Friday, September 21, 2012

"It is what it is"


The worst loneliness is not to be comfortable with yourself. ~ Mark Twain

Acceptance of one's life has nothing to do with resignation; it does not mean running away from the struggle. On the contrary, it means accepting it as it comes, with all the handicaps of heredity, of suffering, of psychological complexes and injustices. ~ Paul Tournier

These years in silence and reflection made me stronger and reminded me that acceptance has to come from within and that this kind of truth gives me the power to conquer emotions I didn't even know existed. ~ Ricky Martin


We had an email inquiry yesterday that got me writing about acceptance.  Wes, my colleague, asked if I’d written anything for the blog on that theme – and while it has come up here and there – I couldn’t think of a post with that emphasis.  Now for many of our readers who are out and comfortable with their identity some of the following may seem like it is from an age-gone-by.  The reality is that we continue to regularly get emails from Christians who experience same-sex attraction who are full of anguish and self-loathing.  So it is my hope that this post will somehow find their way to them and that it will provide them some encouragement so that they can take a step towards courageous self-acceptance.

In the interest of disclosure, this idea of acceptance is something I’ve been working on personally for the last couple of years.  Without going into too much detail, there has been a long-standing reality in my life that has caused me much grief, disappointment, and frustration.  No matter what I tried to bring about change in this area, it continued to be pretty much the same.  I prayed.  I read.  I pleaded and bargained and begged.  I engaged.  I backed off.  I stood on my head naked (ok, well not really).  But essentially, I did everything I knew to do to try to break patterns and cycles that were causing me so much pain.  But, nothing I did helped in a sustainable way.  Sometimes there would be little glimmers of hope or little signs of transformation, and each time that would spur me on to engage even more and try even harder.  After many years of this, I began to feel emotionally and spiritually burnt out.  I’m not an expert in this area, but it seems to me that the human heart can only take so much disappointment and despair.  The writer of Proverbs says it this way, “Hope deferred makes the heart sick.”  

Over the years, I’d invited a lot of different people into my life to try to help me understand and learn how to navigate my reality more effectively.  Pastors. Spiritual directors.  Professors.  Counselors.  Prayer warriors.  Inner healing practitioners.  Wise friends.  Many of these people did their best to encourage me to continue persevering, to offer their insight and input, and to simply care for me in my pain.  But none of them had any real guidance that would change the situation I was dealing with on a daily basis. 

A few years ago, feeling again at the end of my rope, I started to connect with a new therapist.  And she began to talk to me about acceptance.  And, truth be told, I didn’t want to hear it.  After so many years of engaging and trying and working at it, the idea of acceptance felt like resignation, like giving up.  And if I was anything, I was not a quitter.  Giving up was not in my vocabulary.  I would continue to work away – even through pain and discouragement and burn out. 

Over time, however, we would continue to come back to this idea of acceptance.  We worked at understanding what it was, and what it wasn’t.  And my therapist helped me to make the connection of acceptance with things that were out of my control.  We have probably all heard the serenity prayer in one of its versions, “God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the things I can; and wisdom to know the difference.”  Sometimes, however, for those of us who take initiative, hold to high ideals, and work for change, it can be hard to see what is beyond our influence to affect.  We think somehow that if we just try hard enough that eventually we'll experience the transformation we long for.  But that’s why the prayer asks for wisdom - because sometimes wisdom calls us to let go and accept.

With my therapist’s help, I began to better understand the things that I could not change about my reality.  I began to realize that accepting those things wasn’t the same as quitting or giving up.  But as I began to accept this reality, different and difficult questions arose.  If it is true that these things are beyond my capacity to influence, then how do I need to learn to let go of the ways they bring such disappointment, frustration and pain into my life.  How can I find life-giving boundaries so that I am able to live the fullest life God has prepared for me?  What fears do I need to release so that I can let go?  What losses do I need to grieve?  How can I live beyond my worries about what other people will think or what judgments they might hold against me?  These questions lead to other challenges in acceptance.  How can I accept that some people will never understand why I’ve made the decisions I believe I need to make?  How can I accept that some people will judge me anyway, no matter how hard I try to explain the journey, with God, I’ve been on to get to this point?

People contact us at New Direction from all across the spectrum of understanding and accepting the reality of same-sex attraction.  Some people contact us in a very difficult and painful place of struggle.  These are such sad emails to receive.  As I read through the anguished description of all the different things they are trying to escape the reality of experiencing same-sex attraction, something deep within my heart breaks.  Even though the reality in my life was not same-sex attraction, I do know what it is like to be on that treadmill.  I know what it is like to be so afraid of accepting something.  I know what it is like to dread God’s disapproval or disappointment.  I know what it is like to feel the fear that taking any other path is going to lead to rejection and judgment from people we care about and who are important to us.  I know what it is like to feel so terribly trapped, so overwhelmingly exhausted, and so full of despair that you wonder if you'll be able to keep holding on. 

