tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-90178198155875243772024-02-18T23:18:32.876-05:00MOving HOrizon"a journey of discovery as the ground moves beneath my feet"
A blog about being gay and Mormon, a MoHo, a BYU graduate, a religious believer and a friend, and the experiences of rediscovering, redefining and recreating myself as I attempt to find balance and happiness in life.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.comBlogger48125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-47434113311016767942016-04-08T13:16:00.000-04:002016-04-08T13:16:56.894-04:00Six Years Out<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/04/moving-horizons.html" target="_blank">Six years ago, I came out on this blog.</a> It feels like yesterday and, simultaneously, a lifetime ago.<br />
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It feels like yesterday that I started to brave the online world with how I truly felt. Seems only yesterday that I reached out to other gay Mormon bloggers (who I am still friends with today). Seems only yesterday that I was wrestling with two halves of me, not knowing that I could be complete and whole as a distinct individual. Seems only yesterday that the world was simpler, black and white, and easier.<br />
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Yet, I look back over the past six years and I am floored by how much has happened and how distant my old life seems. Going to church with my family (when I have the chance) seems foreign to me with only a hint of distant familiarity. My old thoughts and thinking patterns seem labored and heavy compared to the lightness I experience today while contemplating life. It seems a lifetime ago that I discovered the world has so many colors, hues and diversity that makes it truly beautiful.<br />
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The world has changed. Gay marriage is now legal. Slowly, there is more acceptance in the world. Information is readily available and communication is easy for anyone needing love, support or help. I've had close gay couples who are dear friends marry (some divorce), adopt children and start their own families. It seems that a lifetime of change has happened in only a few short years.<br />
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We still have a long way to go. Policies change, laws are introduced, intolerance still exists. But we are stronger together. We cannot become complacent and forget where we have come from only a few short years ago. Yet we can also celebrate all we have accomplished and push forward, including making personal progress, enhancing friendships and building up the community we have created.<br />
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Six years ago I came out on this blog. And in what seems like both a brief moment in time and vast era of change, I've never been happier.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-18464194043942699062015-04-08T21:27:00.000-04:002015-04-08T21:30:15.973-04:00Five Years Out<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/04/moving-horizons.html" target="_blank">Five years out</a>. I can hardly believe it myself.</div>
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A half
decade of truly being me! In the past five years, I’ve been on such a journey.
From helping out the gay Mormon community to then focusing more on my own
health and stability, I’ve found that true happiness comes from both serving
others and from within. And I’m happier than ever.</div>
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I’m going
through so much change right now, but change is good. It</div>
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<o:p></o:p></div>
keeps you humble and moving
forward. Everything is up in the air right now—my job, where I live, what my
future may hold. But the one thing that has been constant is the close circle
of friends and family who support me through everything. I even still have
friends I met from this very blog.<br />
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That’s why I
still keep this blog up even though most of the Mohosphere seems to have
migrated to Facebook and beyond. Every year I look back, read through my posts
and see how far I have come. And if it can be helpful at all in other people’s
pursuit of peace, then all the better.<o:p></o:p></div>
Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-58551694071669322472014-04-08T21:51:00.000-04:002014-04-09T01:01:07.310-04:00Four Years Out: My Bachelor's Degree in Being Gay<div style="text-align: center;">
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<br />
I can't believe it has been four years since <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/04/moving-horizons.html">I came out to myself</a>. Four years of learning who I am again. Four years of wonderful new experiences. Four years of education about what that means for the rest of my life. Today, I receive my bachelor's degree in being gay.<br />
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Like any other four-year degree, I've had my ups and downs. I've had some of the best teachers--my family and friends--who have taught me about love and who helped support me through it all. I've also had the hard professor of life teach me about bigotry, hate and misunderstanding. More than anything though, I've learned how to experience joy--my own and that of others--and live authentically, striving to be my best self everyday.<br />
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I like the person I've become, and I'm proud of my heritage. I'm proud to be a gay Mormon. I'm proud of the way my family has grown to accept me. I'm proud that I have been able to give back to the community in my own way, from deeply personal relationships to helping out a number of gay/Mormon organizations.<br />
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I certainly haven't learned everything yet--there is so much more to come. So I've decided to carry on and pursue an advanced degree in being gay. I just hope it doesn't take four more years to graduate with honors by finding a husband!Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-83273775999599996452013-04-08T20:32:00.000-04:002013-04-08T20:36:32.923-04:00Three Years Out<div style="text-align: center;">
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<br />
It has been three years to the day since <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/04/moving-horizons.html">I came out to myself</a>. Three years since I first said the words, “Hello world. I am a Mormon young man who is attracted to other men.” Three years of happiness and sadness, triumph and failure, ups and downs, as any full life tends to have.
<br />
<br />
I’ve come out to everyone. I’ve lived an authentic life. I’ve organized advocacy groups and counseled those in urgent need. I’ve discussed the needs of gay Mormons in the White House. I’ve been to Pride celebrations in four different cities. I’ve celebrated with people as they marry their same-sex partners. I’ve been surprised by allies I never expected. I’ve made some of the best friends in my life. And I’ve been in love.
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On the other hand, I’ve been defriended for advocating marriage equality. I’ve experienced a militant bishop and attended church less regularly. I’ve lost the ability to go to the temple over technicalities. I’ve cried because sometimes I still don’t understand why I am. And I’ve suffered heartbreak that stings.
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To me, the positives outweigh the negatives. I’m still standing and smiling. I’m still the same person I’ve always been. I’m still the son/friend/uncle/coworker who strives to be good and helps others be happy. And I’m still growing, learning and loving.
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<br />
The best part about coming out has been the conversations with family, friends and even strangers, bearing my soul and providing a familiar face for the issues that homosexuality and religion raise. Eyes have been opened, hearts warmed and tears shed.
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<br />
It has been three years since I came out. I’m only at the beginning of my journey, and the road ahead is still unknown. But now, I know I am not alone and that makes all the difference.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-18943372362102824652012-04-08T22:23:00.001-04:002012-04-09T01:24:23.918-04:00Two Years Out<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9R9ffRFwnB2s9JOk049b5uX1O7XjQtBe7DoWIaSwDGxeExX5B2v8aanq4qipeUHtS_l9GQR7I3Y202xxlb33GSyUl32E2v60EMNui-83NWub239X4osk74RqjHOkK2lqVCVs7ai0N1J47/s1600/2+Years.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg9R9ffRFwnB2s9JOk049b5uX1O7XjQtBe7DoWIaSwDGxeExX5B2v8aanq4qipeUHtS_l9GQR7I3Y202xxlb33GSyUl32E2v60EMNui-83NWub239X4osk74RqjHOkK2lqVCVs7ai0N1J47/s320/2+Years.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5729263566693740514" /></a><br />Two years out today! Hooray! Best decision I've ever made in my life. I realize that I have not updated this blog in a whole year. (Sorry about that!) But what a year it has been!<br /><br />In the brief few minutes before I miss my anniversary date for posting this, I wanted to share that this past year has been the best of my life. Yes it had ups and downs, but I am happier and healthier than I ever have been.<br /><br />Time permitting, I'll try to write down more of my story. It is worth telling. I have enjoyed meeting so many of you, and I am so thankful for this community. You are all so wonderful!<br /><br />To summarize my entire last year, I can simply say this: it does get better. :)Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-37192891777771089342011-04-08T19:27:00.006-04:002011-04-08T19:36:43.540-04:00One Year Out<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhnlRkocxF2Q188NREvs3tSbeSqtmVTaRmq1F35XgxYWl0Uv0cd72EgJ9L6jElLUM3XF9_KDy8qe6TV-k5UpFB4q98dls590Uv88SCmAGpVY9yqHj3SyF_MMZdEfogLE1jennBdnqMSveIL/s1600/1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 150px; height: 150px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhnlRkocxF2Q188NREvs3tSbeSqtmVTaRmq1F35XgxYWl0Uv0cd72EgJ9L6jElLUM3XF9_KDy8qe6TV-k5UpFB4q98dls590Uv88SCmAGpVY9yqHj3SyF_MMZdEfogLE1jennBdnqMSveIL/s400/1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5593360388750482946" /></a>Today is my one year anniversary that I started blogging just after coming out to myself. I am happier, healthier and on my way up.<br /><br />What a year it has been! Because I have been so busy and have not been able to write the anniversary post that I want to (and that I still will), I'll leave you with a taste of this yummy concoction.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsXdRBTH4M-8FEKBXU3ErIkfJWa7jOBVbspiCFsR0_wPWvg_ekEOJR8Jk0N0KBkfOtK9cRTHmfalUnUQCW7un9yIOa4SA5wyhTmI_fLrn1-Q1_YcjP8uMwzGpgCV8ulPSAwqCnAbtFzrND/s1600/rainbow-cake.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsXdRBTH4M-8FEKBXU3ErIkfJWa7jOBVbspiCFsR0_wPWvg_ekEOJR8Jk0N0KBkfOtK9cRTHmfalUnUQCW7un9yIOa4SA5wyhTmI_fLrn1-Q1_YcjP8uMwzGpgCV8ulPSAwqCnAbtFzrND/s400/rainbow-cake.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5593360477847839858" /></a>Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com15tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-45566810818108243382011-03-11T17:30:00.001-05:002011-03-11T17:31:27.943-05:00Coming Out to an Apostle<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8DD7ne59AgZz_tY4IMJrM6UWSKYdezFgSOKH19EWdTT756tjbu_1yZGygwSWLQQs_lzTgZBb19oOTIyTiTkQ06bxfkYJDcq0-Bh8CbvXYp_gFYLtk4kG7lJsVnKYQpUiey3E4HNWTBIJu/s1600/Handshake2.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 346px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8DD7ne59AgZz_tY4IMJrM6UWSKYdezFgSOKH19EWdTT756tjbu_1yZGygwSWLQQs_lzTgZBb19oOTIyTiTkQ06bxfkYJDcq0-Bh8CbvXYp_gFYLtk4kG7lJsVnKYQpUiey3E4HNWTBIJu/s400/Handshake2.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5582953028742140018" /></a><br />Thanks for everyone's thoughts and opinions on what Elder Bednar said (or did not say) regarding homosexuality. I tend to remain generally optimistic, based on a one-on-one interaction I had with him following the fireside.<br /><br />We had the chance to shake his hand afterwards, and since I was near the front of the chapel, I took the opportunity to line up to say hello to him in person. Most people were just shaking his hand and moving on, but I wanted to say something to him. <br /><br />I wanted to send a polite, meaningful message that might alter his perspective slightly or open up his eyes on the issue that he could eventually report back to the Twelve on. I didn't have much time to think, but when I approached him I shook his hand, thanked him for his earlier comments and then said something along these lines:<br /><br />"As someone who is gay and active in the church, who is doctrinally grounded to the extent that I am capable of understanding, who is temple worthy, who serves the Lord and those around me, making friends and doing what I can whenever I can to help, I just wanted to convey to you how hard and lonely a road that life is."<br /><br />He took me by the hand, looked me in the eye and told me that he can't understand how hard it is or can be, but that the First Presidency and Twelve are acutely aware of what is happening. He commended me for not letting the world define me, for realizing my divine heritage and for my integrity. I then moved on in the line.<br /><br />In public meetings, I believe general authorities must maintain a consistent message across the board. In their personal ministries, they can be more open and compassionate. I hope that in the near future the wider consistent message and the compassionate personal response can merge to better uplift gay members of the church.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com18tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-55180926839808745662011-03-01T13:10:00.001-05:002013-08-12T21:43:19.020-04:00Elder Bednar on Homosexuality<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiuc5D2TU2-omGxcyQ70-PVNIJYyYUey-m5mO1sDYv-OaRSgFlYr4LLsXIOzsqYTV1x2E16mu6pvzEitGDky2LQ26qICxE-SQlqo1rmgfcY2nVH79RN_R7VUpXdBUymNnEhfV4qLbtmXH4e/s1600/Bednar+Mic+Photo.jpg" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"><img alt="" border="0" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5579131823526687346" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiuc5D2TU2-omGxcyQ70-PVNIJYyYUey-m5mO1sDYv-OaRSgFlYr4LLsXIOzsqYTV1x2E16mu6pvzEitGDky2LQ26qICxE-SQlqo1rmgfcY2nVH79RN_R7VUpXdBUymNnEhfV4qLbtmXH4e/s400/Bednar+Mic+Photo.jpg" style="cursor: pointer; display: block; height: 295px; margin: 0px auto 10px; text-align: center; width: 346px;" /></a><br />
On Friday, I had the opportunity to attend a fireside for Young Single Adults in New York. Elder David A. Bednar was the featured speaker, and he decided to have an open forum question and answer period. (For those of you reading who may not be Mormon, Elder Bednar is a member of the modern Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and a special witness of Christ...so he is a pretty big deal.)<br />
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I got there about 45 minutes early and the room was quickly filling up. One of my friends had saved me a seat in the front, and so I joined her on the pew. I settled in and removed a piece of paper from my bag that had the question I wanted to ask written on it.<br />
