Showing posts with label addiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label addiction. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2015

Gay Q & A: Acceptance, Religion, Addiction, and Biology

How did you come to accept that you are gay?

The acceptance process of being gay was a rather long and drawn out one for me. While it was obvious to many, or perhaps maybe not to some, I was in strict denial of it for most of my life. It wasn't until my late 20's & early 30's that I started to come to terms with all of it.

The acceptance came when I finally decided to embrace and love the fact that I was gay & surrender to the fact that nothing I was doing or could do would "get rid" of "those" feelings of same gender attraction. I came to realize that energy can never be destroyed and it is inherently designed to be created and recreated over time. In my personal experience I wouldn't want to be different than I am now. I spent my whole life fighting it, denying, and lying to myself for what, to be miserable? No. That's where I was most of the time in shame and misery trying not to be something I was naturally designed to be.

I've had some tough conversations with God about it and it went something like this:

I asked, "God, Why did you give this to me? I didn't want it! Why would I choose this experience? Why is it so 'wrong' to be gay?"

The simple reply was, "Emily, you came to learn love in all of its levels and forms including this one. There is nothing wrong with loving who, or how you love. If you find joy and peace, then it is good and comes from God. Focus on the principles. I designed you on purpose and with purpose and I didn't make a mistake with you. The mistake would be in believing that there was something inherently wrong, bad, unnatural, or counterfeit about you. That would be the sad part, believing that I love you less than anyone else or that you are unworthy of love and all that life experience can be. You are equal in my eyes."

"Then why must I stay celibate in order to please you? Why did you give me such a big heart filled with love for others and then tell me not to express it to its full extent? It's not fair. Why should I go my whole life without connecting on a deeply satisfying, enriching, complementary, and reflective soul level with another person? It doesn't make sense to me & I'm confused at such a contradiction! Denying the love I have to offer is miserable, depressing, and seems like it would be a waste of my energy."

"Emily, do not be discouraged by constraints that sources outside of yourself try to tell you who you should be. I'm really accepting and open-hearted, though some versions people profess are very limiting of my infinite nature. Believe the God that is in you. Believe that you are because I Am. I am Love and as such, so are you. Follow the feelings of pure love and you will be on the path that is true for you. Your path is not the same as other people and comparing the path with criticism is unfair judgment towards yourself. Your path specifics are perfectly designed for you and you alone. There's no one else quite like you and I love you that way."

Was it hard to turn your back on what you have been taught your whole life?

Absolutely. I had to wrap my head, unravel, and re-wrap it differently than I had before. I really questioned everything I thought I knew up until that point of my life. All my certainties and truths went out the window when my life was falling apart despite doing all the "right" things that were expressed in the religion I grew up in. It wasn't adding up in the end. I read scriptures, attended church and religious services very regularly, courted my spouse, and well... it just wasn't there between us.

The miracle that happened is that I had the opportunity again and chose to discover more about myself in relation to God's eyes and to fully love, accept, & embrace myself. God didn't make a mistake with me. He understood perfectly that I came to this world to learn, exemplify, embrace, and embody divine love in all its forms. God looks on the heart and not on the outward appearance. One may deem another with a specific label as different, less than or greater than. God sees everyone as equal and what he sees is love. There is not a judgement on what form the love comes in, that's something people do.

I may have turned a different way from the religious construct arena, but I have found that my heart leans more into trusting God. I'm closer to God now overall than I ever was before. I realized that God loves everyone absolutely & that he's protective of all of his children if they allow and receive it. So rather than seeing a physical apostasy from religion, I realized that the potential "breakdown" was really a breakthrough or spiritual awakening waiting for me to embrace it with open arms. I became open to exploring & shook off limits that I thought needed to be there to keep me safe. When I approach God with an open heart, mind, body & spirit, miracles come pouring in to show the next step for me.

I came to realize what it means to have a hero's quest or journey of leaving your home tribe, receiving a life calling, having teachers & mentors, following & embracing it, & returning to the tribe you originated from with the potential of being completely rejected. So, the awakening happens in the journey where you come to experience God on a personal and individual level and then bring that light and knowledge forward to where you came from. Someone questioning is not an actual threat to a construct (tribe) and is rather, an invaluable asset if people receive them. People will generally take their joy-filled wisdom where it is appreciated, valued, and has influence.

What was the hardest part about transitioning from a religious background?