One of the things that I have been very blessed by in the last decade of walking with gay Christians is to so often witness a tenacious and resilient spirit that believes God loves them for all of who they are.   You can quickly see the difference in a gay Christian who accepts the reality of their sexuality and a same-sex attracted Christian who is in great conflict and striving to somehow overcome their attractions.  There is a peace and calm about those who have accepted that their same-sex attraction does not disqualify them from God’s love.  But there can often be an anxiousness in those who feel that their experience of same-sex attraction is something God is waiting for them to deal with. 

Regardless of whether a gay Christian believes they should be celibate or is open to experiencing love and family in a covenanted relationship, self-acceptance makes all the difference.  This is also the case with those who may find themselves in a mixed orientation marriage.  Being honest and self-accepting of the reality of experiencing same-sex attraction does not diminish your love or commitment to your opposite gender spouse or your children.  For most people, experiencing same-sex attraction simply “is what it is”.  It is a reality that was not chosen, perhaps isn’t particularly desired, but for the most part is persistent and resistant to change.  We really don’t know what causes someone to experience same-sex attraction.  It is a complex matter and there is likely no simplistic determinative factor.  Rather, current research suggests to us that it is a complex combination of both essential (nature) factors and constructionist (nurture) factors that influence different people to different degrees.  What we do know is that people do not choose to experience same-sex attraction.  In this sense, the experience of same-sex attraction is morally neutral – the individual is not culpable for experiencing them. 

Many Christian denominations differentiate between the experience of same-sex attraction and the decision to engage in same-sex sexual activity.  Many Christians would not consider the experience of same-sex attraction to be sinful or inherently problematic.  It can be very freeing and very healthy to simply accept that this is a reality that you experience.  It isn’t necessarily good or bad – it just is.  Living with serenity means, we refuse to feel shame or enter into striving or allow others’ opinions or judgments impede our ability to receive God’s unconditional love, and to love ourselves, with confident, strong faith and trust.

Not only that, but acceptance can really help us in some areas that we do have some capacity to change and influence for the better.  For those who spend a lot of energy trying to fight against experiencing same-sex attraction, their lack of acceptance might actually make their struggle worse.  You see, the more you fight against it – the more you think about it - the more vulnerable you may be to struggle with temptation or lust.  Self-acceptance will actually help you not be so preoccupied with your sexual attractions.  If for example, a same-sex attracted guy sees a good looking man and finds they are drawn to him or attracted to him, they can simply acknowledge that that is their same-sex attraction.  It doesn’t have to automatically be a reason to beat themselves up or feel guilty.  What they have simply done is acknowledge that they feel drawn, accept it for what it is, and then choose to get on with what they were doing.  But if they right away start to focus on how bad they feel about having experienced that attraction, and start to focus on feeling guilty, the more power the attractions have in their life.  They become a much bigger deal.  This is true whether the sexual attraction someone feels is for the same or the opposite gender.  Sexual attraction is a normal part of life.  Lust is a different ballgame.  As we know from the book of James, there is a progression from thought to temptation to lust to sin.   Simply recognizing an attraction is an innocent reality that you can simply accept as “it is what it is”.  One way to help such thoughts from becoming lustful temptations is to acknowledge the goodness of God’s creation in that person.  “Wow God, you made a beautiful, attractive person.”  You can admire and appreciate without becoming lustful.  And you don’t need to be afraid of admiring or appreciating.  There can be a level of innocent acceptance that this is who you are drawn to – without it becoming an issue of objectification or lust.  This self-acceptance will free you from obsessing about these matters.
 
It may be, in your life circumstances that this acceptance is something internal within yourself – and that may be sufficient for you to live an honest life free from guilt and self-loathing.  But, you may find that it is even more freeing to be able to honestly share this reality with another person you trust who you are close to – or perhaps a small group of people.  This is entirely up to you.  Only you can judge whether there are people in your life who could receive this disclosure without judgment and who could extend acceptance and care to you.  But, if you have people like that in your life – then it could be very helpful to not live with the weight of secrecy.  Honestly disclosing this reality to trusted confidantes doesn’t mean you are going to go do something crazy – (for example, if you are in a mixed orientation marriage, it doesn’t mean your commitments to your spouse or family have changed) – it simply means you don’t have to live with a secret anymore – and that you are free to simply be yourself. 

Our sexual attractions don’t define us – but they are also an expression of our personhood.  And so to be able to be more fully known is a gift – and a great protection against our desires gaining power over us in a way that we don’t want.  Afterall, every human being seeking to honour God and steward their sexuality appropriately needs to learn to manage their thought life to align with their beliefs and values.  Everyone has to learn how to maturely deal with temptation.  Part of that is recognizing that temptation grows really well in the dark and secret place.  But it has a harder time gaining speed in the light of honesty and authenticity. 

