Over the past few weeks since my big friend fallout on Facebook, I've been thinking about what happened with the breakdown in communication. Why did it break down? And why did it break down so badly?
I had a lapse in good judgment, vented publicly some old hurts, didn't use the best choice of words, and managed to offend some, despite the fact that none of it had been directed at them or anyone in particular. Sometimes I'm rational; sometimes I'm not. That time I was not. When others rant and vent about things, whether it's directed at me or not, I have an understanding about what is going on. I know that they may be irrational, that what they are saying is not really about me. I know not to take it personally. That's why I allow others the space to vent. But I had forgotten that not everyone has that same understanding and some things I said were taken personally.
There was no way I could help them see the error in what they were saying, believing, and assuming about my meanings or intentions. But that didn't really matter; I didn't know what my intentions were at the time, which was why I was venting. We were talking past each other. So I just stopped talking all together and let the other person say what they needed to say and believe what they wanted to believe, about me.
All these years of progress, of letting go and moving on, trying to become a whole, self-defined individual, by reprogramming my thinking, vocabulary, humor, self-expression and identity; they all had no idea of who I was anymore, what I was about, why I felt the way I did. And I was trying to explain it. Albeit, poorly, but I was trying. They just didn't understand; they also didn't really care. They, for the most part, really wanted me to return to the way I used to be. That wasn't possible. So in the end, I lost their friendship. This was more than a stupid Facebook de-friending; this was the real deal.
But, was losing them as friends really what hurt so much? No, what really hurt was the profound realization that when leaving the Mormon religion, letting go of god and all such religious belief, learning about a bigger picture of the world and how it worked, I had actually lost my ability to communicate with them. I had lost my ability to see things through the eyes of Mormon politics, theology, culture and dogma. I can still understand all these things, but I no longer understand them from the point of view of a believer. But, when I was a believer, my understanding of them troubled me. Could that have been because I was never a true believer? Or was I simply noticing things that others were not seeing? And then getting frustrated and hurt as any attempt I made to describe or inquire about my observations were mocked and dismissed.
It reminds me of the story, Flatland by Edwin A. Abbot, a story that has had a subtle but profound impact on my life ever since I was introduced to it in 1986. In that story there was a Square who lived in a two dimensional (2D) world who suddenly, albeit with much drama, found himself in a three dimensional (3D) world. After that experience, no matter how hard he tried, he was never able to convince anyone in the 2D world about the 3D world. That's what happened to me. I could no longer see it only in 2D; I had the 3D version. And the 3D language wouldn't translate to 2D without losing much of its information and meaning.
But, unlike the Square, who seemed perfectly content to live in 2D, until he was forced into the 3D, I was never satisfied by 2D. It had stopped working for me. I saw too many contradictions and conflicts. Many were essentially swept under the rug, and dismissed by those who claimed to have all the answers. I needed something different, deeper, more meaningful and more applicable to now rather than only looking at that the imaginary future. So I took a different path and learned things about my world that now make sense to me. But they all seemed diametrically opposed to what everyone else believed. At which point the communication gap went from a crack to canyon. And all this time, I hadn't realized just how big that canyon had become. And just like in the story, the misunderstandings across that divide would often elevate to frustrations, insults, and conflict. Especially when I was reminded of the hurt I had felt while living in my old 2D world.
I can't force anyone to see things from my point of view. All I can do is just say it and those who are looking will find it. That's how it worked for me; I went looking for it. But now that I've found it, I want to talk about it. But, not everyone will like what I say. I know it's not my problem even though they all may think it's my problem. I have to let them believe what they wish, and if that means they want to believe I'm a bad person, then that is their right.
I'm not saying this to mean that I'm better than they are. 3D vs. 2D is not an "us" vs. "them" idea. It's just that in one particular aspect of our lives we don't see things from the same perspective and understanding. My thinking shifted perpendicular to theirs. What they see as a circle, I can now see as a sphere or a cone, or a cylinder. All they see is a circle. But the huge irony of all this is that we both claim to have "the big picture".
Throughout the story of Flatland, there are several events where a higher dimensional being is trying to communicate to a lower dimensional being about what they really are, and failing every time. The only time it was successful was when one of those beings, the Square, was physically moved into the 3D space. At which point it all became clear to him. But by doing so, he crossed a line that could not be uncrossed. And even though, in the end, he remained trapped in the 2D world forever, his thinking had permanently changed the way he viewed that world.
And like the Square, there just isn't any way I can go back to thinking in 2D. 3D is so much more engaging, enlightening and rewarding. And there is a hell of a lot of stuff in 3D to learn and experience. I just can't spend a lot of time thinking in 2D anymore. And yet, I must caution myself. The Sphere in his arrogance, refused to accept the Square's suggestion that higher dimensions were thinkable. And quickly showed that he was just as limited in his thinking in 3D as the Polygons were in 2D or the Line was in 1D. Those worlds worked for them just fine and they saw no reason to look beyond them.
