my devoutly religious parents realize
that the "temptations" would still exist considering
that Utah, like every other state, was swarming with women.
After three weeks of complete social seclusion and innumerable
verbal brawls with both parents, my mother found it in her
heart to recall the "good ole days" when she and
I would take long walks together every morning before school.
We would talk openly about everything under the sun except
what I knew better than to confide. She was by far my dearest
companion, my source of spiritual strength and the most
understanding of confidants. She invited me to lunch at
Souper Salad, "our" restaurant, and then drove
up Provo Canyon to spend the entire afternoon, just her
and I, talking, laughing, taking fun pictures of each other
and specifically NOT bringing up my being gay, or anything
related to it.
All ran smoothly until the drive home. She simply couldn't
help herself from making some kind of dig and on the safe
topic of the friendliness of our new church congregation
(my house, my rules= Keriann goes to church with the family),
she found just such opportunity to state, "It's so
embarassing when a Sister comes up to me and says 'Oh my,
you have such a beautiful daughter. I have a son around
her age...'" After five seconds of the most piercing
silence I'd ever experienced, she proceeded with "I
don't even HAVE a beautiful daughter. I have a beautiful
DYKE." As 'DYKE' resonated thru my head and tears immediately
threatened to escape, I replied, "Mom, I may be beautiful
dyke... but I will always be your daughter."
A week later, upon my refusal to attend a church meeting,
I was "invited to leave the family" and given
three hours to get myself and my belongings out. With no
money and two boxes worth of my life, I called one of the
only two friends I had made, explained the situation and
begged for a ride to the bus stop. Not only did he give
me the ride, but he also called the other friend whose mother
happened to be an ex-mormon lesbian. Feeling for my cause
(and (after much assurance that I had a place to stay),
she bought my bus ticket back to Las Vegas.
In just one month, everything I knew about life had changed.
I lived with my girlfriend for a few months, graduated high
school early, tried to make amends back in Utah to no avail
and then moved in with my gay male counterpart, Justin,
and his parents. It was wonderful to see the healthy, supportive
relationship between Justin and his parents- specifically
his mother. She did not love him DESPITE his homosexuality.
She loved him BECAUSE of it, because it's just one contributing
factor to who he is as a person. Such a blessing it was
to have lived with them and belong to a family who loved
ME; a beautiful dyke.
I am now 21, still living in Las Vegas and still struggling
to have a relationship with my parents. I have been madly
in love with my Stephanie a little over three years now.
We bought a house last year and have two cats. I am out,
I am happy and I am one damn beautiful dyke. |
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What about you? Share your stories of success
out of the ex-gay movement. (submit
your story) |
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www.homonomo.com
© 2003-2007 |
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