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Thank you so much for all of your suggestions as to what I should ask Elder Bednar. I took a little from each of you and came up with a question that I thought would be a good one for him to answer that was not accusatory or offensive but more inquisitive and genuine.<br />
<br />
Here was my my question.<br />
<blockquote>
I believe that sexuality is not a conscious choice in this life. I have a question with two parts. 1) How does homosexuality fit in the plan of salvation, and 2) what is the church specifically doing on a general level to better support and uplift the thousands of our gay brothers and sisters, both active and inactive, who are in need spiritually, socially and emotionally?</blockquote>
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I realized that by asking the question I was going to essentially out myself to the whole audience of young single adults from three stakes. Yes, I was nervous, but I had made the choice and wanted to hear his answer. (I teased my straight friend about her asking the question for me, and she said she couldn't do it with a straight face.)<br />
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I am coming up on being out to myself for a year now (wow!) and really don't mind people knowing about me being gay, so I raised my hand at every opportunity, hoping to be called on. But I wasn't.<br />
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The audience was packed with raised hands, and only a few were picked to ask a question since each answer lasted from 10 to 20 minutes. I was a little disappointed because I was ready to take that step and ask the question that would establish myself publicly as a gay Mormon. <br />
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However, I did get to hear him talk on the subject for nearly 12 minutes. One of the last questions asked from an ASL interpreter was about homosexuality. (Sidenote: the ASL sign for gay/homosexual is putting the thumb and forefinger on your chin, like signing the letter G and tapping it on your chin. Very cool.)<br />
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I have included the transcript of that question and his comments below as well as an audio recording. Please remember that Elder Bednar's comments were said to a specific and relatively small group and would not be in any way official statements from the church. This should be simply classified on his thoughts on homosexuality.<br />
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Without further ado, here is the transcript and recording, which you can also download <a href="http://dl.dropbox.com/u/13084940/Elder%20Bednar%20on%20Homosexuality.mp3" target="_blank">here</a>:<br />
<audio controls="controls" height="50px" width="100px">
<source src="http://dl.dropbox.com/u/13084940/Elder%20Bednar%20on%20Homosexuality.mp3" type="audio/mpeg"></source>
<embed height="50px" src="" width="100px"></embed>
</audio>
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<blockquote>
Sister (asking verbally and in sign language): I have a question but I... [pause] Sorry, I am interpreting at the same time as asking a question.<br />
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Elder Bednar: Don’t be sorry! (laughter from audience)<br />
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Sister: My question is a really big question that I am not really sure how to ask. But in concern with homosexuality, I’ve heard people say, “Well, the same as blacks in the priesthood. It will change someday in the future.” (Which I don’t believe that. We have the Family Proclamation that says different.) But I have many friends in the church and out of the church who struggle with homosexuality and it's a huge struggle. And I just want to know what can I do to help them, and some who have chosen that lifestyle and others who are just struggling and say, "I want to get married in the temple but I can’t." So... I just... What's my place and what can I do to help them?<br />
<br />
Elder Bednar: What a courageous question. Thank you for asking. This is another example of where it is important to be doctrinally grounded so that you’re not tossed to and fro by every doctrine of men. Now this is going to be very simple. Some of you are going to be disappointed because of the simplicity. I would encourage you to not be blinded by the simpleness of the way. Do you recall that the children of Israel could be healed if they would simply look, but because of the simpleness of the way they refused to look. And a tremendous blessing was missed. <br />
<br />
Now let me begin with a few fundamental principles. We are agents, we are not objects. We have the capacity to act, we are not simply acted upon. We are sons and daughters of God first, foremost and always. We are not defined by sexuality. We are defined by our divine heritage. <br />
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In mortality everyone that has ever been born has some type of a thorn in the flesh. I do not want to get into chemistry, biomechanics or genetics. I’m not going there. But there are different peoples who seem to have various kinds of predispositions to various substances or other things. I don’t know where those come from, and ultimately I would suggest to you where they come from is not the most important question. The question is how do we respond to them as agents who can act and not simply be acted upon.<br />
<br />
Paul described the fact that he had a thorn in the flesh. I have no idea what it is. Some people will have a thorn in the flesh of a particular type. Others will have another thorn in the flesh of a particular type. There are valiant, virtuous, magnificent couples that are sealed in the temple. Their only yearning is to invite children and for a reason I do not know and cannot explain, in mortality they do not have the blessing of children. And you could ask the question, “Why in the world would these two righteous young people not have this blessing?” <br />
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Well, the only thing I know is that we will live in families in eternity. For some couples, being prepared to be a family in eternity involves marriage, sealing and the birth of their own biological children. For other couples, preparation to be a family in eternity may include a sealing but not having their own biological children. I do not know why one couple is prepared one way and another couple is prepared another way. But I know that they will live in families in eternity. For that couple, that can be a thorn in the flesh. <br />
<br />
Now, in terms of homosexuality, the issue is chastity. It matters not whether you are talking about relationships between a man and a woman or between two of the same gender, the Lord’s standard is the same: chastity. <br />
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To those who have same gender attraction, that attraction, in and of itself, is not a sin, any more than inordinate attraction to a member of the opposite sex is a sin. Now if there is dwelling on it, inappropriate evil thoughts, that is a sin. But we have the capacity to master and control those thoughts. You can cast them out, regardless of what the object is of those thoughts. We have the capacity to act and not simply be acted upon. And the standard is chastity, and virtue, and moral purity. It doesn’t change.<br />
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Now there are some people who will never perhaps overcome attraction to those of the same gender. If they honor their covenants, work to control their thoughts and do not act on the attraction, they are chaste. They can be worthy and receive temple blessings and every other blessing that is available to members of the church, because they abide by and live the law of chastity. And that is the universal standard. <br />
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There are other people who, for reasons I can’t explain, will fast and pray and that attraction may be remedied. It may be lessened. It may be eliminated. I don’t know why that occurs for some and not for others. But ultimately the issue becomes, how do we act in response to whatever the thorn in the flesh is, knowing that this life is only a portion of our eternal life and a preparation to live in eternity in families. <br />
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[To the sister:] Help me know if any of that made sense, dear sister, or did I miss some of what you were asking about. <br />
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Sister: [Pause] Yes, it makes sense. Yes, I understand. And I think that the other part of it is what can I do to help these friends?<br />
<br />
Elder Bednar: Now consider what I just tried to outline in the answer I gave to your question. It’s in the Proclamation on the Family, it’s the principle of agency, it’s understanding the fundamentals of the doctrine of Christ restored to the earth in these latter days that focus on who we are as sons and daughters of god, why we are here upon the earth, what is the nature of the plan, what is the purpose of the plan, what is our role in the plan, and what is the nature of gender in the plan. This goes back to the dating and marriage and stuff.<br />
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By divine design, by divine design, as a part of the father’s plan, there are differences between male and female spirits. A part of the plan is for a male and a female spirit to progress together towards the blessings of family in eternity. That’s the reason for those simple statements in the Proclamation. Marriage between a man and a woman is ordained of God and the Family is central to the Creator’s plan for the eternal destiny of His children. That’s just foundational and fundamental. <br />
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And when we see and understand that, you don’t talk about marriage as a sociological institution, and the benefit that it has for a community or a nation. It is a doctrinal, foundational bedrock truth. How do spirits get from premortality to mortality in preparation for living in families in eternity? The authorized channel for those spirits to come into mortality, obtain a physical body of flesh and bone, is marriage between a man and a woman, and only in a marriage between a man and a woman. God has said that is the channel. <br />
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Well that gets pretty clear in a world that has a lot of sophistry explaining a whole bunch of things. God’s plan is pretty straightforward and pretty clear, and all of our debate is not going to change it. That’s His plan. <br />
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So your question about what can you do? Get doctrinally grounded. Focus on the fundamentals, and don’t be seduced by the voices and philosophies of man. And you can only avoid that seduction if you are doctrinally grounded. <br />
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[To the sister:] Did that respond?<br />
<br />
Sister: [Pause] Yeah.<br />
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Elder Bednar: You don’t sound sure.<br />
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Sister: It’s because I’m wondering what I can do to help my <span style="font-style: italic;">friends</span> who are… like, I am doctrinally grounded myself. Do I suggest to them to become more doctrinally grounded as well?<br />
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Elder Bednar: K, now I am going to push back on you a little bit.<br />
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Sister: K. <br />
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Elder Bednar: It sounds like you are asking, “Well tell me the four things that I am supposed to do.” [Sister: Yes.] I’m not going to do that. You get that for yourself. Once you get doctrinally grounded, you can’t go give it to them. Don’t try to give them a list of “well here’s the four things you need to do.” <br />
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In the right way at the right time, you’ll be able to give a reason for the hope that is within you. You’ve heard that in the New Testament. Well, when they say, ”Well, you’ve got goofy ideas about this. Well, where do your goofy ideas come from?” They come from the foundation, the fundamentals of the restored gospel. And you’re able to simply and clearly explain and testify. And then encourage them to go and do thou likewise. <br />
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So I’m not going to give you a prescription of what you do to them. You get it and then you help them so they can get it for themselves, not borrow it from you, get it for themselves. <br />
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[To the sister:] Did we get it this time?<br />
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Sister: Yes.<br />
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Elder Bednar: All right. Good. [Laughter from audience.] Terrific question.</blockquote>
<br />
I am not commenting on my thoughts about what Elder Bednar said at this particular moment. I will post on that later, along with a little detail on a one-on-one interaction I had with him. Needless to say, it has caused personal reflection and some pensive soul searching.<br />
<br />