In my haste, I've found myself getting too attached to my new 3D world and assuming that it is a complete picture, and in my own arrogance have tried to force in on others who have no desire to know if it. Also, my attachment has in the past closed me off from discovering 4D, 5D, 6D and so on, in other areas, until something drastic hits to knock me out of it. The funny thing is it took a nervous breakdown to make that "leap of faith" in to the 3D realm for me. I would hope that it doesn't always have to take such drama to gain new perspectives. Many people seem to have done it without all the drama; it seems silly to keep doing it with all the drama. But, I guess that's probably a bit optimistic to make such an assumption. Whether that drama is internal or external, there is always going to be drama. The Sphere was offended and chastised the Square for suggesting that 4D or 5D could be possible. And the Square was imprisoned in 2D for attempting to talk of the 3D world, which had been made illegal. At least it was better than execution, which was the other option. And in all cases, the object in the higher dimension would arrogantly try to impress upon those in a lower dimension a differing view of the world. Conflict ensued. Drama.
I guess the easy thing to do is just say nothing, keep it too myself and shut myself off from the world in order to avoid the pain of rejection and ridicule. Or, say something, and just accept that all my old friends believe that I am their enemy. Compartmentalize, perhaps? I don't know. I really hate it when people tell me that if my friends can't accept me now, then they never really were my friends. Is that really true? I just don't buy it. Or, am I just stubbornly trying to hold on to the past? I prefer to think that we can no longer have expression in friendships because we no longer speak the same language. Or is that just being naive? I would hope not. I've had friendships suddenly "come back" to me the second I found myself in 3D. When all that time I thought they had turned their backs on me, they were really there, just standing outside my range of vision, waiting for me to turn and face them.
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Saturday, February 19, 2011
My Rejected Ensign Article
I was pondering once about how everything on earth seems to have a purpose and how it seems to be perfectly designed for our benefit, a good example being the banana, a natural food that is healthy and fits perfectly in my perfectly designed hand on my perfectly designed body. Bananas being a perfect food should be eaten frequently, so I eat a lot of them!
But one day, I noticed something seemed to be off. I wasn't feeling the spiritually upbeat feelings that I have always felt. And I soon found myself on the toilet trying to poop but I couldn't. I pushed as hard as I could. I didn't understand what could have gone wrong. Could I have eaten too many bananas? This supposedly natural bodily process of a bowel movement was becoming especially difficult and increasingly uncomfortable, as it seemed to linger half way out of my butt.
It caused me to doubt for a moment if God had really made everything perfect. If we really were perfectly designed, then why can’t I poop? It seems like something is messed up in how this natural process was supposed to work. If I’m supposed to be designed to poop, than why is it so difficult sometimes? Why would I have to work so hard to poop? I began to curse God! Why would God to that?
I was having a crisis of faith.
But then, something amazing happened, which gave me pause and later shame for feeling any doubts. When the poop finally slid out and plopped in the toilet, it made a perfect splash that hit me right square in the bum hole! It was amazing! The cool water sent shivers up my spine and I knew it was the Holy Ghost witnessing to me the truth of our perfect existence and divine potential.
What I was witnessing first hand, was a natural cleansing process. The water splash in the perfect spot to render toilet paper and other man made cleaning to be unnecessary. How could that be an accident? That had to be designed that way! By an intelligent designer, Heavenly Father! The natural world and all its creatures were truly designed to be self cleaning! We may not be able to lick ourselves clean like a dog or cat but God didn’t intend for us to be cleaned that way. He created a way for us to be cleaned naturally by making our poop splash water on us in the right place when we poop.
It was at that moment I became convinced that even though we may not always first understand the purpose of all things, with faith in God and the power of the Holy Ghost, all things will be revealed to us. Line upon line, precept on precept, all things will be revealed in time as long as we obey His prophets and trust that everything works in harmony as God has designed it. God is the creator of all things and has Intelligently Designed a way for us to be cleansed of all ungodly filth by immersion in the holy waters of anal baptism. And again, through Christ’s Atonement, we will be cleansed spiritually of dirty thoughts about playing with our bums in ways that could make us gay.
But one day, I noticed something seemed to be off. I wasn't feeling the spiritually upbeat feelings that I have always felt. And I soon found myself on the toilet trying to poop but I couldn't. I pushed as hard as I could. I didn't understand what could have gone wrong. Could I have eaten too many bananas? This supposedly natural bodily process of a bowel movement was becoming especially difficult and increasingly uncomfortable, as it seemed to linger half way out of my butt.
