Category Archives: NEWS

I'm A Mormon Mom Taking A Stand For All The Gay Kids In Our Church

I'm A Mormon Mom Taking A Stand For All The Gay Kids In Our Church
“Your pain is the breaking of the shell which encloses your understanding”
Kahlil Gibran

When my son Ross came out to our family as gay eight years ago, my hurdle towards a major crisis of faith began. I had to re-examine everything I had previously thought and at times thought I knew with certainty to be true. There is nothing like seeing a precious child in despair over the knowledge that the plan of happiness he had been taught to strive for, which included the opportunity for temple marriage and parenthood, the plan that is the bedrock of our theology, would be impossible for him to attain as his authentic self. It upended my notions of truth, happiness, obedience, loyalty, and in fact all that I held dear, including my perception of the character of God. And I, for a long moment, wondered if I would be able to stay with a theology that had unintentionally made my child feel inherently unworthy of God’s choicest blessings.

Ross began having panic attacks in February of 2007, his senior year of high school, shortly after being offered a scholarship to BYU and the nagging fear that had been encroaching on my sense of well-being began to loom larger. My suspicions were confirmed when I sat him down at the kitchen table one warm June night that year, while his brother and father were away at scout camp.

I asked and he answered, pouring out years of grief and heartache and shame. Wishing it wasn’t so, wanting to be just like “everyone else” and knowing he was not. I assured him of our love and understanding, our unwavering support and loyalty, but when in absolute despair he said, “What’s the point of going on? I can’t ever marry in the temple and have a family. How do I get to the Celestial Kingdom? What happens to me?” I had no answers. I could not advise him to keep coming to church, to hope for peace in the next life. There are graveyards full of young Latter-Day-Saints who have tried. I would rather have him alive, living an authentic life, true to who he is, than to live a stalwart steadfast lie that backs him in to a suicidal corner.

If I had previously entertained any doubt that sexual preference was a choice, those doubts were completely erased as I held my sobbing teenager that night in the kitchen, as he chanted over and over, “I just want to be normal, go on a mission, get married, like everyone else.” And all I could think of was, “What kid in their right mind would choose ridicule over acceptance, would choose to be a pariah in his own religious community?” I received a firm conviction that night as I held him in my arms, that this was my beloved child and that our family would rally around him and support him, and we have.

He no longer attends church. He had to walk away, to find his own path that would somehow help him want to stay alive by not asking of him to be alone all his life, but affirm his desire for love and companionship. He has spent the last eight years as an out gay man, trying to make up for all those years he felt he had to hide his painful secret, and he is learning to discard the shame and self-loathing that his religious doctrine and culture imposed upon him all those years. I am hoping that he can finally see himself as I know God sees him.

My conventional faith has taken a hit since my child came out, but my capacity for love and empathy has increased ten-fold. All of my beliefs have been upended and rearranged. Here in my community people have been incredible supportive, including a fabulously affirming bishop and an incredibly well-educated and enlightened stake presidency, but the doctrine remains the same. And young gay Mormons are dying to get to heaven where they hope life won’t be so cruel. We are losing whole families who are pushed out by intolerance and bigotry.

I had no answers back in 2007, but I have answers now. And they are loud and clear and not just for my child, but for all the gay kids I have learned to advocate for. I want to find every struggling gay Mormon child and cup their faces in my hands, and tell them how loved they are, AS they are. After having a front row seat to the anguish of my own beloved child, I must work to prevent others from having to face a potentially even more perilous situation, wherein their church leaders or even their own families reject them. Because this does happen. It happens in our church.

That is not part of God’s plan for them. This is not their test or trial here on earth. They will not become straight in the next life. This is how a loving father created them, with the desire and capacity to form a lifelong bond of love and companionship with someone they are madly in love with. This is my testimony, and I will fight for love and acceptance. For compassion and Christ-like understanding for these valiant souls from their fellow saints and the community at large.

Perhaps then families like mine will not feel torn between a church they love and a child they would give their life for. I stay in the faith of my childhood with the desire to be a voice of compassion and mercy, an obligation to be a comforter, an advisor, a friend, to any who have suffered as we have, as Ross has. Maybe I can encourage a parent to affirm their child. Perhaps I can help a gay Mormon child want to stay alive. This is what my Savior expects of me. This is why I breathe fire. I am a Mama Dragon.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/diane-oviatt/mormon-mom-gay-kid_b_7292302.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Rush Limbaugh Blames Same-sex Marriage, Gay Clergy For America's Decline in Christian Followers: AUDIO

Rush Limbaugh Blames Same-sex Marriage, Gay Clergy For America's Decline in Christian Followers: AUDIO

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(Photo via Twitter)

It didn’t take long for conservative pundit Rush Limbaugh to weigh in on Pew’s recent study showing that the number of identifying Christian’s has steadily declined over the last decade, with the radio host blaming, you guessed it, gay marriage.