I would, however, love to hear your comments, asking that they remain respectful in this open forum for discussion.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com35tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-17177546991767089722011-02-20T17:39:00.006-05:002011-02-20T17:46:44.136-05:00Help: Ask an Apostle a Direct QuestionI have the opportunity to go to a Q&A fireside on Friday with Elder Bednar. What question should I ask, if any?<br /><br />- Horizon<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHz9Yei5dHcOInutqStURTEbobtSRldDaQFqHmPk_FnKxqiQwQxXklD_fY_BKEl4d1A5dWEWJMpYRiBqYRrbSPLOP0wjmOnSz6wyUNBsUk-FYh3pj6_qUG8mWdOfqlz3jNIfoJFWPIX-8i/s1600/bednar.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 300px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHz9Yei5dHcOInutqStURTEbobtSRldDaQFqHmPk_FnKxqiQwQxXklD_fY_BKEl4d1A5dWEWJMpYRiBqYRrbSPLOP0wjmOnSz6wyUNBsUk-FYh3pj6_qUG8mWdOfqlz3jNIfoJFWPIX-8i/s400/bednar.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5575906558123876306" /></a>Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com14tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-76441751089375781802011-02-17T21:05:00.000-05:002011-02-17T21:09:57.435-05:00Coming Out, Part 5I'd finally done it. After all of the anxiety, self-loathing, guilt, fear, trepidation and uncertainty, I told my parents I was gay.<br /><br />And I was still ok.<br /><br />I hadn't been kicked out. I wasn't rejected. I wasn't cast out of the family.<br /><br />I was loved. I was accepted. I was still me.<br /><br />I cannot accurately describe the feelings I experienced in that moment. After a lifetime in the desert, it was a cool drink of water. After years of carrying burdens almost incapable of bearing, it was a suddenly lightened load. It was a shout of joy, a needed relief, a celebration of life, a moment of zen, and a manifestation of love and acceptance.<br /><br />The feeling was akin to the divine love I felt in the temple when I <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/07/my-coming-out-letter.html"target="_blank">asked God if He accepted me as His gay son</a>. My earthly parents had accepted me too.<br /><br />Dropping to my knees in my room, I offered a prayer of gratitude. I always prepare for the the worst and hope for the best, and the near best had happened. That prayer was said through tears of joy.<br /><br />I was giddy. I was thrilled. I was enthralled. I was humbled. I was happy.<br /><br />I messaged my friends who had offered their best sentiments before, wanting to share the amazing news with them. There is no way I could have gotten through without their constant support. I smiled as their responses of joy came back. They had all been waiting in eager anticipation. I was glad I was heading to Salt Lake the next day to meet some of them for the first time.<br /><br />Glancing at my <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/07/family-reunion.html"target="_blank">packed suitcase</a>, I laughed softly at myself. I had been so worried to the point of being sick, and now it all seemed so silly. Of course my parents accepted me. I was their son! Why hadn't I told them years ago!?!<br /><br />I headed back downstairs to be with my family, finally feeling normal for the first time that entire reunion. I was smiling again, I was myself again.<br /><br />Thinking to myself, I knew the path ahead would not always be easy. Hard decisions await me in my future along with heartbreak and grief as well as joy and happiness. But I was at peace knowing I had a foundation of godly and familial love as I took another step forward in my journey across the moving horizon.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUoQXCzJ8hInBSuFk-xAzdbRlBm5AY_WFQmtks7VoNwpBU04gsZ5lYj0FqHiPgFdNbxHzjRHvDacccWThBOBsurUQZub5bfxNHLgUavQuMXG9hsikIX_d4FJ97EEImS1hmpTbNSi6dC5Xz/s1600/Suitcase+on+Road.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 380px; height: 253px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUoQXCzJ8hInBSuFk-xAzdbRlBm5AY_WFQmtks7VoNwpBU04gsZ5lYj0FqHiPgFdNbxHzjRHvDacccWThBOBsurUQZub5bfxNHLgUavQuMXG9hsikIX_d4FJ97EEImS1hmpTbNSi6dC5Xz/s400/Suitcase+on+Road.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5574831231968333314" /></a>Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-88784345951590184382011-02-16T10:48:00.004-05:002011-02-16T11:30:51.877-05:00Coming Out, Part 4What happened next is what I had always secretly hoped for. We talked.<br /><br />It felt like such a relief after years of forced silence on my part. I did not say everything, but I wanted to establish a foundation of understanding for the future. I opened up like never before.<br /><br />We discussed my experiences growing up, what my reality was like, the church, single and prominent members (Sheri Dew, I am looking at you), priesthood leadership, if and when I should tell other family members as well as many other things.<br /><br />One of the most significant things happened when my mom apologized for pressuring me to date, to marry and to give her grandchildren. She said she was just trying to be a good mom and the things she said were not meant to be malicious in any way. I replied that I knew they weren't malicious and that my coming out to them was not motivated by anger or intended to be malicious either. <br /><br />I said I was done hiding and that if the occasion presented itself to use their best judgement to decide to tell anyone else. I asked that I be able to tell my sisters but aside from that, I trusted them.<br /><br />Both of my parents expressed their sorrow for what I had been going through and how hard life had been living with the secret alone. They both were sad for the difficult path that lay before me, but were encouraged that I was finding more happiness.<br /><br />Suddenly, there was a knock on the door and we were suddenly thrown back into the timeline rather than suspended in conversation as the door swung open. My older sister came in to grab something out of the room, not even noticing what had just taken place and left door open as she exited, only a slightly curious look on her face.<br /><br />With that, the conversation was over. We could feel it. Not a tear had been shed. I gave them both a great big hug for being the amazing parents they are. In that moment, a hug was exactly what I needed. Accepting love from my parents, freely given.<br /><br />I went back to the old decorative church pew I had been sitting on, aware of the ironic connection between me baring my soul and the origin of that seat. I retrieved the copy of "No More Goodbyes" I had intended to give them, but I took it with me as I exited the room. They didn't need it yet. I'll save it for a day when things become a bit more difficult in their eyes (like a relationship).<br /><br />I bounded out of the room, with newfound happiness, energy and freedom I had not experienced ever before. I felt light as a feather, the burden shared. The knots and butterflies in my stomach were gone.<br /><br />My older sister saw me leave the room with the book in my hand and asked what it was. Smiling to myself as I headed up the stairs to my room to process, I replied without looking back, "Just something I am reading."Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-42541723352963906942011-01-28T11:37:00.007-05:002011-01-28T12:35:25.675-05:00Coming Out, Part 3<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCxcc9rm7FPsDNMOkl6LEJaZ_c7WqFeBWpQl4PQSj8YGCXjqIqPqBF_AjSIfxFuNEXsqrP8OBSsORvowxEgyBU4V0lz9XBTWrpNDee7LnID-eyFa-UBzFTuUt1Pz9z7gmgQRv2WIQ6iBu4/s1600/light+closet.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 296px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCxcc9rm7FPsDNMOkl6LEJaZ_c7WqFeBWpQl4PQSj8YGCXjqIqPqBF_AjSIfxFuNEXsqrP8OBSsORvowxEgyBU4V0lz9XBTWrpNDee7LnID-eyFa-UBzFTuUt1Pz9z7gmgQRv2WIQ6iBu4/s400/light+closet.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5567279259544541570" /></a><br />My mom finished reading the <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/07/my-coming-out-letter.html"target="_blank">letter</a> first. She is the speed reader in the family and tears through volumes of books every year. She had a look on her face that I could not quite read - one of wanting to express motherly love and sorrow at the same time, all while controlling her emotions to remain objective. She wanted to talk right then, but I insisted that my dad be able to finish reading the letter before we talked.<br /><br />To make chit chat for a bit, my mom then casually asked who my fifth grade teacher was because I had mentioned in my letter I had consciously known I was gay since the that grade. I was again thrown off by a question from my mom. At first I thought she was trying to place blame on why I was gay and it had something to do with my poor fifth grade teacher (I knew I was gay well before that, I just didn't know the word associated with it), but I realized quickly that she just wanted to have some context of the stage in my life when it all began. I casually replied to her query right as my dad finished reading the letter.<br /><br />Seeing him lift his head I was all of a sudden acutely conscious of how much I needed their acceptance. I needed them to acknowledge what I had been through and who I really was. My parents are my best friends. I do not know what I would do without them. I had waited so long to come out because I didn't want to disappoint them or cause them any strife or harm.<br /><br />At that moment I was the most vulnerable I have ever been in my life. The risk was taken, my deepest secret exposed. I had opened up the tender inside of my soul taking what seemed like the greatest leap of faith over the widest chasm of doubt of my existence, and I would either fly or fall. I recalled all of the stories I had heard of friends coming out to their parents, the rejection, the heartbreak, the closemindedness, and said one last silent prayer before the trajectory of my own story was determined.<br /><br />My dad, with his metered voice said, "I have considered before now and made the decision long ago that my children will always be welcome in our home no matter what. Horizon, you will always be welcome no matter what. You are family."<br /><br />I was flying. My heart lept for joy. I would not be kicked out. I would not have to run into the night with tears in my eyes. It wasn't a tacit endorsement of what my life might become, but it was a positive beginning point. <br /><br />My mom conveyed similar wonderful support quoting my letter that I was, in fact, the same son she knew that morning and that nothing would change that. She told me that her fear was that I would want to abandon the family because of being gay. I exclaimed that my biggest fear was being cast out of the family for being gay! (It just goes to show how important family is to us, that both of our greatest fears was losing it.)<br /><br />In that instant, the burden I had carried my whole life. the weight that pulled me down, was shared and instantly became lighter. The knots inside my stomach loosened and I found myself breathing again as if I hadn't taken a breath since I entered the room. It was so wonderful to be exposed to the light and finally be my true self without the fears that had so traumatized my whole existence. <br /><br />We talked some more, but for the first time in the longest time, I was happy.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-74293886639433280292011-01-26T12:38:00.001-05:002011-01-26T12:38:01.122-05:00Coming Out, Part 2<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAGRYC5d-uSUwk7X9oJEjhmxrrhZt1bbdShFeaB5aeoVyQ2cb3shomPu434s34lBJqYU07zayBEbM7WSDkvJqcvkD6kc5QgiHJKms5Kb-mklRnWKCAjdnqqzAYjn0DkNlwG2BXTE-I-HiB/s1600/envelope+1.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 268px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAGRYC5d-uSUwk7X9oJEjhmxrrhZt1bbdShFeaB5aeoVyQ2cb3shomPu434s34lBJqYU07zayBEbM7WSDkvJqcvkD6kc5QgiHJKms5Kb-mklRnWKCAjdnqqzAYjn0DkNlwG2BXTE-I-HiB/s400/envelope+1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5565838350728816738" /></a><br />The mood was instantly serious and the room went deathly quiet as I handed two thick white envelopes to each of my parents. Watching them remove and unfold the stapled papers and start reading was perhaps even more difficult than giving them the <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/07/my-coming-out-letter.html"target="_blank">letter</a> in the first place. This was it. They were about to know everything about me.<br /><br />The rustling of the papers as they read was torturous noise as I sat in the silent room and watched. I analyzed their faces as they read. Having worked so hard composing that letter, I knew the three magic words "I am gay" were about halfway down the first page. I expected some reaction, an exclamation or outbust of tears when they read those words. But each of them read through turning the page without reaction, just the same look of stoic concern on their faces.<br /><br />I was taken a bit off guard at this. I had expected some reaction, not simply no reaction. Though I had asked them to read the letter all the way through before commenting, I didn't actually expect that to happen! In my life, I prepare for the worst and hope for the best. I had faith in my parents' reactions, but I was ready to make a quick getaway if I needed to. The waiting for a reaction was gnawing at my insides.<br /><br />Then my mom did something I had not prepared for at all: she giggled.<br /><br />Hearing that sound completely threw me off. How was I supposed to react to that? Did she really just make that sound? I hadn't even considered that reaction beforehand as a possibility so I didn't prepare for it. I was befuddled.<br /><br />What did she find humorous in this serious matter? Was she laughing because she didn't know how to react? Was it a nervous laugh? Didn't she realize how serious this moment was?<br /><br />I broke the silence and somewhat accusingly asked, "What?" being unable to calm my mind.<br /><br />"Oh, I just read where you wrote that living in New York didn't make you gay. I know that. I just thought it was a little funny," she replied. <br /><br />I smiled out of exasperation as the tension lifted. I didn't respond. I couldn't respond. The silence continued and she kept on reading.<br /><br />In that instant, in comparison to the angst and torture I had put myself through the whole week of the family reunion and my whole life before that, I experienced the first inking of a feeling I had not expected but yearned for so deeply: hope.<br /><br />That was the first sentence my mom ever said about me being gay, and she said it with a smile.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-69344100966559349152011-01-24T11:45:00.001-05:002011-01-24T11:45:00.169-05:00Coming Out, Part 1The following post continues my coming out story immediately after the events described <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/07/family-reunion.html"target="_blank">here</a>.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUB_2cNcxDWtbF20MyO0HEeqBahDSAf0q6QDGulJrX-0itk9Ic9Adqkxt8BIIDqz7YLhwEYOxvp-Q6V2sV4zjfCOC1DLPJDG03VldLLB3wHfckMcaDOZ07a2WcANeAaM-_Ba_eB4Ta7MiO/s1600/red+church+pew+w-+sunflowers.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 258px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUB_2cNcxDWtbF20MyO0HEeqBahDSAf0q6QDGulJrX-0itk9Ic9Adqkxt8BIIDqz7YLhwEYOxvp-Q6V2sV4zjfCOC1DLPJDG03VldLLB3wHfckMcaDOZ07a2WcANeAaM-_Ba_eB4Ta7MiO/s400/red+church+pew+w-+sunflowers.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5565624054432497522" /></a><br />When I entered my parents room, I sat down on an old decorative church pew from an ancestor’s pioneer home, my dad sitting in an armchair to my left, my mom laying on the bed to my right. Sitting on the hard wood, l bowed my head an looked at the floor, contemplating the momentary semblance of piety. I almost felt like I was in a confession about to share my true soul for the first time. I couldn’t quite force myself to look up.<br /><br />The air was filled with a nervous tension based on the awkward conversations I had with my parents earlier asking them if I could talk to them. I was sure they could hear the beating of my pounding heart reverberating throughout the room. My chest felt as if it might explode from the intense pressure. <br /><br />Putting the book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/No-More-Goodbyes-Circling-Wagons/dp/0963885243"target="_blank">“No More Goodbyes”</a> and the copies of the <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/07/my-coming-out-letter.html"target="_blank">coming out letters</a> I had printed on the floor next to me, I raised my head and timidly looked up at my parents. I couldn't quite read their faces. A combination of concern mixed with a decent attempt to look unconcerned was evident in their faces. I felt similarly conflicted. I was going to tell them I was gay, and there was no going back. <br /><br />This was the moment I had geared up for but still I felt woefully unprepared. Everything was about to change. I took a deep breath trying to calm the tempest within me and then began to speak.<br /><br />I tried to open with some sort of lighthearted remark to let some of the pressure out of the room but failed spectacularly. I managed to get a smile from my mom which calmed my nerves slightly. Seeing my parents smile had always made me feel comfortable, and it was the brief glimpse of normalcy I needed to continue.<br /><br />Glancing back and forth from my mom to my dad, I thanked them for what wonderful parents they were and for their never ending love and support. I knew that once I started speaking, things would get easier, so I forged ahead though I felt like I was recklessly running toward a drop off of unfathomable depth.