The hardest part for me was dealing with the culture of shame I grew up with. That's been the toughest transition to unlearn and relearn. I have found a great deal of insight and healing by reading different books from John Bradshaw (Healing the Shame That Binds You & Homecoming), Debbie Ford (The Dark Side of the Light Chasers), Julia Cameron (The Artist's Way), Brené Brown (The Gifts of Imperfection and Daring Greatly), Byron Katie (Loving What Is), and Tosha Silver (Outrageous Openness). These have greatly influenced my life for the better and to shift the energy of shame to a life filled with passion, joy, peace, happiness, and soulful satisfaction. I also found amazing counselors to work with as well as practitioners of different kinds to assist with complementary therapies.

I've had a lot of support over the years, but I have also learned to ask for it specifically. There are many people who love me just the way I am & they do so openly and lovingly with all of their hearts. There may be people who are now uncomfortable and that's okay. Their discomfort isn't a problem for me to resolve. I've come to realize that it's their story and not mine.

How is this different from just being a different form of sexual addiction?

Addictions are an unhealthy way to avoid, escape, overcompensate, deny, or otherwise shove & stuff whatever "it" is away so that we don't have to deal with it head on. Addictions generally reside in a state of shame/perfectionism. So, if you want to transform the addiction, shift the shame and resolve the core inside yourself. You are not your story & you are not your shame.

I don't think gender-identity is an addiction at all. No one says hetero's have an addiction for who they like naturally. Someone once said to me that they've never struggled with same gender attraction. I asked them "who said it was a struggle?" The struggle isn't in who we like. The struggle can be there if or when we judge our natural dispositions or that of another's to be inherently wrong.  

God made nature in all different forms, including humans. Our natural state of being is Love and we are to continue increasing and/or existing in that joyful state as often as possible. Some plants are asexual, male seahorses have the babies; many species are not monogamous for life with one mate. What does all this potentially mean? In my book it means that God loves variety! God didn't create everything within one category to be exactly the same. No two snowflakes are exactly alike and neither are 2 flowers of the exact variety. All have things that are relatively common to one another in their like kind, but none are all the same. While many will say that the purpose of humans is to create more humans, who's to say that God didn't intend the process of co-creation to be on every level? 

The most supportive unit of society is really self-love, vulnerability, & self-awareness & the rest is all just details. Yes a husband & wife could provide stability as a unit of society and of family security. That can be provided in a lot of different formats. Single parents, unmarried, heterosexual, and homosexual people are all capable of amazing things. No one is better than another and we are all worthy of support from the village of our surrounding tribes.

Isn't this (homo) sexuality just a refuge from, or a reaction to, being hurt by men so much?

I suppose for some people the answer to this question could be yes. I am unsure of if there is an underlying understanding to the question of sexual abuse being a factor in same-gender attraction. Not everyone who is gay has been sexually abused. The abuse doesn't always factor into gender identity either.

I can say I've thoroughly sorted through a large amount of those experiences, beliefs, thoughts, feelings, and emotions over the years and have done a lot of work to heal the trauma that was there for me. I still have hatred towards men & women to work through as well as some remaining shame and judgement. I'm not perfect. I have seriously questioned if I would be gay without the abuse & the answer I can comfortably say is "Yes, I would still be gay if I had not been sexually abused by men & women." No one is at fault for gender identity, it just is. My parents didn't parent me differently than my other siblings. Some people are gay & some are not. People are all on the spectrum of human nature. It's not a big deal in my book. 

What makes physical intimacy okay with a woman for you, but not a man?

This would depend entirely on what a person feels naturally comfortable with. The question for an individual would be "If there wasn't any shame in this would I feel draw n to being with someone of the same, both, opposite gender, or no one at all?" I have come to a point personally where I do not see people as physically male or female. Rather I see masculine & feminine in everyone & believe in finding the energetic compliment to your amazingly already whole self. Up until 5 weeks in utero babies are completely identical. It isn't until the hormone surge that a physical gender type is determined. What about people who have more than one set of genitalia? Did God predestine them to be miserable because they don't fit into a neat category? Nope. I think we were designed to figure it out for ourselves.