Limbaugh shared his reasoning on his radio show on Tuesday, specifically citing churches that perform same-sex weddings and ordained gay clergy are the reason for the diaspora:

“They have left their churches because of social issues and the evolution of their churches to social areas they didn’t want to go and don’t feel comfortable being in. If you look at the evangelical churches, they haven’t lost anything. Their membership is holding pretty steady. Where the message has remained, where the mission has remained the same, where the members of the church don’t think any corruption is taking place. They’re still hanging in there.

You can listen to Limbaugh discuss Pew’s study, AFTER THE JUMP

[h/t Raw Story]

 


Anthony Costello

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/limbaughgay.html

Val And Ami's Story From The Let Love Define Family Series

Val And Ami's Story From The Let Love Define Family Series
To celebrate National Foster Care Month, this installment in the Huffington Post Gay Voices RaiseAChild.US “Let Love Define Family™” series continues to follow two Pennsylvania women along their journey to build a family of their own. We first introduced the couple in February 2014. Today, they offer valuable advice for parents. RaiseAChild.US contributing writer David Humiston shares their update.

On the eve of finalizing the adoption of their daughter Lilly, Ami Lanning and Val Minett told me they had a rough day. Excited at the prospect of capping their 14-month fostering experience with the official stamp of parental approval at 9:30 a.m. the following morning, they nonetheless had a day of struggles with their very soon-to-be legally adopted daughter.

Val said that she and Ami were determined to create “a soft place to land” for a child in need. I believe they are succeeding because their words spoke to me of determination, an understanding of the natural ups and downs of bringing someone into a new home at the age of 8, and unequivocal love. Young Lilly, who has been diagnosed with an alphabet soup of childhood behavioral disorders, likes to test her boundaries and, in so doing, reaffirm the extent and limits of her familial relationship. This is not unusual for any child, let alone one who has bounced around a bit and is still torn about previous associations, including challenging issues with her birth mother and failed recent fostering attempts. It is ironic, then, that she should push the limits the day we spoke by tearing up a metaphorical example of her “soft landing place.” But, as Ami says, “It’s only a pillow and she can tear up as many as she likes. She’s stuck with us, and we’re not giving up on her.”

val

That’s the real lesson here. And that’s what Ami and Val want to share. Trauma at any age can be devastating, but the very worst thing anyone could do to children who have experienced trauma is to give up on them. So Ami and Val refuse to do so… no matter what. Both are very active and involved with school and counseling options, including regular visits to someone who helps them deal with the new issues of parenting and how to deal with each other. Differences in parenting style are often a sore spot in families and theirs is no different, but they are very conscious of this and deeply committed to each other and to resolving issues in whatever way is best for all involved — that means, to a very large extent, what is best for Lilly.

At one point Ami and Val looked into birthing options, but health reasons ruled this out. Interestingly enough, had they gone through with that process, their birth child would be the same age today as their now-adopted daughter, Lilly. They were quick to point out that adopting and not knowing how tough things might be later was not at all different from giving birth and not knowing the trials that may lie ahead. They say that when Lilly came through their front door, it was like she was being born into a new life for them. It was her birth moment as far as they were concerned. According to Val, the moment she entered the door with her thumb in her mouth and a tender, but tattered look on her lovely face, she felt as if her birth child had been laid upon her chest. She needed them, and they were joyful to have her.

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While the last months have had good and bad moments, both say that the good times, even a good moment each day or so, vastly outweigh any of the bad and, while it can wear them down, it never wears them out. Ami recounts how Lilly asked her one night to sing for her as she was falling asleep. Ami was somewhat surprised, but touched. She sang a soft rendition of “Count Your Blessings” from “White Christmas,” to which Lilly simply sighed, thanked her with love, and fell quickly and deeply asleep. Lilly and Ami also often draw together, and Lilly has expressed natural talent, especially for Zentangle® drawings. One of Lilly’s counselors was so enamored and impressed with this that he has since incorporated Zentangle® drawing into other counseling relationships to great effect.

Val shared a story with me as well. In the car one day, Lilly asked her if she had been good on an errand they ran. Val told her that she was and that she appreciated it, saying, “You’re a good kid,” to which Lilly replied, “You’re a good mommy!” Val followed that with, “Sometimes I am, and sometimes I’m still practicing.” “Well, no one is perfect,” replied Lilly with sympathy. A little while later, after they had gotten home, Lilly gave Val a big hug and told her, “Today, you’re perfect!”