<br /><br />I told them that I had been through a lot of self-reflection recently as evidenced by my visible stress, breaking out, not being able to concentrate and really not being myself the past several days. It was then that I said I was about to tell them why.<br /><br />I paused as my voice broke, but I could not stop or my voice would fail me. I tried to sound confident and not have my voice waver or falter any more. I told them that my significant weight loss also factored into what I was going to share with them and that it was one of the many positive things resulting from what I was going through.<br /><br />Realizing that my eyes had drifted again to the floor where my letters were, I paused and looked up again wondering what was going through their minds. We had never really talked this frankly before. I didn't know what to expect from them. Could they guess what was coming? Did they already suspect? I could tell that they were trying so hard to be open and keep a smile on their faces.<br /><br />I said I had written a letter explaining everything that I would like them to read. My mom perked up a bit at this because she loves receiving and reading notes and letters from her children. I was a little wary of how her emotions would change and wondered how this letter would rank among the ones she holds onto for keepsakes. I picked up the envelopes off the carpet, the paper vibrating in my shaking hands. <br /><br />Asking them to read through the whole letter before asking any questions, I said the last thing they would ever hear from their only son before they knew. Almost tearing up, I said, "I love you. Giving you this letter is the hardest thing I have done in my life."Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-28614170777497725122011-01-21T12:54:00.006-05:002011-01-21T13:07:08.803-05:00ReturnIt has been exactly six months to the day that I last posted.<br /><br />I am sorry I have been gone so long! At first, this break was not planned or intentional. It just happened because of an uptick of my day-to-day responsibilities (and quite possibly me discovering the game <a href="http://www.rovio.com/index.php?page=angry-birds"target="_blank">Angry Birds</a> during my daily commute). However, the delay in posting turned into a sabbatical from blogging for a few important reasons.<br /><br />In the past half-year, I have still been heavily involved in the gay Mormon community but my blog has not been the primary vehicle of my interactions. Instead of hiding behind the words on a website, I am experiencing life first hand. This blog initially was a sounding board for thoughts, ideas and feelings as I processed one of the biggest decisions and subsequent paradigm shifts of my life. The words were a manifestation of the transition as I learned to accept who I was – who I am.<br /><br />On a smaller scale, I started worrying too much about the quality of my own writing. So many of you so eloquently voice your heartfelt experiences and reasoned arguments that I want to put my best effort into participating in our community. I hold myself to high standards especially when it comes to writing. One of the primary things I do every day is write and edit. Before when composing an entry I would work on it for quite some time, and if I couldn't get a sentence just right I would agonize over publishing it until I was happy with the cadence, flow, beat and structure of each post.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6gcq62ld8hcxe23azrB3qFr46hiOr79GaeHayJBlVy3P0wJnyLIM4rDcAhEpEfgK7DHFx7Eq1ytBKNTSZ9mQ1I2Cac2yumUOKEESoNOCPD5aZXQxlQAawkUtda6p6PgJGCokHLL3-8u62/s1600/writersblock.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6gcq62ld8hcxe23azrB3qFr46hiOr79GaeHayJBlVy3P0wJnyLIM4rDcAhEpEfgK7DHFx7Eq1ytBKNTSZ9mQ1I2Cac2yumUOKEESoNOCPD5aZXQxlQAawkUtda6p6PgJGCokHLL3-8u62/s400/writersblock.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5564700286579235682" /></a><br />If you will forgive me, I am going to try to post more regularly but I am going to spend less time agonizing over every word. I apologize if some of the edges of my future posts are a little rougher than what I have published before, but I celebrate my imperfections because I am an imperfect person.<br /><br />One of the primary reasons for the break was because I spread myself too thin. Balancing an ever-demanding job with everything that I wanted to do in my personal life became too much of a juggling act. Work days became long and arduous. Free time to think and reflect became a rarity. My priorities were challenged due to my limited time. Pensive moments and blogging fell through the cracks in my schedule.<br /><br />Additionally, I wanted to do everything I possibly could to help the community. I helped create the <a href="http://www.mohomap.com"target="_blank">MoHo Map</a> and continue to maintain it, offered to help administer the <a href="http://mohodirectory.blogspot.com/"target="_blank">MoHo Directory</a>, attempted to write book entries on gay Mormon issues and helped organize a potential new community for the advancement of gay acceptance within the church. With everything that was happening in addition to my work and church responsibilities, I couldn’t really do my best in any of them so the time I invested into blogging was sacrificed in order for me to concentrate on other priorities.<br /><br />So much has happened in six months. One of the benefits of this sabbatical is that it has created a buffer of time on this blog because events started moving quickly and I simply could not keep up in real time. At first, I was using this blog primarily as a journaling function. It will continue to serve that role as well as being a place for discussion and reflection of both yours and the humorous and serious thoughts running through my mind. <br /><br />Still, the mission of this blog remains as it has been from the beginning: celebrate the good, create beneficial connections and relationships, promote the positive, be as uplifting and helpful to others as possible as we take this journey together.<br /><br />The collective voice of this community has immense value. I think I can give back and contribute more to the running dialogue that I have benefitted so much from before. I love telling stories and I have some to finish up and some new ones to tell.<br /><br />You are all amazing. Some of my best friends have originated through this blog and I hope to meet many more of you.<br /><br />Horizon is back!<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjI1VpXlFKxgn6xScGwX5zPO3AX7YJfPMpFetctq0n3ziojJBvvaejGRisQt1AIEgUPkkgaY1FstxNjDi1Bvlo_0vtKNKuLgNkEbetYPgUtikHSv5mSBUDIzZByXSe5nUYBlnTwgtkveiX_/s1600/i%2527m+back.png"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjI1VpXlFKxgn6xScGwX5zPO3AX7YJfPMpFetctq0n3ziojJBvvaejGRisQt1AIEgUPkkgaY1FstxNjDi1Bvlo_0vtKNKuLgNkEbetYPgUtikHSv5mSBUDIzZByXSe5nUYBlnTwgtkveiX_/s400/i%2527m+back.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5564700646326804338" /></a>Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-78192984685360621112010-07-21T00:13:00.000-04:002010-07-21T00:14:48.821-04:00Giving Our Lives for Ransom<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgr19F8xAl1dwE0rULIHrJCL8OmZXbg_oF1WBnoUlFvQVhyphenhyphentWJ2aoAsjmwA0ny7Umdm5Csl8__FVblUhaqQ9IwM_miwZDR1IjOzvFm7HRIbC0IX2PPsYyMFd0lh_ORIxp84B0a_YwjncFQ/s1600/candle.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 160px; height: 200px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgr19F8xAl1dwE0rULIHrJCL8OmZXbg_oF1WBnoUlFvQVhyphenhyphentWJ2aoAsjmwA0ny7Umdm5Csl8__FVblUhaqQ9IwM_miwZDR1IjOzvFm7HRIbC0IX2PPsYyMFd0lh_ORIxp84B0a_YwjncFQ/s200/candle.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5496196424665055346" /></a>I did not know Todd Ransom, nor the other gay Mormons who have given their lives up recently as their last measure of sacrifice. But I have talked to my friends, his friends, people whose lives he had touched for good, and seen the outpouring of love online in the days following the news of his suicide to know what a remarkable young man he was.<br /><br />I cannot assume the reasoning for giving up his life was based purely on the conflict between being gay and Mormon. But it had to certainly play a large part. His last post “Sunrise - accept this offering - Sunrise” brings me to tears. I know all too well the clash of the mind, heart and soul while trying to reconcile one’s being with the seemingly incompatible spiritual beliefs the Mormon faith teaches. I was ready to sacrifice my own life in a different way, by forcing myself to marry a woman, in order to show my last measure of devotion to the eternal plan I had been taught. Hardly even knowing him, I would have been there for Todd in every way I possibly could before he made his final sacrifice.<br /><br />As gay Mormons, we are extraordinarily familiar with the concept of sacrifice in order to find favor with our religion and our God. Many of us have denied who we are, our happiness and our well-being in order to find spiritual comfort and acceptance to a strictly held view of righteousness. Many of us would gladly pay a steep ransom for the sure knowledge that our souls were saved in the life to come. Unfortunately, too many think the heavy price of that ransom can only be paid with their lives.<br /><br />Let’s give of our souls in service for that ransom. Let’s try harder to be a true friend to those who are struggling. Let’s try harder to be more open and express our own needs and weaknesses. Let’s try harder to help open the eyes of those we come in contact with to show them we are as deserving of God’s love and mercy as anyone else. Let’s try harder to provide refuge for the weary, for those who have known anguish, self-loathing and grief, for those who feel they have been rejected for no other reason than who they are.<br /><br />We are all imperfect individuals, but that does not decrease our capacity to love. I know of no other group of people as needing of the loving embrace of acceptance and support as our fellow gay brothers and lesbian sisters in the Mormon church. Though we may rail about why the church and many of its members chose to ignore this issue as lives are lost, and though we may publicly march to send a loud message of tolerance and understanding, we must face the fact that change comes slowly.<br /><br />Because progress is measured in glacial increments when it comes to the church and homosexuality, it falls to us to create the safe haven so many gay Mormons desperately need. It falls to us to not let our own insecurities and quick judgments get in the way of offering our friendship and love to every one of God’s children. It falls to us to convey to our fellow gay Mormons that they are not alone, that they are loved and that they are accepted because one suicide, let alone three, is too many.<br /><br />Let’s give our lives for Ransom.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-84151408521697672522010-07-18T23:55:00.003-04:002010-07-19T00:57:13.072-04:00Family ReunionI have a few posts I still need to write that come chronologically before the three in this series including an amazing first date, the genesis of the <a href="http://www.mohomap.com"target="_blank">MoHo Map</a>, coming out to my best friend, attending NYC Pride and meeting several other MoHo bloggers. But because of the significance of the events that have happened recently, I have decided to abandon the timeline for a bit to share my coming out story.<br /><br />- - -<br /><br />The days leading up to my trip home for the family reunion were tortuous. I couldn’t sleep. I couldn’t eat. I was so busy, yet at the same time I couldn’t accomplish anything. My mind was awash with playing out the scenario in my head when I would come out to my parents. Some people have asked why I have been so intent on telling them, and I think that it is because I do consider family to be one of the biggest joys in my life. I knew that letting them into my life would be difficult, but at the same time a relief. I had never really been open with them before in terms of emotions and feelings, so I didn’t know what to expect.<br /><br />I don’t get involved in anything until I have researched it out and have some knowledge of what is to come. So either to my benefit or detriment, I had researched many people’s coming out experiences and then prepared for each and every situation I could think of just in case. I told myself that I would prepare for the worst and hope for the best, though I genuinely expected the worst. I tried to incorporate many of these issues into <a href="http://www.movinghorizon.com/2010/07/my-coming-out-letter.html"target="_blank">my coming out letter</a>, that way I could establish a firm foundation of expectations with my parents. <br /><br />I had previously ordered “No More Goodbyes” and “In Quiet Desperation” in preparation as well. I had read through NMG very quickly, my heart both aching and celebrating with each story. I am a very empathetic person. I tend to genuinely feel the emotions of my friends and close acquaintances and sincerely wish and hope the best for each of them. The stories in NMG were so simple yet so profound that I told myself that when I came out to my parents I would give them a copy of the book. (I even wrote the author, Carol Lynn Pearson, thanking her for the tool I thought would soften the blow for them.)<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-7dSJpODwCkQUE2cbDk9QwZXuIqiNiM5lBVjOY54PMtsDaCZr9E4HQ6Duz7jalZLagXlr264zTVE80Ltn8PQIirBp82ocPk1NL7y2MZkq2IoiWEqZUqyrOJG8xVs8CBZlXpFl0YPYugnE/s1600/NMG.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 329px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-7dSJpODwCkQUE2cbDk9QwZXuIqiNiM5lBVjOY54PMtsDaCZr9E4HQ6Duz7jalZLagXlr264zTVE80Ltn8PQIirBp82ocPk1NL7y2MZkq2IoiWEqZUqyrOJG8xVs8CBZlXpFl0YPYugnE/s400/NMG.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5495461641497912162" /></a><br />For all intents and purposes, I let time get away from me and I wasn’t able to finish my letter to the degree of liking I preferred. I knew I was working on a document that would define my existence and act as a launching pad for the future. Yes, I would be there in person to answer questions, but this letter would be left behind, something that could be added to family history. I like writing. I wanted to get it right. But it was all over the place. I couldn’t tie it all together. I was also surprised at how difficult it was to write because it encompassed a topic of such a personal nature. I could only work on it a little at a time, though the pressure was growing the days before the flight. I didn’t finish it in time.<br /><br />The night before the trip, I packed my suitcase and only got about three hours of sleep. Then before I knew it I was off to work on the subway with my things. I don’t even remember what I did that day. I probably was working to get things in order so they wouldn’t fall through the cracks while I was gone. Never before had I taken off more than two days of work in a row, so I was looking forward to the break, but I was just watching the clock waiting for the shuttle that would take me to the airport. The time came, I bid my coworkers farewell and, with a deep breath, took off on what seemed like the greatest adventure of my life.