I was asked to share my thoughts today in church during an
Elder’s Quorum lesson about “where our choices lead.” At first, I didn’t know
what to say. This is actually a very difficult question to answer for someone
like me. As a gay and active member of the Church, I am constantly considering
this question because I am straddling two paths – both of which would lead me
to very different destinations. If I were to embrace a completely homosexual
lifestyle, I would give up many of the blessings I enjoy by being an active
member of the church. On the other hand, by embracing the standards of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ, I miss out on the possibility of a romantic/intimate
companionship that all human beings need. I can’t have both.
But this post isn’t about the conflict I feel, living
between two worlds. This post is not about justice, equality, or fairness –
religious or otherwise. This post isn’t even about me asking “why.” I could
delve into a myriad of questions I’ve had over the course of my life, not the
least of which is, why have I been burdened with being gay in a
hetero-family-oriented church? No, this post isn’t about all of that. This post
is about living with unanswered questions.
I won’t go into detail about what I shared with the brothers
in the Elders’ Quorum lesson today, mostly because I’m pretty sure I was
bawling like a baby through all of it, even though it only lasted about 5
minutes. But, I do want to share one thing I said, which is the foundation of
what I want to share in this post. Regarding my circumstances, as stated above,
I shared this, “The Lord knows me. He knows this is hard for me. But I know
there is a reason to have faith; even if I don’t know the reason yet – I know
there is one.”
Essentially, I am choosing to live a faith-centered, abstinent
lifestyle, without really knowing why. I have no proof that my faith will be rewarded.
I have no proof that I’m making the right choice. But I am making that choice.
I am choosing to abstain from a fully gay lifestyle, in order to remain a
member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in good standing. (I
know many people in my situation have opted to leave the church and I fully
support them in their decision – we all have a different path and we all
deserve to be loved and accepted for who we are regardless of the path we
choose.)
I guess that’s what I think faith is – moving forward when
we don’t yet have all the answers. Which is, as I’ve come to realize, unbelievably
ironic for me. You see, I seem to have a great deal of faith when it comes to
religious/spiritual matters. But I have recently come to know that I don’t seem
to have much faith anywhere else in my life.
When I look in the mirror, I hate what I see. When I look in
the mirror, I see how fat I am and I hate it. I hate how it looks, I hate how
it feels and I hate the burden that it creates in my life on every level –
physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual. I hate that I can’t physically do
things I want to do; I hate that I can’t wear clothes I want to wear; I hate
how self-conscious I am and every time I go out in public, I worry that people
are going to laugh at me, make fun of me, or look down on me. I worry that they
will think about me the way I think about myself – weak, lazy, ugly, and
stupid.
I have been on a multi-year journey to fix this – to lose
weight, to feel better about myself and my life. I’ve had some successes, but
many, many failures and every failure gets harder and harder to get back up
from. The problem, if I can oversimplify, isn’t about knowledge or opportunity –
I’ve had an abundance of both. The problem is that I tried to move forward
without faith. Maybe it seems ridiculous to you, but I think it takes faith to
change nutrition and exercise habits. Every time I started a new diet, or a new
exercise program, or hired a new trainer, I struggled to put faith into the
process or the person who was coaching me. I struggled with cutting things out
of my diet, restricting calories, trying new exercises, needing to modify exercises
to my ability level and so on, because I didn’t really know if it was going to
work or not. The outcome of changing lifestyle habits was my unanswered
question – was this really going to work for me this time?
Paradoxically, there were times when I did put my faith in
the process and several times it did pay off – it paid off in increased
strength, flexibility, weightloss, increased energy, and so on. But then I had
a set-back. Several circumstances made me question my faith in the process, so
much so, that I gave up on it. I gave up on eating right; I gave up on
exercise. And it took its toll. I lost the energy I had gained. I gained back
the weight I had lost. I lost strength, flexibility; and probably the worst
part – I lost believing in myself.
As I’ve contemplated the things I’ve lost and as I’ve
pondered on the seemingly inexhaustible supply of self-loathing I experience on
a daily basis, and especially in light of what I was reminded of in church
today – I realize that the one thing I’ve
never had any faith in – is me. When I had faith in the process of weightloss,
it worked, I did lose weight, and it felt great. But I didn’t believe that I
was worth it. I didn’t have faith that I could sustain the progress I had made
because I didn’t have faith in myself. And I inevitably gave up on the process
of weightloss.
I have spent thousands of hours, years even, money, tears,
and whatever energy I could muster to try to understand why I am the way I am.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not bagging on therapy – I love therapy and I’m a huge
advocate for it. But after so much time and energy trying to understand why, I
think I’m at a place where I realize that some questions just aren’t going to
be answered. I don’t know why my first, visceral reaction is to hate myself; I
don’t know why I have an aversion to doing anything “hard,” or that will make
me look stupid; I don’t know why a good body and self-confidence come so easily
to others and not to me. I don’t know why I have to fight my own brain every
single day just to function in this world, let alone improve myself. And maybe
I won’t ever know. Maybe that’s what faith is – to not know, but to move
forward anyway. Maybe what I have needed, more than “answers” is just to have
faith that I am worth it; that I can do it; that regardless of how successful I
am (I really want to lose that “last” 100 pounds!!), that I’ll be better off
for even trying.