It caused me to doubt for a moment if God had really made everything perfect. If we really were perfectly designed, then why can’t I poop? It seems like something is messed up in how this natural process was supposed to work. If I’m supposed to be designed to poop, than why is it so difficult sometimes? Why would I have to work so hard to poop? I began to curse God! Why would God to that?
I was having a crisis of faith.
But then, something amazing happened, which gave me pause and later shame for feeling any doubts. When the poop finally slid out and plopped in the toilet, it made a perfect splash that hit me right square in the bum hole! It was amazing! The cool water sent shivers up my spine and I knew it was the Holy Ghost witnessing to me the truth of our perfect existence and divine potential.
What I was witnessing first hand, was a natural cleansing process. The water splash in the perfect spot to render toilet paper and other man made cleaning to be unnecessary. How could that be an accident? That had to be designed that way! By an intelligent designer, Heavenly Father! The natural world and all its creatures were truly designed to be self cleaning! We may not be able to lick ourselves clean like a dog or cat but God didn’t intend for us to be cleaned that way. He created a way for us to be cleaned naturally by making our poop splash water on us in the right place when we poop.
It was at that moment I became convinced that even though we may not always first understand the purpose of all things, with faith in God and the power of the Holy Ghost, all things will be revealed to us. Line upon line, precept on precept, all things will be revealed in time as long as we obey His prophets and trust that everything works in harmony as God has designed it. God is the creator of all things and has Intelligently Designed a way for us to be cleansed of all ungodly filth by immersion in the holy waters of anal baptism. And again, through Christ’s Atonement, we will be cleansed spiritually of dirty thoughts about playing with our bums in ways that could make us gay.
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Saturday, January 29, 2011
How Not To Love
I have a complicated ego. (Don't we all?) It shields me from reality, keeping me lost in the sea of its preconceived notion of itself. And then shields me from the crap that its preconceived notion emits by rationalizing it into something else. Ultimately, how I end up seeing myself is completely different from how others see me. Who gets the correct view of whom I am? Neither. Both are pretty much fucked up.
When it comes to shit like that, friendships can be, and will get, utterly destroyed. And my ego, in its attempt to take the moral high ground by attempting to not judge their responses, can't see what harm has been done to that other person. Completely oblivious really. It's so messed up.
What it ultimately comes down to is my ego butting heads with someone else's ego. And my ego will not let me see that that is what I'm doing. Yes, my battered and bruised ego, injured from decades of abuse, screams out acidic tirades in frustration, all the while telling me it's simply expressing a truth that other people need to understand. No concept of whether it's appropriate or even relevant. It's oblivious to that reality. And then my ego has the audacity to be confused and offended, if that screaming is rejected, dismissed or challenged.
So what am I going on about?
Me shoving my Dirty Laundry into other people's faces.
No one likes that shit. No one. It's a lose-lose. Always has been, always will be.
I would have imagined that in time I could open up to people. Come out of the closet about this blog. To remove the anonymity and let it stand as a connection to my past. Show how I've worked through things, and come to learn who I am. But now, I'm not so sure this blog should exist. It may need to disappear completely and permanently off the Internet. I may need to disappear completely and permanently off the Internet too.
All the plans I had, wiped out by my own arrogance and smug self-righteousness. Oblivious I was. Fucking oblivious. Patting myself on the back for all the great work I've done only to find I've done nothing but make enemies where I had none before. They had done NOTHING to me. They had been patiently putting up with my bullshit for DECADES. They had defended me and stood-up for me when I was at my most assholishness. They didn't give a shit that I was gay. They didn't give a shit I left the church. And then, I turn around and spit on them to feed my little bruised ego. What was I trying to gain from that? A reason to say, "Oh poor me. Look, see, no one really likes me." Self induced pity. This entire blog has turned into a pity party for me. What the fuck was I thinking?
I don't care if people think that they shouldn't have been offended by what I was doing. That's no excuse. Why? Because deep down I knew that what I was doing was going to offend. I may not have known why, or how or who specifically, but I did know it would offend, on purpose. I was trying to push buttons.
I have written and spoken at times about how it is not my responsibility to protect other people's view of the world by compromising who I am. I still mean it. It's just that in this case, I crossed the line and compromised myself in an attempt to selfishly destroy someone else's view of the world. That's a big difference! When my view of the world changed, it wasn't because someone was shoveling it on me. I did it on my own because I needed to do it. But then I snapped. Something had triggered my pain. I quickly forgot my experiences and selfishly expected that others needed their world view changed. Even when it was working perfectly well for them, maybe even better than the one I was currently trying to shovel. It was pure hypocrisy from a lapse of self-awareness.
I can say it like I see it but it doesn't matter if buttons are purposely pushed. They will only create conflict and close hearts, hearts that have been so willing to work with me and let me be myself. Hearts that put up with the button pushing until it became so toxic that they had to shut down to protect themselves from annihilation. Pushing to that point is poison. It's healthy to remove toxic people from your life. But I didn't realize that I would be the toxin. I lost my awareness of that.