<br /><br />- - -<br /><br />The airport was chaotic, the flight overbooked. The airline offered two hundred dollars to reschedule, but I told myself they would have to add another zero on the end for me to even begin to consider rescheduling. I don’t think I could endure the waiting anymore than I absolutely had to. Once aboard the delayed flight, I tried to relax and read the rest of IQD. I bought the book to read ahead of my mom because I knew once I came out to her, she would head to Deseret Book. Knowing this would be what she would find, I wanted to read it preemptively. <br /><br />I had read and loved the beginning part about Stuart Matis. But the second part I found difficult to read. I don’t know if it was the attitude of the arguments or my unease and lack of sleep, but I found the writing to be labored and excessive, almost to the point of bemoaning same gender attraction with sackcloth and ashes. Needless to say, I didn’t get through the end. I think I dosed off for a few minutes, but I was still stressed and just wanted the flight to end. <br /><br />Four hours later after landing, I ran to baggage claim and waited for my suitcase to turn the corner of the carousel when a particularly attractive guy chose to stand right in front of me. I am hesitant to say this, but looking at him and feeling at least the superficial attraction that eye-candy garners, I still felt a bit guilty and ashamed of that reaction. I brushed it off like I always did, and when my bag appeared, I grabbed it and headed for the parking lot without looking back.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgiHiKt2iQkwWaNp4EO0CINfCeEtihJxm3ZzapxYN042L0FvthzS2MKUAPx90-NnlBk6uTTYGLZ5ZRebvCEQikIeL3JvKqKOBSUDaFqnVM6JriZrqMiCMH5HHM_g5oWn4nlJ7YViptw8chn/s1600/Baggage.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgiHiKt2iQkwWaNp4EO0CINfCeEtihJxm3ZzapxYN042L0FvthzS2MKUAPx90-NnlBk6uTTYGLZ5ZRebvCEQikIeL3JvKqKOBSUDaFqnVM6JriZrqMiCMH5HHM_g5oWn4nlJ7YViptw8chn/s400/Baggage.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5495461912539206850" /></a><br />My dad had come to pick me up and was there waiting. I loaded my things into the backseat and then hopped into the front, sharing a smile and a quick hug before we headed off. My dad is one of the most loving, gentle and caring souls I know, and it was refreshing to see him again. The conversation beyond initial pleasantries mostly focused on my physical appearance.<br /><br />I hadn’t seen him in six months, and in that time I had come out to myself and subsequently lost 45 pounds. I am actually still losing the weight. I realize that I had used weight as a protection mechanism against me accepting who I was. I reasoned that if I hated myself, so would everyone else. I had also wanted to punish my body for feeling the way it did. (Luckily, I am no longer in that tragic state of mind and am on my way to feeling and looking great!)<br /><br />On the way home we did have an interesting exchange. Between my mom and dad, I had supposed that my dad would be more agreeable to accepting my coming out news initially. I had actually been dropping subtle hints in the weeks leading up to the family reunion to prepare him. As he was driving, I mentioned in passing how great it was to be home. He replied that I would always be welcome at home. Seeing this as a perfect opportunity to prepare him further, I lightly replied, “I’ll hold you to that.” He gave me an awkward glance and a smile and the conversation moved on until we reached the house.<br /><br />I was mauled by my mom and my older sister the moment I stepped out of the car. (I had avoided mentioning the weight loss to anyone in the family and hadn’t posted any recent pictures of myself just so I could enjoy this moment.) They both were amazed with how I looked and wanted to know my secret and what diet I was on. I wasn’t about to tell them that the secret was coming out to myself and accepting who I was, but I managed to put together some answer about not being on a diet but simply being aware of what I ate, controlling portion sizes and recognizing when I was full. They were incredulous when I told them I had not exercised one bit to achieve the weight loss. My mom, always the one to be happy with children making healthy changes, was beside herself, though was a bit sad because she had gotten a shirt two sizes too big for me for the family photo. I told her not to worry about it and that we would make it work.<br /><br />We talked for a bit, enjoying the family being together again. I relish our family conversations. I never laugh so hard as when I do when I am with my family. The conversations are intellectual, joyful and exciting. Only getting together once or twice a year, we also have a lot to talk about. I was trying to enjoy it, thinking it may be one of the last normal conversations I’d have with them. I was determined to enjoy the next four days before I came out, appreciating every moment because I was convinced everything would change once I did. I went to bed that night both smiling over being with my close ones again and frowning at the sadness and conflict my news might mean to that familial unit.<br /><br />- - -<br /><br />The next morning we drove two hours to my uncle’s house. My uncle travels with his family during the summer and leaves behind a beautiful home complete with saltwater pool and slide, spa, basketball court, fire pits, barbeque, massive flat panel television and surround sound, pool table, foosball, air hockey and more. I was appreciative of everything to distract me from my own thoughts of dread. (I also secretly believe that my mom used the pool as an excuse to get us away from the city where we grew up just so we wouldn’t be tempted to meet up with any friends and thus steal time away from the reunion. She is an empty nester and wants to make the most of her family time, bless her heart.)<br /><br />The days were full of family activities like swimming, cooking, eating out, a water balloon fight, picnicking, going to a movie, celebrating a birthday, fireworks, playing card and board games, crafts and many more fun-filled excursions. My mom had created a whole schedule listing activities by the hour just to make sure we maximized the time we had together. Some of the non-traditional activities included a thirty-course blind palette taste test, a patriotic flag ceremony and devotional, a Deseret Industries thrift store scavenger hunt and a family fireside on patriarchal blessings. (Yeah, we are weird but in a good way, and we have a ton of fun!)<br /><br />I am glad we had so much scheduled fun because waiting until the last day to come out would have been unbearable had I not had planned activities to get me there. My family could tell something was up anyway. I was breaking out, something I do more when I am stressed. And this time it was bad. I wasn’t sleeping at all. I tried, but I was worrying so much and trying to work on my letter. I was texting more than usual (mostly to you fellow bloggers) to the point where my family thought I had a secret girlfriend (how wrong they were). I know I had wanted to enjoy the last few days of normalcy with my family, but I was beginning to think I should have just done it at first because I was slowly tearing myself apart, to the verge of breaking down.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEga561HlL1AAwWohBj_j4ai1yjz9hVq2DHepUNEX1UUPERapbK4BZPOiFzsJSgzFKQ8nm0D7rXY3czkOnpIlVOsZXlesmhhGH4eFkB1lx-GmYUs491GVnN0PnSXfLDRpC54u25IP5Cb2CRe/s1600/Chapel.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 308px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEga561HlL1AAwWohBj_j4ai1yjz9hVq2DHepUNEX1UUPERapbK4BZPOiFzsJSgzFKQ8nm0D7rXY3czkOnpIlVOsZXlesmhhGH4eFkB1lx-GmYUs491GVnN0PnSXfLDRpC54u25IP5Cb2CRe/s400/Chapel.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5495462081195760802" /></a><br />On one of our excursions, we headed to an old pioneer valley for church and a picnic lunch. There is antique chapel and a congregation that still meets there so we went for Sacrament Meeting. It was the Fourth of July and the day before I was planning on coming out. The service was very pleasant and quaint. After the sacrament had been distributed, the member of the bishopric who was conducting got up to start the testimony portion of the meeting. As is custom, he started with his own testimony which included some patriotic themes to honor the holiday. It was all perfectly fine until I heard the phrase, “and I know that the country is currently run by people influenced by the devil...” It just went downhill from there.<br /><br />The one thing I had going for me about coming out to my parents is that they are both members of the Democratic Party. Being a bit more open-minded than the usual conservative, cookie-cutter Mormon, I had hoped that this open-mindedness would extend to their only son. After a lovely picnic I was in the car with my mom on the way home. I brought up the interesting testimony which led to a fantastic political discussion including a conversation about the prejudices felt by Mormons who are Democrats living in conservative areas. I took the opportunity to ask my Mom there was anything on the Democratic platform that she did not agree with. Without skipping a beat, she responded “Gay marriage.”<br /><br />She qualified her comments by saying that she thought that they had the right to be together and that there were many loving partnerships with good people, but that the Plan of Salvation was about the family unit being sealed in the temple, which a gay couple simply could not do. I was a little dismayed but I understood where she was coming from. Family to her is everything, and a celestial family bound for the eternities has always been her unabashed goal. The conversation moved on to other topics, but my mind remained on what she had said. I wondered if her views would change at all learning about me, or if she would always be saddened for the family she expected but might not attain. I wondered if she would ever be able to support me getting married to another man.<br /><br />That night was the worst. I was worried and nauseous. I was up until 5 AM finishing my letter, thinking, praying, worrying, fidgeting and pacing. I was having second thoughts. Why was I doing this? Did I want to change everything? Were my feelings all that important in the eternal scheme of things? Was my happiness worth the sadness of my family? After a few calls to some friends (where I went into the garage to make sure I wasn’t heard at all), I calmed down and regained a level head, but I was still worried and exhausted. I was wrestling with myself, wrestling with the exact wording of the letter and wrestling with the decision to come out that I had thought I already made. Finishing the letter, I read it over once quickly to proofread it, posted it online and then collapsed onto the bed. In the chaos of my mind, sleep came slowly.<br /><br />- - -<br /><br />My sister knocked on my door early at 6 AM, asking if I were going on the sunrise hike. I grumbled that I wouldn’t be. I was, however, meeting an old friend for an early breakfast because that was the only time we could coordinate our schedules to do so. I roused myself, took a quick shower and headed out to an IHOP that was close by. I took my letter on a flash drive so I could print it somewhere in town because the house had no printer I could use. After a lovely breakfast, I drove around the city endlessly to find some store that was open. <br /><br />Because of the federal holiday, all of the FedEx, Kinkos and OfficeMax stores were closed as were the libraries and every other place I thought might have a printer for customer use. I started to think I would go crazy, having invested so much into writing this letter that I could not print! I finally found a Staples where the only employee there graciously printed out three copies of the letter for me. (I am pretty sure he got a good look at what it contained, but at this point I was just happy to have a physical copy I could give to my parents.)<br /><br />I got home and stashed the letters in my luggage along with NMG. I then proceeded to pack my things, just in case I needed to make a quick exit that evening. I didn’t think I would have another chance later in the day. Hearing the tales of the gorgeous sunrise hike coming from down the hallway, I joined my family as they returned and tried to act as if everything was normal for the rest of the morning.<br /><br />At some point, I made it my goal to tell my dad I needed to talk to him and Mom alone later that day. It was an awkward conversation because I had never really asked for anything like it before. He agreed, of course, and I proceeded to tell him that Mom might not enjoy the conversation too much and that I needed his help to perhaps step in and maintain the peace. This statement alone probably caused him to worry even more by the look on his face. I told him not to worry and that it was only a precaution. I don’t think that worked. He looked worried the rest of the day.<br /><br />Later in the afternoon, I was helping my mom with the laundry and I mentioned to her that I would like to speak to her and Dad privately sometime. She immediately responded quite emphatically, “I hope it isn’t bad. I can’t handle anything bad right now.” I wept on the inside. I took a beat and forced a smile. I don’t know where I got the strength from, but I replied that it was something good and left to go be alone to recompose myself.<br /><br />I don’t remember much about that afternoon. I was in a daze. I might have gone swimming or played some games. I don’t know. I was doing a lot of thinking and worrying. I had already told my parents I wanted to talk, so there was really no going back at this point. I was lost in a stupor of thought while sitting in the living room when all of a sudden my pensive musings were broken by my mom addressing me, asking, “How about now?”<br /><br />I snapped out of my daze to the realization I was alone with my parents in the living room. Everyone else had, amazingly enough, gone outside to play in the pool. I had supposed the conversation would happen later that night, not at that moment. It was so early still! My heart started beating out of control. I had to catch my breath. Thoughts raced through my mind. Was I ready for this? Can I blow off the whole thing? Where can I run and hide? Could I survive this? How would things change? Would my parents still love me? I was about to find out, right then. <br /><br />Accepting that this is what fate had in store for me, I responded affirmatively and said I would meet them in their room shortly after getting something from mine. Once in my room, I quickly sent out a mass text for support. I checked the many encouraging and loving comments on my letter I posted online and then fell to my knees and offered a quick prayer. I retrieved the letters and the book when my phone started to fill with additional thoughts of love and strength from many of you. I was invigorated and made the determination to go through with it and actually come out.<br /><br />Leaving my phone behind so I wouldn’t be distracted, I headed to my parent’s room. My hands shaking and clinging to the letter for dear life, I tried to take a few deep breaths to calm the butterflies in my stomach and to get my heart the oxygen it needed because it was pounding so quickly. Everything was about to change. For better or for worse, my and my parent’s realities would never be the same once I told them I was gay. I was seconds away from having the most important conversation of my life.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-8384128542673025352010-07-12T23:08:00.001-04:002010-07-12T23:09:49.836-04:00A Week of HappinessThe past week of being out and open with my parents and getting to know my true self has been pure bliss.<br /><br />The comfort of being gay, open and myself has been enveloping while the relief of the weight being shared is simply glorious. I don’t remember ever being this happy.