No matter what your convictions about same-sex sexual activity may be, self-acceptance of the reality you experience is important for you to be able to live a life of peace and serenity.  Refusing to accept your reality is not a sign of your commitment to Christ, it is a sign that the fear, shame, and expectations of others have impeded your capacity to truly believe, in the core of your being, that God loves you no matter what.  Not only that but the refusal to honestly accept your reality may be a barrier to the very life of discipleship that you so deeply want to express.

-WG

18 comments:

  1. Beautifully said, Wendy.

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  2. Beautiful and hopeful! Someone (I know, maybe me) should take some time to blog about sexual orientation aspects of "free will" and a healthy perspective on the "why" for those aspects. It appears to me that God "breathes-in" sexual orientation as part of each person's unique identity. My romantic side wants to believe that He also breathes into each of us a half-gift that fits perfectly with only one other person. In any case, it appears we have a lot of freedom in choosing how to exercise our sexuality but not a lot of freedom in choosing the gender-objects of our natural affections and drives. Regardless of how we understand ourselves, God is very good and we are "fearfully and wonderfully made"!

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  3. Wendy,

    The most important person I came out to was myself.

    What you shared about sexual attractions, about it really being what you admire about that person, is absolutely true. I can state that from personal experience. Learning that secret took care of a lot of the confusion and frustration I was feeling, causing me to more at peace with my sexual orientation.

    Thanks, Dale

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  4. I agree with everything you said here. It has been my experience.
    From the time I decided to accept that "it is what it is", my anxieties really began to fade. Mentioning it to a few people (semi-anonymously) helped as well.

    Also, I found a lot of the problem with lust also cleared up. I did not have to feel so dirty and nasty.

    I still have not gone as far as Wendy suggests.
    Some of the questions I have yet to ask. Some of the ramifications I have yet to ponder, but I do not feel suicidal anymore!

    What I still suffer with is bitterness and cynicism and resignation towards others who are straight. To be honest, I am tempted to look down on them in the worst way.
    I am also tempted to blame God.

    To this day I disagree vehemently with God's apparent (to me) judgment in this matter. I feel more comfortable telling Him that than before.

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  5. I have also found that many if not most straight people (at least the vocal ones) have little to no understanding of sexual attraction and the difference between it and lust.
    Maybe not most, but a sizable number.

    Anyway, the most confused seem to have the most to say.

    Thank you for this post. This blog gives me space to vent.

    Dear Lord, why did you think this was the wisest course of action?

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  6. I would like to say two more things:

    1. It is very lonely when you do not personally know anyone like yourself. Sometimes I think it's beyond comical to be honest seeing as how I have prayed about it.

    Not one friend.

    2. I am most stirred to think about how perplexing this is when I consider what other people I suspect are gay might be going through.
    Especially if they are young.

    Sometimes I want to ask God what's really going on.

    I just cannot imagine why yet another young person might have to live like this.
    Worse yet, there are virtually no people like Wendy where I live. Advice is based in nonsense and ignorance and is delivered liberally and without sensitivity.
    God alone knows what the youth go through, because as I said, I do not personally know any in this environment.

    I get really baffled when I think about it.

    3. When I look at the ignorance that prevails in the church and elsewhere here, I consider that all is practically lost.

    Many times I withdraw and try to look at the people around me to ascertain if there is hope or not for change in attitude and growth in understanding about this issue in my church and country.
    Invariably I conclude that nothing will change.

    The level of ignorance is stunning where I live, and the desire to learn seems nonexistent.
    I am even more baffled when I think that religion doesn't seem to foster any positive attitudes at all towards people like me.

    Put bluntly, these people treat gays in a nasty manner in part because they are positive that this is what God wants. I am unsure what God has done or is doing to distance Himself from that.

    4. I am not convinced that gays and their suffering are a priority for God.

    I sometimes feel as if His dislike for gay activity is much more apparent than even His love for them.

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  7. Sorry to be so negative. Once again, I affirm that what Wendy says in this post has worked for me.
    I think this is the most salient and immediate piece of advice you could ever give a gay person.

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  8. Yeah, I will die an unhappy, hurting person. I just hope my relationship with God will improve by then. God letting this happen and manifest itself in me has destroyed my trust in him. He fulfilled the father roll I know.