But get this, even though I had been pushing buttons for decades, the weird thing was, only recently had I become aware I had been purposely pushing buttons. That seems odd, doesn't it? The ego was in charge, and I was oblivious. I had not understood how stupid it was. How destructive, how evil. In fact, my ego thought it was just the way I do things. I even told people in all confidence that I'm the type that needs to test people. As if "on purpose" wasn't really "on purpose". I really thought I had figured that part out. I was proud of myself. Oblivious to what it really truly was. Oblivious to what others already knew. A character flaw, personality disorder, mental illness, whatever. It is all those things but most importantly, to the unbeknown victim, it is the definition of an asshole.
But then I realized what I was doing was wrong. I understood that it was a flaw, I understood its error and acknowledged it, I even stopped doing it, or so my ego told me. No, I hadn't stopped doing it at all. I had only stopped doing it to new friends. I was still doing it to my old friends. I wasn't aware that my habitual, destructive behavior had not gone away. I was still a raging asshole. After all these years, after all I've gone through. Still, a raging asshole.
I need to forgive myself and move on. The damage is done. No amount of apology will be believed at this point. I brought that on myself. It's over. Some may forgive me. I may never know. I don't know what else I can do other than take the punches as they are returned. And they are still punching. It's their right.
I could say that I love my friends but if I really do, then I would be letting them live their life just like they have been letting me live mine. So until I can lean to do that, I'm not capable of truly loving someone. But, I want to love, so I'm going to keep trying.
You know, this entire blog was set up to air my Dirty Laundry. I haven't always used it for that but that's what its main purpose was. Why on earth would I think that anyone would want to read it? And I hope that no one finds it. Because if they think the shit I put on Facebook was offensive, most of which I don't even write, wait until they read the drivel here.
And that's another thing, if I could just fucking stop airing my Dirty Laundry on Facebook. Of all the places not to do that, Facebook would be the one. There really are places I can go which would be appropriate, for one, the therapist's chair, and here, once I make it a private blog. It will do no good to try and erase the past. The internet has made that impossible. I'll have to own up to it eventually.
I do not pity myself for all this mess, so for hell's sake don't pity me. I believe this is the essence of the human condition, to live, learn, and love. I'm doing my best with what I have and there are bumps along the way. And what I've learned so far is how not to love.
When it comes to shit like that, friendships can be, and will get, utterly destroyed. And my ego, in its attempt to take the moral high ground by attempting to not judge their responses, can't see what harm has been done to that other person. Completely oblivious really. It's so messed up.
What it ultimately comes down to is my ego butting heads with someone else's ego. And my ego will not let me see that that is what I'm doing. Yes, my battered and bruised ego, injured from decades of abuse, screams out acidic tirades in frustration, all the while telling me it's simply expressing a truth that other people need to understand. No concept of whether it's appropriate or even relevant. It's oblivious to that reality. And then my ego has the audacity to be confused and offended, if that screaming is rejected, dismissed or challenged.
So what am I going on about?
Me shoving my Dirty Laundry into other people's faces.
No one likes that shit. No one. It's a lose-lose. Always has been, always will be.
I would have imagined that in time I could open up to people. Come out of the closet about this blog. To remove the anonymity and let it stand as a connection to my past. Show how I've worked through things, and come to learn who I am. But now, I'm not so sure this blog should exist. It may need to disappear completely and permanently off the Internet. I may need to disappear completely and permanently off the Internet too.
All the plans I had, wiped out by my own arrogance and smug self-righteousness. Oblivious I was. Fucking oblivious. Patting myself on the back for all the great work I've done only to find I've done nothing but make enemies where I had none before. They had done NOTHING to me. They had been patiently putting up with my bullshit for DECADES. They had defended me and stood-up for me when I was at my most assholishness. They didn't give a shit that I was gay. They didn't give a shit I left the church. And then, I turn around and spit on them to feed my little bruised ego. What was I trying to gain from that? A reason to say, "Oh poor me. Look, see, no one really likes me." Self induced pity. This entire blog has turned into a pity party for me. What the fuck was I thinking?
I don't care if people think that they shouldn't have been offended by what I was doing. That's no excuse. Why? Because deep down I knew that what I was doing was going to offend. I may not have known why, or how or who specifically, but I did know it would offend, on purpose. I was trying to push buttons.
I have written and spoken at times about how it is not my responsibility to protect other people's view of the world by compromising who I am. I still mean it. It's just that in this case, I crossed the line and compromised myself in an attempt to selfishly destroy someone else's view of the world. That's a big difference! When my view of the world changed, it wasn't because someone was shoveling it on me. I did it on my own because I needed to do it. But then I snapped. Something had triggered my pain. I quickly forgot my experiences and selfishly expected that others needed their world view changed. Even when it was working perfectly well for them, maybe even better than the one I was currently trying to shovel. It was pure hypocrisy from a lapse of self-awareness.