<br /><br />I just got home from the two-week journey (with a red-eye flight and a day of work included). Though I am exhausted, the trip was one of the most worthwhile things I have ever done in my life.<br /><br />I cannot wait to write about the story of my coming out, parental reactions, meeting many of you fellow bloggers, lots of experiential firsts and some follow-up conversations with my parents (in addition to all of the other posts I owe you). I have a lot of writing to do!<br /><br />But at this instant, I must rest. So look forward to a flood of posts coming up soon.<br /><br />Happy One Week Anniversary!Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-64178524601185530692010-07-07T19:36:00.000-04:002010-07-07T19:37:30.426-04:00Parent’s Reaction to My Coming OutGood news! I wanted to let you all know that coming out to my parents went very well. I am happier now than I think I have ever been. Thanks you so much for your love and support!<br /><br />It was much harder than I thought it would be, but they reacted so amazingly well. I cannot describe the relief I feel.<br /><br />I am going to write a dedicated post on the whole experience as soon as I get the chance, but I wanted to update you all in the interim on the good news. Yay!Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-65930833893092680632010-07-05T05:47:00.005-04:002010-07-20T11:52:23.565-04:00My Coming Out LetterHere it is. My coming out letter. I haven't had the time I wanted or needed to really go over this, but here is what my parents are going to read this evening while I am in the room, ready to answer any questions they may have and give them a copy of "No More Goodbyes."<br /><br />This has been one of the most difficult, personal things I have ever written, and I appreciate all of your love, support and help that has gotten me this far.<br /><br />- - -<br /><br />Dear Mom and Dad,<br /><br />I have been writing this letter for 15 years. I have started and stopped many times, finished and deleted it over and over, and now I am trying again.<br /><br />I love you so much! I cannot describe how much our family means to me. You are the biggest support in my life, and the pillars of strength that you provide have been crucial. Thank you for raising me to be a good person, who seeks for the best in everyone and every situation. Thank you for raising me to love the Lord and His church. Thank you for the amazing job you have done. I don't know how you do everything you do. You are great examples for me to live up to. I love you.<br /><br />All my life, I have always wanted to please you as your son. Your respect means the world to me. One of my biggest fears in life is disappointing you, you mean that much to me. I would never want to cause you any grief or heartache. I have always tried to be a good son and bring you joy. I have never wanted to let you down. Please know that giving you this letter is by far the hardest thing I have ever done.<br /><br />All my life I have been guarded about my feelings. I am sure you have noticed. I don't open up. I don't share too much information about me personally besides the some of the week-to-week activities of my life. Much of this is because I don't like feeling vulnerable, and these mechanisms have been ones of defense and protection. I don’t open up because I don’t completely understand what is going on, and there is a clarion reason why.<br /><br />I am sharing with you something that is at my very core, something that I have hidden from the world, something that defines me, something that only the Lord and I know about and have conversed about regularly, if not daily. I am not sure if you have ever suspected, or maybe this will shock you, I do not know.<br /><br />Mom and Dad, I am gay. I have consciously known since I was in the fifth grade, and before that I was innocent enough to not realize it wasn't normal. Most importantly, I did not choose to be gay. It is the way I am, the way I have always been and the way I have felt since I can remember. It is my reality.<br /><br />I share this with you under complete confidence and would hope you hold this information to yourselves only and not tell anyone else, including all family, relatives and acquaintances for the moment. Please let me handle telling them and anyone else at my own pace and in my own way.<br /><br />It has taken me a lifetime to begin to understand it and I don’t fully. I don’t think I ever will. I am just coming to terms with it. I have never been attracted to women. Before, I thought it was out of respect and admiration of the female gender that I never wanted to pursue someone, hold hands or kiss. Now I understand that my heart just wasn’t in it. I have never been in love.<br /><br />I want to share a brief glimpse with you of what my life has been like. I do this so you can really know me. I am the same person, you just know more about me and hopefully this will lead to an openness of love between us. I really hope it will.<br /><br />Growing up in the church as a closeted gay young man has been beyond difficult, nearly impossible. I have always denied the attractions I felt, thinking if I was a better person or more holy or more dedicated to the church the feelings would go away. I have cried and pleaded with the Lord until my knees were bloody that he change me, that he heal me of the terrible burden I had been dealt. I have cried to Him in tears nightly asking why I was the way I was. Through all my dedication, work and devotion, I have never been changed and I still feel the way I do.<br /><br />In the church, I am taught that part of me is evil, that part of me is beyond forgivable, that I have a sickness to be cured, a malady that can be purged, that the part of me I had no choice in becoming is bad. I have been pressured into silence and fear that I could not openly discuss this issue. The church ignores it mostly. But I wanted to make very clear to you that I have never consciously chosen to do wrong. To me, it is as ridiculous as saying that everyone who is born with green eyes is sinful. I have never chosen to be gay.<br /><br />I am a good person. I am faithful and God-fearing. I am a servant. I am a good son. I am a good brother. I am a good uncle. I am a worker. I am temple worthy. I am a believer. I am the same person you knew this morning. But I am not happy.<br /><br />I have experienced happiness through our family, through the joys of others, through the gospel and through good times and experiences. But deep down inside, I’ve had only the outward appearance of happiness because I have been miserable to my core. The gnawing of my feelings was ever-present. At every moment of the day, during every waking hour, I could never escape who I was.<br /><br />I have been bottled up, not truly ever able to be myself. The church teaches me that I have a disease that can be healed, a wrong that can be righted, a burden that is to be carried throughout my life until I die and will be straightened out. Instead of addressing the personal issue of me being gay, the church classifies me as suffering same sex attraction or same gender attraction. Those terms remove the humanity and seem cold and clinical to me.<br /><br />Because of what I was taught and the gospel that I believe in, I have hated myself since I can remember. I hated that I didn’t fit in with the eternal plan. I hated that I couldn’t be myself. I hated my appearance. I hated looking into the mirror. I never understood how anyone could remotely like or want to be around a creature as wretched as I. My spirit has always been at war with my body. I tried to punish my body for feeling and reacting the way it did. I gained weight purposely as a defense mechanism so I would continue to hate myself.<br /><br />Having known so long, but never admitting I was gay, I created emotional and physical walls around me to protect myself from ever being true to myself. My support system is my family and the church. I even work around members and used that as a way to stay hidden from the world though I was there in plain sight. I actually think being a closeted gay man has enhanced my ability to empathize and perform the tasks at my work which require so much careful wording and subtlety. <br /><br />However, I was not being honest with myself or you. Not everything in my life been as peachy as I have painted it. In the darkness of my divided nature, I have suffered through many bouts of depression and fleeting thoughts of suicide. Please do not be worried. I know there is too much to live for, too much good that needs to be done, too much love that needs to be offered and too much service that needs to be performed for those malicious thoughts to last more than an instant. I like life, family and the gospel too much to give up that easily.<br /><br />In the church, I have been encouraged to marry the gay out of me. I was convinced if I tried harder I could change. I have hoped that finding the right girl might ignite a spark that would erase the feelings I have always known. I did and have done everything right. I forced myself to believe that if I could just get married to a girl then I would be committed enough to the gospel truths I know to continue to be faithful, make things work and do my very best to be the fantastic husband and father I know I can be. I so very much desire the peace of mind of having a place in the eternities. <br /><br />I was ready to get married. I was willing to do it. I was willing to live with my secret my whole life long to live the normal approved life I have always wanted. My senior year at BYU, I decided that I was going to make the ultimate sacrifice to deny my feelings and get married. I made the commitment. I bought the ring. I went to the temple and sought the confirmation from the Lord that the choice I had made was correct and approved of. I prayed, fasted and pleaded, showing the lord that I was willing to do anything for him and sacrifice anything to fit into the plan. But I did not receive the calming answer once I presented my decision.<br /><br />I had a stupor of thought. I felt bad about the marriage. I was so confused and lost, I didn’t understand. I thought that I had presented before the Lord was the right thing, part of the plan and the way things were going to be. But I simply felt that the marriage wasn’t right and I was frustrated that my offering to the Lord was not being accepted. I went back to the temple every day for two weeks straight, trying to ascertain the will of the Lord, to find my place and gain approval for the path I had determined would fit what I had been taught and knew to be true.<br /><br />In frustration at the answer I had received, I called you, Dad, in tears from the Provo temple parking lot and poured out to you more than I ever had before. The closest I ever came to telling you about my feelings was on that night, when I told you that my really only concern about the marriage was that I just didn't find her attractive. You calmed me. You helped me organize my thoughts and see the pros and the cons of each aspect of the marriage decision. You gave me great reasons to go through with it. You also said that there was no ticking time bomb, which was exactly how I felt. <br /><br />I was overwhelmed by the pressures of the church and of getting married at BYU. I was overwhelmed by family pressures to wed. I was overwhelmed by my own desire to fit in and be normal. When you said there was no ticking time bomb to getting married, the spirit flowed into me and confirmed that to me with such force. I was so surprised with the answer but accepted it. You said exactly what I needed to hear.<br /><br />Looking back, I am glad I didn’t get married my last year at BYU. Even though I was willing to devote everything to it, I have since come to the realization that getting married would be unfair to my wife because I could never truly love her to the fullest potential. But then, I supposed that I simply had not chosen the right person and the confirmation I sought was denied because I had not found the person I was meant to be with yet.<br /><br />Graduating from BYU, I tried to fill my time up with so many other things so I wouldn't have the time to think about my predicament. I dedicated myself completely to different causes so I could work my feelings into submission. I determined that since I couldn't change my feelings, I would just ignore them. I have become so good at compartmentalizing the pain and grief I feel that I don't know how to truly feel anymore. <br /><br />I continued dating, trying to find the person who the Lord would accept me marrying. Moving to New York, I still pleaded with the Lord to change me so I could live up to His and your expectations of me. I cried myself to sleep most nights thinking that if only I were better I could be made whole. I read my scriptures, went to church and went to the temple regularly, all searching for the answers I desired. I was still avoiding my feelings, keeping them hidden and secret. I didn’t understand, I still don’t, the “whys” of the attractions I feel.<br /><br />About four months ago, I reached a point of desperation. It wasn’t caused by anything in particular but by the combined experience and emotions of a lifetime of internal turmoil. Within my conflicted nature, I felt so alone. I felt like I could never tell you. I felt like I could never be accepted. I felt rejected by the church. I felt lost and confused and went to the only place where I knew I could attempt to sort things out before anything rash occurred. <br /><br />I fled to the temple out of concern for my own well-being and safety. Once there, I fell to my callused knees and prayed harder than ever before for the Lord to remove my burden, to be changed so I could be normal, so I could be free from the pitiful, rejected, pathetic, unlovable, deplorable, wretched, unwanted outcast I was. I cried, my heart broken, no longer wanting to be me, no longer wanting to fight, no longer wanting to live. <br /><br />Not receiving an answer, in my frustration and anger at myself, I asked the one last question I could think of, a question that I had never thought to ask before. I had never asked this question out of fear of the answer, of myself, of being rejected by my very Creator and thus doomed to exile and outer darkness which would have been too much for me. But I had come to a point where it was the only thing left to ask. <br /><br />I asked if He accepted me as I was: gay.<br /><br />That very instant, I felt such a sense of overpowering love from on high that I was overcome with emotion and almost collapsed. I felt the spirit and the love and the acceptance of God so strongly that it was tangible, like an embrace of a broken child who finally understood. Upon feeling that heavenly acceptance, the relief that washed over me felt like pure joy, a sensation I had long forgotten. I cried uncontrollably with happiness at the revelation I had just received.<br /><br />In that moment, I had a divinely inspired epiphany, a fundamental paradigm shift that I could be my gay self and still be loved and accepted by God. This completely new way of thinking and believing changed my whole outlook on life. I didn’t have a reason to hate myself. I didn’t have to be someone who I wasn’t. I didn’t have to hide. I was not alone.<br /><br />I know that we are meant to have joy. I want to be happy. I want to love and be loved. I still don't understand. I don't think I ever will in this lifetime. I know I face some agonizing decisions in the future and I don’t know what is next. I just know that the façade I have lived behind my whole life is no longer necessary. I can’t live up to my full potential behind those walls, ignoring and never addressing the issue I have compartmentalized away my entire existence.