Our process of knowing who we are is between us and God, and everyone else in the world is there to serve as a reflection of ourselves so that we can learn whatever it is that we need to. There aren't any limits to who you love though I'm opposed to incest and statutory relationships (huge boundary violations!). I have a strong draw towards women and things I felt super ashamed doing with men (like even just cuddling or kissing) was not at all shameful with a woman. I feel completely natural with women and it's been pretty surprising because I wasn't expecting that at all.

Has your body actually done anything 'right' when you were with a man? (In terms of biological responses)

Now that I've experienced both sides of the equation I can say for sure that my body struggled horribly to have natural and biological sexual responses to men.

Psychology & sexuality are strongly intertwined. My psychology & brain wiring is geared to being attracted to women on a sexual and romantic level. That is why it feels so wrong for me to be with a man. Psychologically it is very wrong and unnatural for me to do so. I have had a lot more ease in experiences with women and all the "natural stuff" has been wonderful and beautiful so far. It's a night and day difference for me & there isn't a big struggle anymore.

Monday, April 7, 2014

The Dark of the Night: Suicide and Depression through My Eyes

For additional clarification & a preface please read my previous post here.

I have been sitting on writing about this topic of suicide and depression for over a month & the time has come for me to speak up. I share my experiences so that others can learn what they will from it: whether it’s the fact that they are not alone, that there’s help, that there’s hope, or something else entirely. This is part of my “story”. I am not my story, though I recognize that I am not my experiences either. Rather the stories & experiences I share are what I have learned on a personal level. Please do not judge yourself or others based on my experiences. Everyone is different & there’s always a spectrum. We all do the best we can with what we have. We need not compare them, yet we can have an increase of love, compassion, and awareness and that will change your world from the inside out because of them. I am fairly direct & there is the possibility that you may be triggered by some of what I’m about to share. 
I have a long line of generational mental illness, trauma and abuse, addictions, and patterns of codependency. At an early age I distinctly remember not wanting to be “here” anymore: physically non-existent, emotionally detached and disconnected, numb.

One of my first instances of going away & wanting to stay away was when I was 15 months old. I had floaties on my arms that were not blown up yet. The story goes that I jumped into the deep end of the swimming pool and I sank down to the bottom like a little rock. The part I remember is laying on the ground with the lifeguard over me. I was disconnected from my body & I was talking to someone in the spiritual realm. I was told that I needed to go back because my work wasn't done & I was annoyed that I would have to come back to earth and be in my body and feel pain. When I came to I was yelled at by my Grandmother for not listening or knowing the rules. Being alive didn't seem so great with that reception.

At two years old I was being sexually abused*. Further abuse happened with different people outside of my home from the time I was 6 years old until I was 10. The abuse in those years was fairly regular & was with multiple people of both genders, ages, and in various settings and group sizing from 1 to 6 or so people. It was here that I was exposed to huge amounts of pornography, self-abusing behaviors, increasing the circle of abuse by including other children, and performed and received sexual acts: that is what I was being taught. For a few years I kept everything shoved inside. No one really knew what was going on, especially my family. I was shy in public, but at home I was a motor mouth & seemed like my usual self.

*Person is no longer living

Addiction and acting out fully set in from the ages of 14 to 18. It was an old habit. Along the way I had associated abuse of self & others as a way of expressing or communicating what I thought love was. At 16 years old I hit rock bottom. I was very depressed & slept erratically. Addictions were hidden quite well & I felt like I was leading a double life. I had so much pain inside & I didn't know what to do with it all. It was at the lowest point of deep shame that I acted out more.

I felt horrible & sick to my stomach. It was awful. Acting out is always a cry for help on some level & no one else to my knowledge knew any of my secrets. I knew I needed therapy & some kind of medical treatment. I didn't ask for any because that would mean I would have to tell someone why I needed help & I couldn't do that yet. I couldn't bear the thought that I did that & that I had become an abuser. I wanted to do everyone a favor and eliminate the potential threat I was to the world.

So, one day I was all alone and I was sitting there eating an apple with a paring knife on the couch. I had the knife to my forearm and was trying to muster up enough nerve to cut myself already and get it over with. As the knife touched my skin I froze. It was a voice from heaven speaking to me directly, a guardian angel I’m sure. It said, “Emily. This isn't about you and killing yourself won’t solve your problems. It won’t make it easier for anyone else. Your posterity is depending on you to be here. They need you.” That phrase has come to mind many times after that incidence. It changed my life.

This wasn't the last time I seriously considered suicide. No, the struggle with it at times still rages on.