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  9. Anonymous, your comment reveals the pain in your life. In this place we can often feel overwhelmed and helpless. We can feel angry and even bitter. It may be helpful to remember that this anger is almost always a secondary emotion covering our hurt. One way to access this hurt is to allow ourselves to grieve the losses we have experienced. Grieving doesn't mean it was ok or that it didn't matter - it acknowledges our sense of loss and allows us to release the desire for vengence towards the source of our hurt. What this does is it frees us. We tend to carry much more emotional baggage than the perpetrator of our hurt. Grieving can be one of the most healing things we can do. It also gives us some emotional space to consider whether there may be another way to look at things. I have gay friends who tell me that they might not be a believer in Christ if they'd been straight. Their journey with their sexuality kept them drawing near to Christ. They have come to the place of seeing their unique reality in life as a blessing. I'm not saying this is a simple or easy thing .... but I know a lot of gay Christians who have come to a very robust place of self-acceptance, with a very vibrant trust that God loves them as they are, and a confident hope that God's grace embraces them as they seek to live a life of love and service. Unfortunately, there are a lot of people who claim to speak for God - and they can be very hurtful to LGBT people. But, there is also a voice, from many, who recognize LGBT people as God's beloved children - absolutely needed and valued in the Body of Christ. At the end of the day, you have a choice about who you will listen to, which voice most resonates with the Spirit of God within you. And remember, God draws us to himself by his love - not by shame or fear. May you know much grace in the steps ahead of you.

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  10. I once asked the Lord "Why this? Why not problems with drugs?" His answer: "Because drugs would have destroyed you".

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  11. Not sure I follow the last comment.

    Homosexuality has destroyed many people via suicide. There is no need whatsoever for God to ignore the prayers of ten year old boys to be normal like their peers especially if we re to take the Bible seriously.
    After all, He apparently does not like it either.

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  12. Andy, my point was that I was thinking that another path might have been easier or at least better, but in fact I've learned it would not have. That's just part of my particular pathway from denial to acceptance, so that I the clay don't spend my life saying to the Potter "Why did you make me thus?".

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  13. I ask God that question all the time in a modified form.
    I ask God if He thinks this was the wisest decision to make. I have to admit that I just cannot be convinced that answering a suicidal eleven year old's prayer would have torn a hole in the space-time continuum.
    I just cannot.

    But as you said, that is your pathway.

    I struggle to see how I am better off for it all, though I hasten to add I am not bitter anymore.
    I am not sure what benefit I have that straight people do not; neither am I sure what special character deficit of mine made this a necessary experience for me to go through.

    Furthermore, more than homosexuality itself, which could be one of sin's misfortunes; what baffles me is an alarming thought that ...
    Never mind, I cannot remember.

    I am truly puzzled, if mostly resigned.

    In heaven, this will be the explanation of the millennium.

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  14. That's right, then we shall see 'face to face' and 'know fully'. In the meantime, may you experience the ongoing (beyond time and space) coming into you of God as sufficient compensation regardless of all other circumstances (yes easy to say). We're called to be ongoingly crucified In Him, buried In Him, and risen in Him. Unpleasant yes but also a very safe place to be because it is In Him. He humbled Himself to receive me into Himself just as I humbled myself to receive Him into myself. May you experience that same comfort. I can only speak for myself, the coming in of God is far superior to the coming in of men. His coming is ongoing and remains; He does not discard or abandon us nor will He ever abuse us in any way.

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  15. Of course it is easy to say.

    In heaven, will any explanation undo the present injustice of having been raped as a child? (To use a general example). My point is that at some point, a promised explanation cannot undo reality as it is now.

    My waiting for an explanation is more resignation and less hope. It's the very least I could get in return.

    This is not the first time I have seen people call homosexuality some kind of a roundabout blessing. I fail to see how this could be any more than "word of faith".

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  16. I don't think anything can be undone. I think there is compensation. The presence of the Holy Spirit is my only permanent compensation; all other suffering and all other compensation for that suffering are merely temporary. If I did not believe God the Just Judge will even-out-everything in the end, I'd probably have a lot more trouble with bitterness, anger, malice, sadness, and escape into diversion than I already do. There is no easy answer, no pat answer, only God. An eternity, billions upon billions of years painfree and sufferingfree will be more than adequate compensation for me, and thankfully God's given me the grace to be willing to wait for it, otherwise I'd be a lot more grumpy than I already am. May your resignation regarding the darkness be overpowered (gradually, not too much shock all at once) by the joy provided by the light. This isn't saying the darkness has no punch; it's only saying that the light is far greater. If it were not so, I think I might have jumped off a bridge long ago and the destroyer would have won a battle against me.

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  17. To be honest, in order to keep my faith, I just sidestep the entire issue. If I did not have strong evidence that God was working in other areas of my life, I would have given up on Him.

    It's the only thing that keeps me trusting, so I just compartmentalize; write off all my questions as a loss and close the inquiry with my own verdict.

    For this reason, when I see the utter cluelessness in the church, and the zeal with which they pursue it I just shrug my shoulders. It's almost fatalistic if you will.

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