I can say it like I see it but it doesn't matter if buttons are purposely pushed. They will only create conflict and close hearts, hearts that have been so willing to work with me and let me be myself. Hearts that put up with the button pushing until it became so toxic that they had to shut down to protect themselves from annihilation. Pushing to that point is poison. It's healthy to remove toxic people from your life. But I didn't realize that I would be the toxin. I lost my awareness of that.
But get this, even though I had been pushing buttons for decades, the weird thing was, only recently had I become aware I had been purposely pushing buttons. That seems odd, doesn't it? The ego was in charge, and I was oblivious. I had not understood how stupid it was. How destructive, how evil. In fact, my ego thought it was just the way I do things. I even told people in all confidence that I'm the type that needs to test people. As if "on purpose" wasn't really "on purpose". I really thought I had figured that part out. I was proud of myself. Oblivious to what it really truly was. Oblivious to what others already knew. A character flaw, personality disorder, mental illness, whatever. It is all those things but most importantly, to the unbeknown victim, it is the definition of an asshole.
But then I realized what I was doing was wrong. I understood that it was a flaw, I understood its error and acknowledged it, I even stopped doing it, or so my ego told me. No, I hadn't stopped doing it at all. I had only stopped doing it to new friends. I was still doing it to my old friends. I wasn't aware that my habitual, destructive behavior had not gone away. I was still a raging asshole. After all these years, after all I've gone through. Still, a raging asshole.
I need to forgive myself and move on. The damage is done. No amount of apology will be believed at this point. I brought that on myself. It's over. Some may forgive me. I may never know. I don't know what else I can do other than take the punches as they are returned. And they are still punching. It's their right.
I could say that I love my friends but if I really do, then I would be letting them live their life just like they have been letting me live mine. So until I can lean to do that, I'm not capable of truly loving someone. But, I want to love, so I'm going to keep trying.
You know, this entire blog was set up to air my Dirty Laundry. I haven't always used it for that but that's what its main purpose was. Why on earth would I think that anyone would want to read it? And I hope that no one finds it. Because if they think the shit I put on Facebook was offensive, most of which I don't even write, wait until they read the drivel here.
And that's another thing, if I could just fucking stop airing my Dirty Laundry on Facebook. Of all the places not to do that, Facebook would be the one. There really are places I can go which would be appropriate, for one, the therapist's chair, and here, once I make it a private blog. It will do no good to try and erase the past. The internet has made that impossible. I'll have to own up to it eventually.
I do not pity myself for all this mess, so for hell's sake don't pity me. I believe this is the essence of the human condition, to live, learn, and love. I'm doing my best with what I have and there are bumps along the way. And what I've learned so far is how not to love.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Yellow Orb
Oh, Yellow Orb of happiness,
you hid behind the
trees.
I have no sorrow you can mend,
the moon won't take from
me.
Sorry, Yellow Orb of joy,
I'm not in place to feel your ray,
but shut inside a cold stone tomb,
until I'm free to play.
Oh, Yellow Orb of wonder,
I hope to see you soon.
Before my artificial white of ski,
sinks it's heart into my doom.
Oh, Yellow Orb of swift abandon,
You hide from me to soon.
When freedom granted my return,
You hid beyond the moon.
![]() |
View from my office chair. Jan 21, 2011 |
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Winter Beach
I love the ocean beach in the winter time. The air is crisp, and fresh and not a chain smoker in sight.
The landscape is serene with clear blue skies, endless horizon, birds...
more birds...
my boots...
and a beautiful a Belgium draft horse...
I could spend all weekend out here...
Which is exactly what I did.
All pictures: January 15-16, 2011: Ocean City, MD
The landscape is serene with clear blue skies, endless horizon, birds...
more birds...
my boots...
and a beautiful a Belgium draft horse...
I could spend all weekend out here...
Which is exactly what I did.
All pictures: January 15-16, 2011: Ocean City, MD
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Tuesday, January 4, 2011
The Family
Hypatia has posted another thoughtful little piece on what it means to be in "The Family". In this case, a typical Mormon family. This is real stuff people. This is how I remember it to be when I was
growing up. And we ex-Mo's have every right to feel the way we do for
good reason.
TBM's will no doubt find her post offensive and disagree. There will even be some who would try to sympathize or they may even attempt to empathize, but with reckless abandon they will load it all with conditions and apologetics. Yawn!
Well, TBMs, you can say all you want but it won't change the fact that you're all batshit crazy.
Anywhoo, thanks Hypatia, for another great post on Mormon co-dependency!
TBM's will no doubt find her post offensive and disagree. There will even be some who would try to sympathize or they may even attempt to empathize, but with reckless abandon they will load it all with conditions and apologetics. Yawn!