All throughout my marriage I had a lot of deep depression. I was barely functional and that was normal for me then. I had children & looking back I now realize that I had postpartum psychosis & that I should not have been left alone with my children. I felt like an unfit mother and continued in numbness and disconnection. It wasn't until a few years in that I realized how bad I was. I sounded like a screaming banshee with my children. Many days I would yell, cry, and scream sometimes to the point of breaking blood vessels. I studied all the parenting books I could get my hands on, I read lots of spiritually uplifting material, and I felt like I prayed & prayed to have a change of heart and that I could somehow love my children. After months of trying to treat myself & beating myself up for not being a natural at it I finally sought help through a professional counselor for several months.

The initial diagnosis was that of ADHD & I was in counseling & visiting my doctor regularly. I got on medication & it seemed to help, but not enough. A year or two went by and I did the best I could with what I had to work with.

I was depressed everyday & again hardly functioning. My marriage was barely staying together. I was disconnected & did not do a lot around the house. I went to work & came home & expected my husband to do everything else. At that point waking up & going through the motions was all I had to give & it wasn't enough for my husband. He was tired of the 7 years that I spent depressed & nothing looked like it was changing any time soon.

At that point I was feeling a lot of things built up inside, more than what I could handle on my own. I wanted to take some preventative measures so I put myself in group therapy & back in individual counseling. My doctor & I discussed perhaps trying a different set of medications. I found a lot that didn't work (including one that made me really suicidal—showering alone wasn't even safe. I had to leave the bathroom door unlocked & take one while my husband was home) & finally found one that worked well for me. Having that medication that worked was the first time in my life that I felt genuinely happy simply because I existed. It was as if a fog had cleared & I could see that I needed to change. Medication opened up so many things for me because I could finally cope well enough to do the work of getting through the crappy stuff to find the nuggets of gold in it all. I was finally able to change for myself and for the better.

That’s when crap hit the fan in a really big way. My marriage was actually falling apart more than I thought & my husband wanted a divorce. I was crushed and my world was spinning. How could this happen after all this work I've done? The things he complained about for 7 years were no longer relevant because I had changed in an intense year & a half. I thought something had to be wrong with me. Life as I knew it felt like it was over. How could I move forward when I thought I was doing so well? Nothing made sense anymore.

I cried myself to sleep a lot, had panic attacks, and yes, suicide was consistently entertained as a way out of all of it to end the suffering. Thankfully I had a huge support network in place with family, friends, doctors, and counselors. Even with all the love I had I still felt completely alone and like I was in a dark cave. I rarely told people my deepest feelings of not wanting to exist. I didn't want the speech. What I wanted and needed was someone to genuinely listen to me & validate what I was feeling & not dismiss it. I’m not one to seek outward attention in this format.

Medication helped with the chemical imbalances, counseling helped significantly to equip me with tools to cope, and yet after years of combined therapy, I still consistently wanted to stop existing. We narrowed it down to calling it for what it was, “suicidal thoughts, ideations, and tendencies.” I was able to get to the point of awareness that if I attempted suicide I would most likely end up “failing” because I knew I had work on the earth to complete. That knowledge did nothing to change me wanting to stop existing.

I figured if I tried & failed, I would end up living worse off than where I was. I honestly thought, “If I tried a car accident I would probably get paralyzed & then what would I do? If I took pills I’d pass out & get my stomach pumped & then have all these hospital bills. How would I pay for that? If I cut myself, I’d probably bleed & need a blood transfusion, at least then I’d get a break in the hospital for a little while. But how would I pay for that if I survived?” I debated lying about being suicidal just to get checked in. I was consumed and overwhelmed by daily demands of family and home. I wanted out & I considered physically doing so. I knew I’d feel guilty if I up & walked out on my children & leave everything behind, then I really couldn't live with myself if I did do that. There was no amount of “reasoning” that made life better for me. As practical of a suicidal person I was, it scared me.

So, what changed for me? Why am I still here today?

I kept up my support network of multiple therapies which included changing some lifestyle habits. Some of the biggest changes came when I faced my trapped inner demons. There was a lot of trauma I still needed to work through & I knew I needed to head in the direction of being able to help other people with their own demons. My counselor mentioned a place called The Institute of Healing Arts in Lindon, UT (IHA). It intrigued me. I went for a visit & got an appointment set up for a session. That set in motion so many things. I found another type of therapy filled with even more tools to help me work through the crap that happened. This was the work of championing my inner child.

