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Wednesday
28Oct2009

like a prayer

"It seems that all my relationships with men are complicated, and Jesus is no different." - Rugged Fox

Television is exploding with great quality gay content these days, and last week I was absolutely floored by a scene on Grey’s Anatomy that took place between Callie Torres (Sara Ramirez) and her father (Hector Elizondo). The scene occurs when Callie’s father unexpectedly shows up at the hospital with a Catholic priest to “pray away her gay.” Long story short, last season her father did not take well to the news she had fallen in love with a gorgeous female pediatrician named after a battleship; so he cut her off. But last Thursday at 20:17 he returned to make peace. Click on the video below to see what happens:

NOTE: This is the point in which this entry takes a more personal and slightly dramatic tone. And P.S. how much do you love “Youtube” for being able to find anything? 

After watching this scene for the first time, I felt as if the cork had been popped on a bottle of unresolved issues that had been aging in my psyche for the passed six years. With no other choice but to pour myself a glass and take a sip, it was apparent the bottle was 70% religious, 20% spiritual and 10% sexual. Taking a moment to let the repressed memories decant, I took another sip, lied down on my couch, and started entertaining a painful past I had tried hard to forget. The next day I confronted my demons and went to Church.

Setting my alarm o’clock for morning, I put on my finest Sunday clothes and made the half-hour trek to the nearest Catholic Church I had found on Google Maps. Standing at the bottom of the steps leading up to the big wooden doors, it occurred to me that, other then for funerals or weddings, I hadn’t been inside a Church since I came-out six years ago. Taking a seat on one of the rock hard pews (no pun intended, alright maybe just a small one, but seriously, that wood was stiff!) I was surprised at how fast the ritual of mass came back to me. Like riding a bike, the words to every responsorial psalm rolled off my tongue with no thought or conscious effort to remember. Singing along to the choir, I laughed when the overhead projected the lyrics to “One Bread One Body,” after I had just finished singing Mariah Carey's "Touch My Body" ten minutes before.

Looking around, I took in the familiar symbols of a world that I never thought I would return to: the stained glass, the massive arches, the plastered Stations of the Cross. And then, with a single wail, a crying child near the back shattered the fragile silence of my mind. Flooded by images from my religious past, I flashed back to when I was a child pulling on my mother’s arm five minutes into mass and asking when we got to go home. Fast-forwarding, I saw myself back in high school, braces intact, singing the lyrics to my very first solo during mass choir “you who dwell in the shelter the lord, who abide in His shadow for life…” And then, before I knew it, I was coming out over a mickey of vodka and a pack of Marlboro's to my four best Catholic friends. “Are you planning on pursuing this lifestyle?” asked my friend Marc while Matthew remained silent, Peter expressed his support, and John asked if I thought he was hot.

Overwhelmed, I broke down into tears as the Father stood up to speak. I swear the lady beside me with the Gucci Purse and Dolce glasses must’ve thought I was either crazy or just really touched by the homely. What struck me as fascinating however, not to mention psychologically revealing, was the fact that I was crying not because I was sad, happy or finally at peace; but because I was furious. Feeling the anger rise inside of me, I became enraged at the fact a person could ever think to say “Peace be with you, but not with you.” Inflamed, I felt like standing up and screaming as loud as I could into the heavens, “SCREW YOU GOD FOR TURNING YOUR BACK ON ME WHEN I NEEDED YOU THE MOST.” But instead, I knelt down like everyone else and prayed until I got distracted by the fact that I needed to cut my nails.

"So you think you might be gay?"I remember the day in grade twelve when I went to see my counselor for the first time to tell her I thought I was bisexual. (Missing story detail: my high school was all-boys and Catholic). The second I took the seat across from her, my eyes zeroed in on a pamphlet pinned up against her wall that read “So you think you might be gay?” Relieved by the sight, I felt hope that all my life’s questions might be answered within the three folds of that photo-copied paper. A week later when I arrived for my next appointment the pamphlet was gone. Not able to help myself, I asked her where it went. “Father Director came in the other day and once he flipped through it, decided it did not accord with Catholic principles and took it down.”

Reconciling one’s Catholic identity with their gay identity is more often than not, a losing battle. I mean, you try getting off with another man while thinking about eternal damnation and tell me that you do throw in the towel. But it is in my belief that faith is a dark mystery that one should not be born into, but rather fight their entire lives to shed light upon. Because ultimately, the one thing I had in common with everyone else standing beside me (other than a nice outfit and knack for repression) was that I believed I could be a better person, and hopefully make the world a better place in the process. 

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Reader Comments (5)

Wow....this was powerful, Foxy.

October 28, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterChef Green

I think I have probably talked to you some about my own religious background, so I really feel you on this one. I haven't been back to church since both of my "coming-outs;" first as an atheist and secondly as queer. I honestly don't think I could go back, either. Maybe to a brand-new congregation in a new city where nobody knew me... just to see what it felt like to be a stranger in that setting. But to any of my former congregations? Too much baggage. Too many questions about where I've been. It was brave of you to go; I'm really impressed. Do you think you'll go back, or was this a gesture of closure for you?

mucho love, my friend.

October 29, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSarah L

I am not religious in the true sense of the word but somehow I do believe that God is greater than what priests and pontificators make out. Maybe you need to find what you have lost and perhaps it is not in a Catholic church.

October 29, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterCharleen

Fox, this is such a powerful story. It sounds like a process you had to go through to realize your anger and begin to come to terms with it. I wish you luck on this tough journey. You look super hot in that suit and I'm pretty sure that goes a long way towards making the world a better place.

October 30, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterBossyJossy

This post made me really upset too. Faith is something I never grew up with - I was raised without religion, but bore witness to my mother's various spiritual experiments through Buddhism, new age stuff, chakra therapy, but "never the Christians" before her eventual rebirth into Seventh Day Adventism a few years ago. It was all so bizarre to me, and after seeing someone who'd gone from seemingly having such an open mind go headfirst into something that didn't allow her to leave her bedroom two days a week while she studied the bible and preached to us about sinning and saving ourselves, I just was totally turned off by the whole idea. But in the last year I've started to explore my spiritual side, and though I'm still pretty much a newcomer, I've decided I'd be far happier to be a non-denominational Christian than convert to a faith for the sake of what, getting married? Yes, I have a wedding coming up, a wedding that's going to be extremely Catholic because it's important to my soon to be husband. But I'm not going to convert. We've had numerous conversations about the nature of Catholicism and my reasons for not converting. Their stance on homosexuality is a big one. How could I call myself a proud Catholic when I didn't believe in a LOT of the things they dictate about how people should be? "Faith is a dark mystery that one should not be born into, but rather fight their entire lives to shed light upon." I couldn't have said it better myself. *Hug* Thinking of you Sean

November 1, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterEmily Jane

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