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Denying or Suppressing It
Pretending there was nothing amiss in our lives was like ignoring
a growing tumor. Refusing to deal with our homosexual problems
ensured that they would continue to thrive and multiply. We could
resist for a time. We could look the other way. But that only
gave our problems time to fester and grow worse. We could abstain
from homosexual behavior, but that didn't resolve the feeling.
Avoiding the problem could never fix the problem.
Using
Willpower
We certainly never consciously chose to be sexually attracted
to men. Neither could we simple choose to change and be attracted
to women instead. At best, willpower could only help us resist
the urge to indulge whatever sexual desire we felt in the moment.
It could not bring long-term healing.
Rather
than work on our will, or our mental control, we found it much
more effective to work on our heart, or our emotional and spiritual
desire.
Trying
to Pray It Away
Almost all of us at one time hoped and prayed that God would suddenly
change us, that if only we had enough faith, we would wake up
one day and find our homosexual desires miraculously gone. Yes,
those are those who testify of such miraculous, sudden recovery,
but it certainly doesn't seem to be the norm -- and certainly
not without a lot of hard, personal and spiritual work leading
up to that "overnight" recovery.
In fact, many of us came to see that we had been praying the wrong
prayer for many years! Rather than asking God to change us, we
needed him to show us the steps he wanted us to take toward change
-- and then trust him enough to take the very steps we feared
most. We needed to be humble enough to learn the lessons that
the struggle was designed to teach us -- and then move on.
As
Ben writes:
"Like
so many others, I once begged God to change me with a single
touch, the way he healed the blind man. I prayed and read scriptures
hoping that would change me, but all the while I remained locked
in isolation and shame. Ultimately, I learned that trying to
heal my emotional wounds through spirituality alone was like
putting a cast on my arm when I had the flu. I was treating
the wrong problem. I was emotionally broken and weak, but in
many ways spiritually strong. Trying to strengthen myself spiritually,
alone in my room in prayer, wasn't going to heal the isolation
I felt in the world of men. I started to change when I saw the
Lord as a guide who would lead me through a healing journey
if I did it his way, not mine."
For
most of us, praying and building a renewed spiritual life would
become the fuel that powered our journey out of homosexuality
and the map that guided our way -- it was seldom our journey in
itself.
Indulging
It
At
one time, many of us were convinced that indulging our desires
for homosexual expression was the only way to satisfy them and
get relief from constant yearning for male attention and affection.
And in fact it did bring relief -- momentarily. But those of us
who did indulge those desires often found that, when the fleeting
embrace or erotic experience was over, we felt more lonely and
desperate than before. The "hole" inside our souls that we were
constantly trying to fill was deeper and emptier than ever, and
we were desperate for more. It became easy for us to fall into
addiction and dependency.
Even
those of us who found a romantic partner who seemed like he would
always be there for us often found we could never get enough of
him to fill the emptiness inside ourselves. The true need buried
deep inside was a little boy's need for love and acceptance from
his father and from the other boys and to fully and proudly embrace
his masculinity. Sex with another man only alienated us from ever
really finding the real solution to our needs.
"Gay
Pride" or "Gay Affirmation"
For some of us, it seemed for a time that the answer we were looking
for was to accept and embrace our supposedly innate gay identity,
"come out of the closet" as a homosexual and claim "gay pride."
In fact, those of us who did so found it to be an exhilarating,
freeing experience -- temporarily. No longer were we crippled
by vacillation. No longer were we hiding in shame. No longer would
we beat ourselves up with self-criticism and so-called "homophobia."
At last we were "out and proud."
But
no matter how right it was to free ourselves from shame, self-ridicule
and self-hate, and no matter how much relief we found in finally
getting off the fence and making a decision -- any decision --
homosexuality still felt wrong for us. Some of us denied this
for a long time but we could ultimately lie to ourselves no longer.
For us, it just felt wrong. Attempting to resolve our homosexual
struggles by killing our conscience felt like it was killing our
souls instead.
Almost
universally, we felt alienated from God and our spiritual lives.
We were out of integrity with our deeply held values and beliefs
that had always anchored our lives. We felt more alienated than
ever from the masculine world of straight men.
Sadly,
most of us also found far less healing, acceptance and unconditional
love among gay men than we had imagined we would. A common experience
among us what that we experienced the gay world as a place that
was fraught with promiscuity, lust, obsession with youth and physical
appearance, addiction to sex, alcohol and lust. We found judgment,
pettiness, spiritual darkness and brokenness. Although we experienced
small pieces of healing there at times, for the most part, it
only deepened the emotional and spiritual emptiness inside.
Shame,
Self-Ridicule and Self-Hate
For those of us who once "came out" as a homosexual and embraced
"gay pride," we found it immensely freeing to release the shame,
self-ridicule and self-hate that had crippled us for so long.
Indeed, letting go of these destructive emotions was a vital part
of our healing for all of us. Until we did, they entrapped us,
disabled us and obstructed real change. But we found it was counterproductive
to embrace an openly gay identity and lifestyle in an attempt
to free ourselves of shame and hate, because doing so required
us to suppress our conscience and surrender our values. We found
instead that it is ultimately far more healing and freeing to
"come out" as a man who is courageously reclaiming his innate
masculine identity, brotherly love for other men and spiritual
connection to God.
Isolation and Secrecy
As long as we kept our "shameful secret" hidden and attempted
to fix it in isolation and secrecy, we made little or no progress.
No wonder. Problems relating to others do not heal in isolation
without relationships. Fear of trusting others cannot be overcome
without taking the calculated risk to trust.
Indeed,
we found that what we wanted most -- authentic male bonding --
in some ways, we actually feared the most. Emotional intimacy
felt much more risky than sexual intimacy. So we used lust and
sex to give the illusion of intimacy without having to take the
emotional risk of opening our hearts to another man, especially
a straight man.
Trying
to Force Opposite-Sex Attraction
Some of the worst, albeit well-meaning, advice we ever received
was to resolve our homosexual feelings by dating women or looking
at female pornography to arouse interest. We already loved women
- as sisters. We identified with them - too much so.
Our
problem was not generally with women, so that's not where the
solution lay. Our problem was with heterosexual men and masculinity,
and with our own maleness. We needed to spend more time with heterosexual
men, not with women. Before we could concern ourselves with attraction
to women, we had to feel like more of a man. We needed to ground
ourselves much more firmly in a male identity and in the male
world. We needed to overcome our "heterophobia" with men.
That
is where we found healing.
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to "Our Solution: A M.A.N.S. Journey"
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