I spent a year working with my inner child & that of my fellow classmates & clients. Each experience was healing on such a deep level. I started seeing the dysfunctional patterns & beliefs I held about life: Life is hard; we’re all going to die anyways, so why not be ready for when it happens; I am being punished for being alive; life is painful; I was only born for my body to be used, so I’m useless, & on and on it went.

The depression was prevalent during most of my time at IHA. I remember a fellow student coming out of some of her depression. She mentioned that anger is actually a higher state of functioning than shame. She said she had moved out of a lot of the shame & was now working through a lot of the anger. I could see the change in her. I wanted what she had. I knew that if she could have that change of heart, then so could I, seeing her work through it gave me courage and permission to live my truth in my own way.

There came a time when my instructor kept telling me to pay attention to what I was saying & that my words created my reality. Frequently what I was creating was a life of misery & endless woe. (For more specific examples please see this post on the power of our words.) No, I don’t blame Satan for planting those thoughts & I don’t blame myself for thinking/feeling them. I do take accountability for what I do have control over. I cannot control my brain chemistry. I can manage it as best I can & do the best with what I have.

On one occasion was when I was going through my second divorce (I married the same man twice & that’s a completely different story), was forced to quit a job due to sexual harassment, got fired from the next job for theft that I still have no idea how I “committed”, and had a “friend” wake me up at 1:30 am to call me a liar & threaten to report me to the licensing board. I was trying my best to get through things one day at a time. I felt like I was treading water in a cave with only a small air bubble to pull strength from. This was another really low place in my life. I cried & cried & called another friend who came over at 2 am to help me breathe and sort things out. She was my earthly angel that night. She looked me in the eyes and told me that I wanted to live.

From that point on whenever I begin obsessing over wanting to die I verbally /audibly tell myself with fervor and resolve, “Emily, you want to live! I see you! I know you! You are needed here right now!”

Suicidal thoughts for me are really a signal & symptom to something much deeper happening at the core. With the chemical imbalance mostly stable I realize that the rest is for me to work on. I have come to the understanding that I don’t really want to die. I now understand that what I’m really thinking and feeling is that whatever experience I am facing it appears to be so overwhelming & I wish I didn't have to deal with it anymore. It’s uncomfortable & yet it is a feeling that eventually fades away.

Even with all my proactive work, I still struggle at times. The depression I deal with now is less severe with the suicidal thoughts a lot less often. The work did not “get rid of the problem”, but it has helped me to see it differently. Problems aren't to get rid of; rather they are opportunities to find ourselves through them. It can be a process of refinement.

Please know that I actively work on wanting to live life & not just exist, survive, or get through another day. Some days are better than others. I am learning to practice what I feel living in a thriving and prosperous way means to me.  

When I have those down days I check in with myself & usually a trusted support person. I look at potential causes of the depression/suicide feelings I’m having. I see if there are perhaps sleep & nutrition deficiencies (there usually are for me & it’s one of my biggest contributing factors). I see if I need to work through some old personal crap that’s unpleasant & that my old patterning wants me to shove, ignore, numb, and hide deep inside filled with shame. I see if I need to spend some time with nature. I see if I need time alone to process. I see if I need time to socialize. I see if I need time to love, embrace, and nurture myself. It has taken over 25 years for me to get to this point of awareness.

If you feel the inclination to judge either yourself or someone else I suggest you stop right there. There is no judgment for experiences. I do not see someone as the label of “suicidal” because that is not at all who they are. They are a person who needs love and understanding & to find out whom they really are and what they have to offer. They need to see from their own eyes and heart the love they have for themselves. When I learned to love myself I could then be free to live the way I needed to.  

Healing from such deep wounds can take a lifetime to recover from. This is a daily process and a practice for me. I wish I could say I’d never think another death thought again or that I’ll never ever consider doing something to harm myself. That’s not realistic for me. What I can say is that I promise to pay better attention to my emotional, physical, spiritual, and mental needs so that I don’t dwell in depression land longer than is necessary for my learning.

Suicide & depression have taught me more about patience, trust, faith, healing, recovery, and the need for each other, my desires to be more connected to myself and those around me, and look at someone’s heart amid all the “darkness” and find the light within them.  I see light more easily because I have known the dark of the night.