<br /><br />This is me. This is why I have never opened up and always shut down at the mere mention of dating, relationships and more. Perhaps with this new knowledge you can understand me more and love me more as your son. I have been prompted to share this with you, and it has taken more courage than I have in order to do it.<br /><br />I am gay. I have stopped trying to understand why. The world and the church have many differing views of the cause. It is not because of a lack of understanding of the gospel, not because of a biological aberration, not because of an emotionally distant father, not because of an overbearing mother, not because of living in New York and most definitely not because it was my choice.<br /><br />Please do not think of me as selfish or as taking the easy way out. This is not the easy way. The easy way would to be continuing to deny myself in the comforting veil of ignorance. I am not coming out to spite you or purposely anger you. I have no malicious intent and would never knowingly inflict harm or grief upon you. It has worried me to no end telling you this, to the point of being physically ill. I hope that this can be a turning point in our relationship, increasing the love and support between us.<br /><br />Please don’t feel ashamed of me or of yourselves. My being gay isn't because of poor parenting. I am the way I am, and I am starting to accept it rather than fight it. You are remarkable parents, my best friends and the biggest support in my life. I don’t know what I would do if you reject me. I don't know what I could do without you. I hope and pray you can still be a support and foundation in my life. I hope you don't shut me out. I am still the same person, the same loving son, the same soul. You just know me better. Now you can start to understand.<br /><br />I don’t want to be miserable my whole life long. I want to be happy. I am starting to be happy and comfortable with myself. It is a journey that may take some time. I am having to learn everything all over again. Being gay is only part of who I am. You know the rest of me. I love you. I want to make you proud. And I want you to know the real me.<br /><br />Once again, I implore you to not tell the rest of the family or anyone else yet. Please respect that. Right now, I don’t know what is next. I don’t know where I am being led in life. I have just accepted this myself and know difficult choices are ahead. I know that you will probably need to take some time to ponder, process and pray about this and talk it over, so I may be out of contact for a bit and there may be a time period where you and I need some space. Please take all the time you need, but know I stand ready and willing to talk like we always have at any time.<br /><br />Mom, Dad, love me for who I am. Instead of being disappointed, hope for the best and be happy for me. I am happier.<br /><br />Love your son,<br /><br />HorizonHorizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com15tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-25211196275060524252010-07-04T10:24:00.001-04:002010-07-04T10:25:50.583-04:00Tomorrow Changes EverythingI am one day away from coming out to my parents.<br /><br />The family reunion is going well, though I remain very busy with all of the scheduled activities. I am still trying to finish my letter in the free moments I do have. <br /><br />I am feeling nervous, scared, confident, timid, excited, afraid, proud, ashamed and everything in between.<br /><br />I vacillate between wanting to tell them and having second thoughts, though I know this will be one of the few opportunities that we can have this conversation.<br /><br />If there were ever a time I needed positive affirmation and some encouraging, loving thoughts, that would be now.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com16tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-50649673423453864972010-06-28T11:52:00.002-04:002010-06-28T11:55:03.183-04:00Coming Out a Week From TodayI have been so busy as of late that my blogging is falling behind (all for good reasons). I have been working on a special project that will be unveiled later today (more on that soon).<br /><br />However, I did want to give you an update on the topics of the posts I would like to write because exciting things have been happening:<br /><br /><ul><li>Unveiling the special project</li><li>My spectacular first date</li><li>Coming out to my best friend</li><li>My coming out letter to my parents</li><li>Going to NYC Pride</li><li>Meeting more MoHos</li></ul><br />And future topics I know I will post about:<br /><br /><ul><li>My family reunion</li><li>Actually coming out to my parents</li><li>My upcoming Salt Lake City trip</li></ul><br />So stay tuned. There are lots of exciting things happening on the horizon!Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-62717759172679317162010-06-21T18:06:00.004-04:002010-06-21T18:44:45.747-04:00Thoughts on the FiresideI am straying from my usual posts to offer a comment that I wrote on GMB's <a href="http://agaymormonboy.blogspot.com/2010/06/fireside-flak.html"target="_blank">blog</a> about the upcoming fireside that has taken the MoHosphere by storm:<br /><br />Coming from the perspective of someone who is still involved in the church, I think the fireside would have done two things for me: 1) It would have been a much needed comfort that my needs were at least being attempted to be met, providing a starting point and people to talk to rather than hiding, and 2) I would have been terrified to even go and show my face.<br /><br />I appreciate that this fireside is more about addressing needs. It was destined to become a lightning rod issue just because it is sponsored by the Church, meaning certain language has to be used. However, I find it hard to believe that in the breakaway sessions, people will not break the barrier of the wordage and address some critical issues. I think that this has the potential to be a really good fireside.<br /> <br />I think I would have been much better off not feeling so alone for so long. This fireside might serve as a catalyst for people coming out to their parents and leaders and revealing that as a group we exist and do not have to hide. The potential future relationships and openness from this single event could cause a lot of good.<br /> <br />The dialogue and the environment must be a safe one. I never felt safe enough to vocalize anything. An admission of being gay is a condition that really alters everything and you can’t go back to the way things were before. And honestly, I don’t know if I would have felt safe going to a fireside like this. <br /><br />I applaud that the dialogue is happening and that people have the option of going, but I do agree that impressionable minds will be in attendance and the framework provided to them as they begin their journeys of coming out will be key to the direction those journeys will take.<br /> <br />However, I think we may be giving too much credit to the power of this fireside. People are free to choose their own path, and simply because they attended this fireside, I don’t think they will be like lemmings toeing the church line. If it opens up the dialogue for them to find other resources, I think that people will really look for happiness, whether that be by staying faithful or exploring other options.<br /> <br />The unspoken endorsement of a Mixed Orientation Marriage is both inspirational and dangerous. Earlier in my life, I was desperate to get married, and seeing one that worked would have been a very convincing argument for keeping with bearing my burden in order to continue living in accordance to the gospel. <br /><br />Right now, at the beginning of his marriage, Ty’s viewpoint will be a bit too peachy, still in the honeymoon, to be able to be an accurate judge of the success of MOMs. In order for this not to be simply church propaganda, another viewpoint of a MOM marriage that did not work out would be necessary. I hope that this will come from the breakaway groups.<br /> <br />The two options that the church can endorse are MOMs and celibacy. And that is really where the rub is. Either of those options don’t really symbolize happiness, at least in my mind. This is a high risk, high reward fireside. I think that it will be a great night to provide a sense of community and open the dialogue, though potentially dangerous to endorse a specific course for people to follow. <br /><br />But I go back to my point, I think people are smarter and more aware than we give them credit. I think that for the most part, they will be able to take the good and then decide where their lives should go. Yes, there are a few who will believe that the words of the church are law, but I find that those who are gay wake up eventually.<br /> <br />There is no easy answer. But in the atmosphere of fear and silence, opening up and at least sending the message that this issue is one that CAN be talked about is the best benefit. For that alone, I would be OK with this fireside. <br /><br />I hope and pray that the information revealed will not be abused by leaders in the church. I hope that there isn't a child who is forced to go against their wishes. I know some people who would rather die than go to a meeting like this.<br /><br />The diversity of voices is crucial, rather than having just one source of “the answers.” I don't think this can be accomplished by protesting. I wish I could buy a hundred copies of No More Goodbyes and give them out to every attendee at the door, just to show that there are other options. Heck, even a flyer with the MoHo Directory's web address and a loving note on it would work.<br /> <br />It may not be ideal, but some action is better than none. But that is my opinion.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-86528434714942378002010-06-20T21:17:00.004-04:002010-06-20T21:22:12.510-04:00ConversationsBefore last weekend, I had only spoken out loud about being gay to one or two fellow bloggers over the phone. During those calls, I was in my apartment with my roommates (also Mormons), so I never really felt free to talk. I had to hide, use code words and beat around the bush while trying to make a point. Because of the paper thin walls, I haven’t felt like I could be myself even over the phone.<br /><br />Meeting <a href="http://agaymormonboy.blogspot.com/"target="_blank">GMB</a> in person was a refreshing respite from the closed off walls of my life as we talked about everything imaginable. In the time he was here, we had enjoyably long chats just about everywhere. Sure, gay and MoHo themed subjects dominated the conversation, but we were able to move beyond those. We are both academics at heart and were able to weave theory and past experience into our conversations with ease.<br /><br />Over the weekend we had ample time to chat. Essentially, though we did have a lot of fun, the conversations were what I was most looking forward to. I truly believe each person’s life is lived as a series of conversations. I think I got less sleep last weekend then I have in a long while due to conversations. Because of the combination of activities in the city, subway rides and long talks into the evening, I think I averaged going to bed at four AM each night (or morning!?!).<br /><br />Four particular conversations stand out in my memory, each happening at a different location. <br /><br />After the Broadway show, we went back to my work to get his things and then head to my apartment. In the corner office, where we went to see the view of New York at night below us, we both crashed on the plush chairs and ended up talking. We talked about the play and shared our reviews, but really that first night was more of a get-to-know-you. <br /><br />Amazingly, the first time I ever said “I’m gay” out loud happened while I was at my work – in the CEO’s office. (I sure hope that the office wasn’t bugged at all!) It was so foreign to hear my own voice saying that phrase I had known to be true for so long yet never uttered in my life. It made me pause, contemplating the magnitude of it. I learned so much that evening, both about him and about myself. Heading home on the subway late at night was a little tedious and took longer than normal, but we got in and chatted even more before heading to bed.<br /><br />- - -<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHp9QH-tg_kHb6hYQsAKMGlbWt8hxdOt4mfLYDFnaHfZPqXAYeoIN8wNXPN7W_lPm4r4asYXpPL1Es73vDIU3T_6ucWjwi2b87b1o4DgdgfkohBZ9Mw-CI0ulK8oPlA3YKFGo0epjt71OP/s1600/Met+Central+Park+Panarama+Small.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 108px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhHp9QH-tg_kHb6hYQsAKMGlbWt8hxdOt4mfLYDFnaHfZPqXAYeoIN8wNXPN7W_lPm4r4asYXpPL1Es73vDIU3T_6ucWjwi2b87b1o4DgdgfkohBZ9Mw-CI0ulK8oPlA3YKFGo0epjt71OP/s400/Met+Central+Park+Panarama+Small.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5485030319788738402" /></a><br />The next day, after sleeping in and cooking breakfast (strawberries and cream stuffed French toast with a chocolate drizzle – quite the threesome of flavors), we headed across Central Park to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, or the Met. Central Park was gorgeous on a bright summer day teeming with people from all walks of life doing their thing – dancing, skating, sailing, playing, reading, sleeping, busking, you name it.<br /><br />The Met was equally as glorious, with fantastic exhibits and things to see. We browsed around everything from modern art to Greek sculpture as well as seeing an intriguing and well-curated American women’s fashion installation and a huge Picasso exhibit. The extended conversation here had a running theme of how regionality influences art and literature, including examining the changes of personality and relative existence on creativity. (I warned you we are both academics at heart – we both discussed papers we would eventually like to write given the time and proper access to resources and research. Crazy, I know.)<br /><br />While we were discussing a stunning freestanding Mayan stela, the topic of regionality led to a side conversation on how I thought that when I come out to my parents they might think that living in New York actually made me gay, or at least contributed to it. This is a fascinating subject that I am working on another dedicated post discussing the differences between the east and west coast when it comes to open-mindedness, the church and coming out. So stay tuned for that one. <br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjGt3Vd1EVFZ8_AGSg2EYxwc1JBeiPuvZ0yGTGO7bLqE4gmubGxMsqJf55XMQxNX2AnDLxXYnpxkqqeMupuu7xHKiFZCwRteVrXciBb75U_MO4vuAC2tJGlRE-6WBD7zXJY9dAmDUJEh0cX/s1600/Met+Bearden.JPG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 174px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjGt3Vd1EVFZ8_AGSg2EYxwc1JBeiPuvZ0yGTGO7bLqE4gmubGxMsqJf55XMQxNX2AnDLxXYnpxkqqeMupuu7xHKiFZCwRteVrXciBb75U_MO4vuAC2tJGlRE-6WBD7zXJY9dAmDUJEh0cX/s400/Met+Bearden.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5485030748960401906" /></a><br />We had tasty dinner at the museum (I love museum food. I was raised on it.) and worked our way through more exhibits, discovering an exciting find every now and then that held special significance to either of us. The Met is so big it is possible to find treasures unknown inside and never be able to find the same spot again. We were trying to fit in as much as possible before we were politely ushered out of the museum around closing time, just missing the closing of the gift shop.