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On another occasion, Lilly asked Val, “When I leave, will you still be my mommy”? Puzzled, Val responded, “You mean like when you go off to college or get married?” “Yes,” said Lilly. “I will always be your mommy and mom (Ami) will always be your mom. We are your forever family. You’re stuck with us and we will always stick together,” said Val. “Like gum on your shoe?” Lilly asked with a smile. To which Val laughed, saying, “Yes, exactly like gum on your shoe.”

So here’s to being imperfectly perfect, being gum on someone’s shoe, and counting your blessings. Each day is a new day, and today, as I write this, little Lilly has landed forever in her soft place.

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On Saturday, May 16, 2015, RaiseAChild.US will host “Call Me Mom,” a free brunch event for all women interested in learning about building or expanding a family through fostering, adopting, or weekend hosting. This two hour relaxed and causal program will begin at 11:00AM at the ANDAZ West Hollywood Hotel, West Hollywood, CA. RSVP and information at www.RaiseAChild.US.

A “Call Me Dad” RaiseAChild.US brunch event for all men is scheduled for Saturday, June 13, 2015 at The Montalban Theatre in Hollywood, CA. Actor/comedian Alec Mapa is to appear. Visit www.RaiseAChild.US to RSVP.

RaiseAChild.US is the nationwide leader in the recruitment and support of LGBT and all prospective parents interested in building families through fostering and adopting to meet the needs of the 400,000 children in the foster care system. RaiseAChild.US recruits, educates, and nurtures supportive relationships equally with all prospective foster and adoptive parents while partnering with agencies to improve the process of advancing foster children to safe, loving and permanent homes. For information about how you can become a foster or adoptive parent, please visit www.RaiseAChild.US.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/15/val-ami-gay-family_n_7268266.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Rob Lowe Is OK With His Dadbod And Thinks It’s Time To Start Objectifying Men

Rob Lowe Is OK With His Dadbod And Thinks It’s Time To Start Objectifying Men

not_100913_premier_2I’m obsessed with this fucking thing. Did you know that I tweeted about it two weeks ago? I put it out there to my millions of followers:  Be honest with me: Do I have a dadbod? I just need to know. Because I’m not really sure what it means yet and I need to find out. They said absolutely not, although some wonderful internet sleuths found a photo of me when I was not at my finest and said, yeah, you have a dadbod. I am a dad and I have a bod. So by definition, I have a dadbod.I’m not pro or con [dadbod], but it’s great that it is a real thing. My understanding of it is [that dadbod] guys are semi-jacked but have neglected this [points to decidedly anti-dadbod stomach], is that right? My new favorite term … are you ready for this? Skinny-fat. It’s a great one. Because it’s people who look skinny but aren’t, right?  I think it’s time to start objectifying men. I think it’s time.”

 

— Rob Lowe, (who is now the sworn enemy of Kit Harington) discussing his daily routine with NY magazine

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/NcdRh1PYDRI/rob-lowe-is-ok-with-his-dadbod-and-thinks-its-time-to-start-objectifying-men-20150515

WATCH: Psychotherapist Matthew Dempsey Explains the Deal with Gay Men and Bottom Shaming

WATCH: Psychotherapist Matthew Dempsey Explains the Deal with Gay Men and Bottom Shaming

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Psychotherapist Matthew Dempsey succinctly tackles the topic of gay labels and bottom shaming within the gay community with a new video he posted to his YouTube page. Dempsey expertly deconstructs the heterosexual masculine/feminine framework that surrounds “tops” and “bottoms,” while also rationalizing that it’s perfectly ok for people to prefer one position over the other, with the caveat that it’s not motivated by shame.

Watch the intelligent, and incredibly handsome, Dempsey discuss the gay community’s fixation on “Who topped? Who bottomed?” using humor and logic, AFTER THE JUMP

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Anthony Costello

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/watch-psychotherapist-matthew-dempsey-explains-bottom-shaming-with-gay-men.html

Can Bears And Twinks Live Together In Peace?

Can Bears And Twinks Live Together In Peace?

Editor’s note: We’ve asked online comedian, voice actor and chest hair model Sam Kalidi to create a new meme each week for Queerty readers. This week he answers the long-pressing question of whether bears and twinks can cohabit in peace. He looks forward to all your hate mail. You can find him on Twitter,Facebook, Instagram and at your local glory hole.

 

twinks and bears

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/6nGW4zo-adc/can-bears-and-twinks-live-together-in-peace-20150515