Well, TBMs, you can say all you want but it won't change the fact that you're all batshit crazy.
Anywhoo, thanks Hypatia, for another great post on Mormon co-dependency!
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Differences Are Normal
Back in September of 2009, I made a smugly moralistic little post called, "My Two Dates".
The point of that post was to talk about a little event where I got asked if I would be interested in joining a couple for a little threesome action. I talked about how I learned a valuable lesson about misjudging people. And then at the end of it, in an attempt to whitewash the fact that I was still a judgmental prick, I said that I was not interested in hooking up with them. But I never really said why. And to be honest, at the time, I wasn't really all that sure myself. I did give some lame-ass excuse about how it would bring up some emotional baggage; as if I had any clue what I was talking about.
Well, truth be told, 6 months later, I found myself chained to the wall of their play room having a good time. This happened twice, on consecutive weekends.
Now, here are the reasons why I'm bringing all this up: 1) my conscience is getting the better of me. Since I had originally said I wasn't interested in doing something only to turn around and do it, I felt like I had some explaining to do. Not that anyone would have known either way, or that I needed to justify myself, I just needed to be honest. 2) I've finally come to terms with the core reason I was uninterested in hooking up in the first place and I've finally been able to put it all into words. That is to say, I sort of knew what it was I had been working out back then, but I hadn't fully understood until now what it was all about. 3) I feel rather smugly moralistic about it all, which, oddly enough, is what's motivating me to write this in the first place.
In the 6 months that followed our initial meeting back in August of 2009, I had managed to get over my fears and initial reservations for avoiding them. Many of my fears had mostly to do with just plain old self-esteem and insecurity. But my reservations or rather, my stated noninterest was rooted in the mindset of looking for my "One True Love". A belief that had been culled from the many, downright useless, beliefs regarding the purposes of sex, intimacy and relationships, which were all framed within the context of traditional religious ideals, namely, the Mormon kind. So, naturally, play time with a couple who have been together for 15 years wasn't going to get me into a relationship of that kind. Although, it could develop into some other kind of relationship, not that this one was, but whether it happened or not, it was not the goal anyway, I was simply not interested in doing anything unless it fit within the set of "values" that I been accustom to. So, I was willing to pass up an opportunity for some serious adult oriented fun.
I had grown up around the idea of the traditional Mormon polygamist family and I knew about Polyandry from studying all the many forms of BDSM relationship dynamics that embraced it. So, back in 2007 when I was first coming out, I was prepared to admit to my mom at the time, that I could not say that such arrangements would never happen and that I could see myself living in a nontraditional dynamic in the future. It was an attempt to plant a seed in her mind that the rules have changed; the expectations of normality must be adjusted. There is no "one right way" of defining a family. To my surprise, she added to that by telling me her understanding of family, which included even more combinations that I had never imagined. She was already ahead of the game.
However, I still held back. I still had my doubts if such things really were for me or not. I realized in the end that I was still in love with the idea of the perfect, white-picketed, fenced-in, nuclear family, that I had grown up to believe was the only way that was truly acceptable in society or at least in Mormon cultural society. To make matters worse, the gay marriage debate was raging in the media and I found myself caught up in the whirlwind, trying to prove to the world that gay people were normal, that they were just like everyone else. But, it was like going back into the closet all over again. I had a hard time figuring out how I was going to get the queer world that made sense to me, fit in with what everyone else expected the gay world should be. I wanted the freedom to live an honest life but not make others uncomfortable. I don't know how I was going to do that. I was trying to have it both ways. And in the end, the big question that I was not asking was, "why do I still try to garner their acceptance anyway?"
In all of this, the core issue to embrace was, if I'm going to live honestly and with any modicum of dignity and self-respect, I will stop trying so hard to live by their "rules". I am gay, but more than that, I am queer. There is no way I'm going to fit within the "rules" of the prevailing religious society's notion of the traditional, patriarchal family, no matter what I do. So, essentially, I get to decide what constitutes the "purpose" of sex within the context of my relationships and I get to decide what constitutes my own family. Whether it's comprised of a same-sex couple who fosters or adopts children, or whether it's comprised of several same-sex adults who all share partnership roles, or a partner and those that make up the "extended" family. There could even be a hierarchy just like in the traditional or historical sense but with different names, titles, and meanings. It doesn't matter. I get to define what family, friends and sex are within the context of my own values that work for me. And today there are millions out there, gay and non-gay, who happily and joyfully do just that.
So, as it stands, the gay marriage debate will continue, obviously, as many people will be seeking to be part of that normalcy and continue to fight for it. And that's OK. But I'm no longer interested in fighting. Because, truth be told, it's all a bunch of crap! It's not to say that I don't support it or I won't be part of it someday, I may get married, but in the end, I don't believe, considering the way I view and choose to live my life, that my family, whatever form it takes, will ever be treated with any sort of respect whether I'm married or not. Because the basic fact is, we, as queer folk, are not normal. We are different.