<br /><br />From there, we walked and roamed around the city, stopping by the Apple store for the first time for both of us, Columbus Circle and Times Square. (One odd side note, there seemed to be an odd number of people speaking Portuguese walking around that night. We both noticed.) After gazing at the lights and commercial appeal of the crossroads of the world, we ended up at the best cheesecake place in the city, Junior’s.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjq5cTyV2_CJMUBpeGW9-TN9csFYXV6nP_CGLcUWpHZWDGdZC7P1Gj5wTZQ9y4hLFtcbxOakw_fglksZr8Qx2oepofSAl1tbFEBau42CC-1oMpi3BUnHicFZPyABYBr-N2bgMjLls2-A5Cf/s1600/Juniors+Bakery.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 266px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjq5cTyV2_CJMUBpeGW9-TN9csFYXV6nP_CGLcUWpHZWDGdZC7P1Gj5wTZQ9y4hLFtcbxOakw_fglksZr8Qx2oepofSAl1tbFEBau42CC-1oMpi3BUnHicFZPyABYBr-N2bgMjLls2-A5Cf/s400/Juniors+Bakery.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5485030494218494626" /></a><br />We selected our cheesecake from the plethora of flavors they offered and sat in the corner of their outdoor seating area, enjoying the perfectly mild night temperature. We both agreed that we are people watchers and enjoyed being in a place where we could just sit, eat, talk and watch those around us. The cheesecake was quite delicious and we ended up in an involved discussion about the MoHo experience, with the MoHosphere as a focal point.<br /><br />We talked about the types of MoHos that exist in the community as well as the phases of voices that cycle through. One aspect of our conversation that I found extremely intriguing was the perceived roles within the MoHo community and what responsibilities we assume in the collective group. Each of us has a different voice with stories to tell and that richness adds to the fabric of the growing conversation. <br /><br />Building on his interest in intertextuality, we thought it would be an interesting project to document and map the evolving MoHosphere to see the cycles, effects and relationships this online community has enabled and created. I don’t know when we would have the time to embark on such a challenging project, but it was captivating to think about, especially the MoHo Map. (Personally, I think that building unity is a good thing and that a map would aid us all, new voices and old, knowing that we are not alone in our pursuits.)<br /><br />Breaking from the conversation, we both realized that it was well past two AM and the restaurant had long since closed. We had been so involved talking at the little patio table for several hours, just the two of us, that the time just flew by. I guess the Chinese proverb “a single conversation across the table with a wise person is worth a month’s study of books” is true, for I learned so much and enjoyed the freedom of it all. Amazingly enough, for the first time I didn’t really care what other people might have thought of us being there so long, talking, laughing and enjoying ourselves. I was just so happy being able to talk unreservedly that I didn’t care what the world thought. <br /><br />- - -<br /><br />The last day he was in New York, we made the journey down to SoHo, a neighborhood known for its fashionable stores and vibrant culture. I have never been one for fashion so the experience was new for me, specifically learning what clothes can express about a person (especially socks, apparently). I think as I build up more confidence in myself and my body that I will be able to enjoy clothes more and create a style for myself other than the conservative business wear I have become so accustomed to. <br /><br />Talking along the way from store to store, from SoHo to Union Square and from fashion outlets to souvenir stands, I was entranced by the sheer idea of being comfortable. Having been guarded for so long, it is an enticing prospect learning to be comfortable with myself. Talking with someone who has apparently found that comfort was refreshing and confidence-building. The entire weekend, I so enjoyed our conversations.<br /><br />- - -<br /><br />Looking back hardly a week after, I am amazed at how fast the time has gone by, yet the conversations remain with me. Of all the things that happened this past weekend, I think the most significant development was vocalizing my thoughts and feelings through dialogue and honest, open conversations. I am not quite sure how to explain it, but sharing and interacting with another person in the flesh brought about a sense of comfort and concreteness. It is liberating to be accepted and understood, and having that validation face to face brings a calm reassurance that a gay closeted Mormon can only imagine.<br /><br />Yes, GMB and I saw and did some amazing things this past weekend. (My next and last post in this series will document perhaps one of the most spectacular events New York City has to offer.) But my favorite part of the weekend were the conversations.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9017819815587524377.post-10171868246000533262010-06-17T01:02:00.014-04:002010-06-19T23:59:26.240-04:00Face to FaceThis past weekend I had the opportunity to take a big step forward: I got to meet one of you face to face! I have determined to write a three-part series to try to document the occasion and share it with you. This is obviously the first part.<br /><br />As always, my home stands open to anyone who wants to visit the Big Apple. I love to host and help my friends out in whatever way I can. <a href="http://agaymormonboy.blogspot.com/"target="_blank">GMB</a>, who I started chatting with online a few months ago, had the opportunity to come to the east coast and spend a few days in Manhattan after another trip and had asked if he could stay. I was so happy that he took me up on my offer, and we planned to make the most out of his time. (I will write more about one specific shared adventure in my third and last post in this series. Believe me, it will be well worth the wait.)<br /><br />Now, I must walk you through some of my thoughts and feelings as I geared up to meet this fellow MoHo blogger. I am a pretty level-headed guy, down to earth and outwardly confident. Nothing really fazes or surprises me. But when I realized I was going to meet someone else in person who knew I was gay, I was instantly discombobulated. I had never seen anyone in person who knew! My emotions were quite the uncontrollable roller coaster ride.<br /><br />Existing behind the comforting veil of technology in a somewhat anonymous state, I have been at ease interacting with the MoHosphere. I have always been a better writer than a speaker, and online I can craft my image and emotions through well-placed words and thought-out phrases. I can be witty through the written word and use emoticons in place of my face to convey more emotion. Even through instant messaging and text messages, I can think through what to say and feel out the words in my mind as I physically type out the consonants and vowels. <br /><br />But meeting someone in person, that comforting veil of technology was about to come crashing down and reveal the man behind the curtain. I was to be exposed for nothing more or less than who I am. Surprised with that thought, I instantly began to feel insecure, worried and self-conscious about myself, my mannerisms, my voice, my clothes, my body, my face, my lack of knowledge about gay culture, everything. I wondered if I was ready to meet someone who knew. I wondered if I would even be able to talk intelligently or if my body would just shut off all flow of knowledge from my brain to my mouth. I wondered if this would all be worth it.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjezY8xVi7BrVDkR7-qtd8nad44XzZzPchp-r77NHfNHdraVKj8T7xnhZEPvANQ94JXs7BmBo9W7zx6WxRAxiUKkJ6ymSiveWy0YNEt4QOVObuZJuLRfCnTRF1oMemIUIU2AqDTRvalAdvy/s1600/Peeking.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 264px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjezY8xVi7BrVDkR7-qtd8nad44XzZzPchp-r77NHfNHdraVKj8T7xnhZEPvANQ94JXs7BmBo9W7zx6WxRAxiUKkJ6ymSiveWy0YNEt4QOVObuZJuLRfCnTRF1oMemIUIU2AqDTRvalAdvy/s400/Peeking.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5483604061039878882" /></a><br />I spent the days before he came preparing for his visit by cleaning pretty much anything that could be cleaned around my apartment. I mopped, washed, vacuumed, laundered, polished and dusted anything I could see or reach. Heck, I even cleaned out the fridge just in case he looked inside. I was determined that even if I wouldn’t be able to function normally, the things I could control, like the cleanliness of my apartment or planning and making certain events happen, would be top-notch. I got to bed late that night and didn’t get much sleep. <br /><br />The morning came early and with a two and a half hour nap, I was up and off to the theater district at 5 AM. One of the things he wanted to do most was to see a specific play on Broadway that had special meaning to him, an exceptional one that has a limited run and has been sold out for the past two months. It is one of the hottest tickets on Broadway and almost impossible to get unless you are comfortable with paying about the same as a month’s rent for a two hour show. <br /><br />However, I had done my research and knew of only one remaining way to get tickets. When the show's sold out, there's a slim possibility that standing room tickets will be made available to the public only to be sold the day of the performance when the box office opens in the morning. That was my shot! I really wanted to make this happen for him, and I was determined to get the tickets, so I headed to midtown earlier than I had ever before to claim my spot in line and hope that the tickets would be available. <br /><br />Arriving around six, I saw that there were five people ahead of me who must have had the same idea and dedication as I did waiting for the box office to open. I hoped that there would be enough tickets for all of us, so I waited. About twenty people lined up after me in the minutes that followed. Four hours later (and an hour into when I normally start work, shhh, don’t tell!) the box office opened, and I waited with baited breath to see if I had arrived early enough. Slowly working my way to the front, I was relieved and rejoiced to get the second to last tickets available that night. Had I arrived a mere five minutes later than I did, I wouldn’t have gotten them!<br /><br />I texted him excitedly that I had gotten the tickets and then ran to work, worried about arriving a bit late. Everything ended up fine, and I tried to carry on as normal for the rest of the work day even though I was exhausted. I was working on deadline on a significant writing project that day, and I still can’t believe I got it done in time. I wasn’t able to concentrate. I couldn’t think. My mind was wandering. I was worried that my phone battery might die. I was worried if it started raining. I was worried about if I had the tickets and checked to make sure I still had them constantly throughout the day. Though not soon enough, the time came when I got the text from him that he had arrived.<br /><br />I texted back that I would meet him outside my building so he could drop off his things before we started our evening’s activities which were located near where I work. Gathering my nerves, I descended the elevator and silently prayed my mind wouldn’t shut down when I met him. Heading out the door of the lobby, I looked around at the hundreds of people moving about, getting off of the bus, coming up from the ground from the subway. It’s a city of strangers. Some come to work, some to play. I was looking around knowing that we were trying to find each other in the crowded streets. Making one more call, we connected. I saw him, standing with his luggage on the far corner of the street on a slightly raised walkway.<br /><br />There he was. This was it. I was about to be seen. I was about to be known. I took a breath and then crossed the street.<br /><br />I waved and caught his attention then went up to meet him. Sharing a quick embrace and saying hello, we had officially met and that was that. From the moment he said my name with a smile on his face, just like he had said my name when he was the first to discover who I was online, the insecurities and worries vanished and I was able to be myself, calm, cool and collected. Offering to take his luggage, we headed back across the street to my office as instant friends.<br /><br />Inside, I was no longer worried. I was confident again. I was myself again. I had been worrying for no reason because I had just been accepted for who I was, no questions asked. I had met someone face to face who knew I was gay and suddenly for that instant the burdens of hiding my true self from the world no longer bore their weight on my shoulders.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjPFl2wMNt4SSVorjYJwGoJBnUJYyhkqJAZ7AgnBcNQS7PkPWlv-2M8CpfyDUrwP5eONlg87xr_inSgS2BiZdL5g1bEuPB9AgaPYCkkmla-sKVV0Vo8ceOsV898LwFyGALu1JGsTtb9o7Yw/s1600/Times+Square.JPG"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjPFl2wMNt4SSVorjYJwGoJBnUJYyhkqJAZ7AgnBcNQS7PkPWlv-2M8CpfyDUrwP5eONlg87xr_inSgS2BiZdL5g1bEuPB9AgaPYCkkmla-sKVV0Vo8ceOsV898LwFyGALu1JGsTtb9o7Yw/s400/Times+Square.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5484700328497411218" /></a><br />We dropped off his things and I introduced him to my colleagues like an old friend. Soon after, I showed him around Times Square, delighting in the look of pure wonder on his face as he witnessed the crossroads of the world. We talked, easily communicating and connecting like any two normal people would. We grabbed a quick bite to eat near a wide, low pool and fountain before heading to the play. Entering the theater, we found the spot where we would be standing and then eagerly waited for the play to begin as we watched the people around us getting settled. Soon the lights dimmed, the audience quieted and the performance began.<br /><br />The play was masterfully performed. It is powerful enough on its own to stand the test of time while communicating so much universal experience through such a simple story. During a particularly moving part near the end, I chanced a glance at my newfound friend and witnessed for myself how much seeing the play meant to him. It was his first Broadway experience. I turned back to the stage smiling to myself, knowing that the efforts I had gone through to get the tickets were appreciated. I let that happiness fill me up as we stood as friends watching side by side. <br /><br />Looking back at the entire experience I feel so silly about the childish and unreasoned thoughts and feelings that raced through my head in the hours leading to our meeting up. Having been surrounded by self-imposed walls (and fences) my whole life, it was a relief to tear some down and let in a little light and fresh air. The power of simply being accepted for who I am was so significant, yet sublime, that I can only look back and smile.<br /><br />I had a friend who I’d met in real life, face to face, who knew I was gay. He wasn’t just a pseudonym on a screen or a Facebook profile anymore, but a living, breathing human being who understood and accepted me. All of me. I could be free, I could be confident, I could be myself, and I discovered for the first time after a long while what it really feels like to be happy.Horizonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02302120147903111060noreply@blogger.com7