Going back to a point I wanted to make – it seems strange
that I have no problem having faith in an omniscient/omnipotent being that I
can’t see, hear, smell, or touch and yet I can’t have faith in the very
physical, tangible experience of being me. I can’t help but ask myself, “what
would having faith in myself look like?”
I literally just spent the last 10 minutes looking off into
space because I don’t know how to answer that question…
I guess it would mean pursuing health and fitness without
having to defend or justify myself. I would do it because it would make me
happy. I think it would mean being willing to make sacrifices of junk
food/binge eating because I know those things don’t really make me happy
long-term. I think it would mean being willing to accept all the bad things
that come with life – being willing to be in pain, to be uncomfortable, to
sacrifice or go without something I may want in the moment; and knowing that
life doesn’t present hardships as a punishment – it’s just a part of life and
it’s okay. I think it would mean accepting that some things are just hard, and
that it doesn’t mean it’s wrong, or that I’ve done something wrong.
It has been difficult to face hard things because I haven’t
felt that I was worth it. I also just realized that when something gets hard, I
immediately react with feelings of indignation. When I face something hard, I
hear my inner voice saying, “this isn’t fair…” And you know what? It isn’t. It
isn’t fair that I have to work so hard to lose weight when it comes so easily
to other men. It isn’t fair that I have to sacrifice enjoyable food when other
men can eat whatever they want and not gain weight. It isn’t fair that I’ve
been through so much trauma, only to have to work even harder at changing my
thoughts/beliefs as a result. It isn’t fair that I have to deal with the
fallout of things that happened to me, that I didn’t cause, that I didn’t want
and that I never would have chosen. It isn’t fair that I have to suffer the
consequences of other people’s bad choices/behavior. Yes, I know that makes me
sound like a brat – and maybe that’s all I’ve ever been. But I’ve avoided and I’ve
retreated and I’ve hid myself away because I just can’t face dealing with hard
things when it wasn’t my fault to begin with. Well that also sounds like a
victim talking…
Okay, so it isn’t fair. I am absolutely, 100% right – it’s
not fair.
Now what?
Where does “it’s not fair” actually get me? Nowhere!!
Focusing on “it’s not fair” just leaves me stuck. I don’t have the answer, but
maybe, just maybe, one way to get past “it’s not fair” is to realize that what
it is, is an opportunity.
No, I didn’t want to be molested. And it isn’t fair. But it
is an opportunity to forgive. No, I didn’t want to be morbidly obese. And it
isn’t fair. But it is an opportunity to learn to appreciate the body God has
given me. No, I didn’t want to live my life hating myself because other people
hurt me. And it isn’t fair. But it is an opportunity to triumph in the face of
adversity.
Maybe what “isn’t fair” is also an opportunity for faith. I
think having faith in myself is trusting that what I want is okay to want; that
I am worth achieving and maintaining improved health and fitness; that it’s
okay that the process will be hard at times, but that the outcome will be worth
it.
I think having faith in myself will mean doing the hardest thing
possible: accept myself for who I am, the way I am, fat and all.
I have gotten used to beating myself up and I have gotten
used to misery. I think it will be just as hard to admit that I’m okay, as it will be to accept that I’m okay. I have never allowed myself to be truly
happy. I thought I needed to change, to achieve an ideal body/success, in order
to matter, in order to be happy. So I’ve never allowed myself to really be
happy. I was afraid that if I was happy then something bad would happen to “balance
it out.” I was afraid that being happy meant I was being selfish. I was afraid
that being happy meant taking happiness away from others, because there’s only
so much to go around. I was afraid that being happy meant that I couldn’t
change my circumstances, that I had to give up my dreams of improving myself
physically or otherwise, because if I’m happy, then what else do I need?
It’s just occurred to me that I don’t think of happiness as
an outcome of choices I make (i.e., a side effect); I think of happiness as THE
destination – the whole end goal. Once you’re happy, that’s it – you’ve made
it. You’re happy and there’s nothing else to want or do because you don’t need
anything because you’re happy.
But what if happiness is NOT a final destination? What if
happiness is NOT an end, in and of itself?
What if happiness is like a jacket. You aren’t meant to wear
jackets all the time, but for some kinds of weather it’s the perfect comfort.
In that way, maybe fulfillment doesn’t come FROM simply “being happy,” but
maybe fulfillment comes from growth and achievement, and happiness just
sometimes comes along for the ride…?
Well this post just kind of went everywhere, didn’t it?
Sorry if it’s been all over the place. I didn’t realize until I started typing
this that the concept of happiness was such a contributing factor to my lack of
self-worth.
Ultimately, I don’t know what will come from all of the
realizations I’ve had today. I still have so many unanswered questions. But I
suppose that was really the whole point of this post in the first place: Faith
is just living life with unanswered questions – and unanswered questions are no
reason to stop living.