There is nothing wrong with being different. But, spending any more time trying to convince a religious society that can't abide difference is a complete waste of my life. And that is what most of the gay marriage political debating has been about, gay couples having to put up their best possible face to show the world just how normal they really are. This for me means compromising my self-expression, my integrity, my sanity, to appease those that can't or won't embrace what they don't understand. I'm not going to waste my time hiding and I'm done trying to change their minds.
We, queers, must make our own rules and live by them. And it's not by the norms of an authoritarian religious society that we are to be comparing ourselves. If we allow that, we are falling into the expectations of those who have never questioned why their normal familial traditions make them so bloody miserable. And we might as well be miserable right along with them. Sure, they will judge us by their standards, there is no way of getting around it, but they are in the wrong when they do. They are the ultimate hypocrites if they think their normality is applicable to us. And we are wrong if we try to get them to think our difference is not different.
The great automatons that comprise most of the religiously bound human race are lost in a sea of sameness. A lack of perspective and creativity in thought and reason, they have failed to embrace diversity, thus they have failed to embrace what's important. And sadly, they are trapped there, consumed by fear of things they are also afraid to understand.
I know I keep reiterating this but I want it made clear! It's not my place to fit within their reality, to erase my differences so that they can think I'm normal. The responsibility actually lies on them to broaden, allow and embrace the differences into their definition of normal. They mistakenly believe that to do that, they would have to compromise their core values, which they say they shouldn't have to do. Just like how I'm saying I shouldn't have to compromise mine for them. But what they must understand is that I'm not compelling them to live my life the way they are compelling me to live theirs. My core values are values I impose upon myself whereas their core values are values they want imposed on others.
I've been foolish in thinking I could measure up to their expectations because they seek and impose an unattainable perfection. And as they continue to do so, their definition of normal narrows, which makes their definition of perfection narrow. Thus, any possible embracement of difference becomes impossible. I've also been foolish in expecting them to look beyond their fears. I know how hard it is for them. I also know that they must make the effort on their own if they ever want to look beyond those fears. No one can do it for them! But I can't wait forever.
In essence, what I'm saying is, my search for acceptance from the Mormons has been put to rest. My ship has sailed. If they want to leave that "Great and Spacious Building" to get across the river now, they'll have to build one themselves. They have been given the tools, materials and the plans; all they need is the desire. Once they do, I'll be here ready to receive them.
The point of that post was to talk about a little event where I got asked if I would be interested in joining a couple for a little threesome action. I talked about how I learned a valuable lesson about misjudging people. And then at the end of it, in an attempt to whitewash the fact that I was still a judgmental prick, I said that I was not interested in hooking up with them. But I never really said why. And to be honest, at the time, I wasn't really all that sure myself. I did give some lame-ass excuse about how it would bring up some emotional baggage; as if I had any clue what I was talking about.
Well, truth be told, 6 months later, I found myself chained to the wall of their play room having a good time. This happened twice, on consecutive weekends.
Now, here are the reasons why I'm bringing all this up: 1) my conscience is getting the better of me. Since I had originally said I wasn't interested in doing something only to turn around and do it, I felt like I had some explaining to do. Not that anyone would have known either way, or that I needed to justify myself, I just needed to be honest. 2) I've finally come to terms with the core reason I was uninterested in hooking up in the first place and I've finally been able to put it all into words. That is to say, I sort of knew what it was I had been working out back then, but I hadn't fully understood until now what it was all about. 3) I feel rather smugly moralistic about it all, which, oddly enough, is what's motivating me to write this in the first place.
In the 6 months that followed our initial meeting back in August of 2009, I had managed to get over my fears and initial reservations for avoiding them. Many of my fears had mostly to do with just plain old self-esteem and insecurity. But my reservations or rather, my stated noninterest was rooted in the mindset of looking for my "One True Love". A belief that had been culled from the many, downright useless, beliefs regarding the purposes of sex, intimacy and relationships, which were all framed within the context of traditional religious ideals, namely, the Mormon kind. So, naturally, play time with a couple who have been together for 15 years wasn't going to get me into a relationship of that kind. Although, it could develop into some other kind of relationship, not that this one was, but whether it happened or not, it was not the goal anyway, I was simply not interested in doing anything unless it fit within the set of "values" that I been accustom to. So, I was willing to pass up an opportunity for some serious adult oriented fun.
I had grown up around the idea of the traditional Mormon polygamist family and I knew about Polyandry from studying all the many forms of BDSM relationship dynamics that embraced it. So, back in 2007 when I was first coming out, I was prepared to admit to my mom at the time, that I could not say that such arrangements would never happen and that I could see myself living in a nontraditional dynamic in the future. It was an attempt to plant a seed in her mind that the rules have changed; the expectations of normality must be adjusted. There is no "one right way" of defining a family. To my surprise, she added to that by telling me her understanding of family, which included even more combinations that I had never imagined. She was already ahead of the game.
However, I still held back. I still had my doubts if such things really were for me or not. I realized in the end that I was still in love with the idea of the perfect, white-picketed, fenced-in, nuclear family, that I had grown up to believe was the only way that was truly acceptable in society or at least in Mormon cultural society. To make matters worse, the gay marriage debate was raging in the media and I found myself caught up in the whirlwind, trying to prove to the world that gay people were normal, that they were just like everyone else. But, it was like going back into the closet all over again. I had a hard time figuring out how I was going to get the queer world that made sense to me, fit in with what everyone else expected the gay world should be. I wanted the freedom to live an honest life but not make others uncomfortable. I don't know how I was going to do that. I was trying to have it both ways. And in the end, the big question that I was not asking was, "why do I still try to garner their acceptance anyway?"
In all of this, the core issue to embrace was, if I'm going to live honestly and with any modicum of dignity and self-respect, I will stop trying so hard to live by their "rules". I am gay, but more than that, I am queer. There is no way I'm going to fit within the "rules" of the prevailing religious society's notion of the traditional, patriarchal family, no matter what I do. So, essentially, I get to decide what constitutes the "purpose" of sex within the context of my relationships and I get to decide what constitutes my own family. Whether it's comprised of a same-sex couple who fosters or adopts children, or whether it's comprised of several same-sex adults who all share partnership roles, or a partner and those that make up the "extended" family. There could even be a hierarchy just like in the traditional or historical sense but with different names, titles, and meanings. It doesn't matter. I get to define what family, friends and sex are within the context of my own values that work for me. And today there are millions out there, gay and non-gay, who happily and joyfully do just that.
So, as it stands, the gay marriage debate will continue, obviously, as many people will be seeking to be part of that normalcy and continue to fight for it. And that's OK. But I'm no longer interested in fighting. Because, truth be told, it's all a bunch of crap! It's not to say that I don't support it or I won't be part of it someday, I may get married, but in the end, I don't believe, considering the way I view and choose to live my life, that my family, whatever form it takes, will ever be treated with any sort of respect whether I'm married or not. Because the basic fact is, we, as queer folk, are not normal. We are different.
There is nothing wrong with being different. But, spending any more time trying to convince a religious society that can't abide difference is a complete waste of my life. And that is what most of the gay marriage political debating has been about, gay couples having to put up their best possible face to show the world just how normal they really are. This for me means compromising my self-expression, my integrity, my sanity, to appease those that can't or won't embrace what they don't understand. I'm not going to waste my time hiding and I'm done trying to change their minds.
We, queers, must make our own rules and live by them. And it's not by the norms of an authoritarian religious society that we are to be comparing ourselves. If we allow that, we are falling into the expectations of those who have never questioned why their normal familial traditions make them so bloody miserable. And we might as well be miserable right along with them. Sure, they will judge us by their standards, there is no way of getting around it, but they are in the wrong when they do. They are the ultimate hypocrites if they think their normality is applicable to us. And we are wrong if we try to get them to think our difference is not different.
The great automatons that comprise most of the religiously bound human race are lost in a sea of sameness. A lack of perspective and creativity in thought and reason, they have failed to embrace diversity, thus they have failed to embrace what's important. And sadly, they are trapped there, consumed by fear of things they are also afraid to understand.
I know I keep reiterating this but I want it made clear! It's not my place to fit within their reality, to erase my differences so that they can think I'm normal. The responsibility actually lies on them to broaden, allow and embrace the differences into their definition of normal. They mistakenly believe that to do that, they would have to compromise their core values, which they say they shouldn't have to do. Just like how I'm saying I shouldn't have to compromise mine for them. But what they must understand is that I'm not compelling them to live my life the way they are compelling me to live theirs. My core values are values I impose upon myself whereas their core values are values they want imposed on others.
I've been foolish in thinking I could measure up to their expectations because they seek and impose an unattainable perfection. And as they continue to do so, their definition of normal narrows, which makes their definition of perfection narrow. Thus, any possible embracement of difference becomes impossible. I've also been foolish in expecting them to look beyond their fears. I know how hard it is for them. I also know that they must make the effort on their own if they ever want to look beyond those fears. No one can do it for them! But I can't wait forever.
In essence, what I'm saying is, my search for acceptance from the Mormons has been put to rest. My ship has sailed. If they want to leave that "Great and Spacious Building" to get across the river now, they'll have to build one themselves. They have been given the tools, materials and the plans; all they need is the desire. Once they do, I'll be here ready to receive them.
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