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Not all catholics believe in conditional love

  • Posted on March 8, 2010 at 3:44 pm

From Catholics for Marriage Equality

As faithful Roman Catholics we believe that the constitutional right to practice freedom of religion is based on respect for the dignity of each individual. We must guard against, not promote, the domination of one religious tradition over others in our civic life. Making respect for the dignity of all people not only an ideal but a living truth, we affirm civil marriage for same-sex couples throughout the United States.

[...]

As Roman Catholics, we differentiate between sacramental marriage and civil marriage. Therefore, we perceive that same-sex civil marriage poses no threat to our Church. While we respect the authority and integrity of the Church in matters of faith, our prayers and discernment have brought us to a new openness on this issue. We do not ask the Church to perform same-sex marriages. We do implore the Church to honor the States’ prerogative to authorize civil marriages for our gay and lesbian family and friends. Grateful for the gift of our faith and the ways that we have been nourished by faith throughout our lives, and also grateful for our citizenship in America and in our particular state, we sign this statement as Roman Catholic citizens of the United States of America.

This. Just as Catholic’s are not obliged to minister other sacraments to non-Catholics they will not be forced to marry same-sex couples.

HT: Pandagon

Conditional love

  • Posted on March 7, 2010 at 9:14 pm

There have been a heartbreaking series of posts over on DailyKos about a young man who was outed by a school prankster, expelled by the school and thrown out by his parents last Wednesday (update 1, update 2, update 3). He has found refuge with his aunt, who visited her sister today to return the family car and pick up her nephew’s things. When she arrived the majority of the nephew’s things were gone.

In the bag for my nephew was a Bible, a couple of Christian CD’s, his birth certificate, passport, and a Christian devotional book.  I had to act shocked that she would give his possessions away.  She assured me that her son could not be “awarded” for his behavior by being allowed to simply pick up his possessions.

She goes on to describe the rest of the visit, including a lecture from the counselor that was there.

After just a few moments of listening to the counselor talk, I felt like I was watching the T.V. show Intervention. (It’s a show about addicts and interventions to save them from their addictions.)  The family was told that they had to let my oldest nephew know what he was losing by being homosexual.  The consensus was that he loses all contact with his family, financial support, and emotional support.  Things would remain that way until he sought help and overcame this “sin”.

It is to her credit that she is there for her nephew. He has somewhere safe to go, a place that will take him in, love him and accept him for who he is. He has a place to live and help finishing high school and going to college. He is one of the lucky ones. Not all teens in strict religious households have someplace to go when they don’t fit.

The family dynamic is all too familiar. Love is conditional. If you step out of line you will be punished. Deviation is not acceptable. Not while you live under this roof!

A lot of my early 20s was spent growing beyond that and learning to rely on only myself. Family would only help you if they approved of you and what you were doing. I am much happier and, curiously, my parents seem to still love me. I am not the daughter they wanted and I get very little flack for it. Some of that is boundary setting, though. I once didn’t speak to them for months while I was in grad school because they wanted something from me I wasn’t prepared to offer. I tried to compromise (how about we do this? does this solution work?). They wouldn’t accept any of the solutions that were acceptable to me so I broke off the relationship for a while.

I … am sure there is something profound to write about how Cam came into my life and I learned that love wasn’t conditional. It’s been a journey, but I do believe that, finally.

Abstinence only education

  • Posted on February 23, 2010 at 9:05 pm

Cam and I were talking last night and the topic ended up about my exposure to sex education as I was growing up.

“You were raised in an extremely conservative environment. Name someone who was raised more conservatively than you were.”

“Bristol Palin?” I guessed. He gave me that look and pointed out that my sex education wasn’t that different than hers.

It was a bit strange to realize the totality of my formal sexual education was abstinence only. Sex was bad and wrong before marriage. Sex was bad and wrong inside marriage unless procreation was involved. Sex was for procreation, not recreation.

The irony is that despite the emphasis on abstinence my sexual experiences were not delayed much compared to my peer group, even those neighborhood kids that weren’t indoctrinated by the Catholic church. There have been lasting effects on my attitudes towards sex and not all of them healthy.

One of the enduring lessons is that we don’t talk about sex. We don’t discuss sex. A girls job was to say no. I was never given the tools to negotiate or discuss mutual pleasure and enjoyment. To explain the mechanics Mom gave me “Preparing for  Adolescence” by James Dobson. He had all of about 3 sentences relating to sex within marriage and none of them were very explanatory. Orgasm was never mentioned, just that when having sex they moved against each other until they both felt “very good.”

That was about the extent of my sexual education from my parent, with one fairly major exception. There was a lot of talk about saying no, about sex being bad and how getting pregnant would ruin my life. Birth control was never discussed at all.

One of my few distinct memories of talking about sex was a discussion in my godmother’s kitchen. Discussion is probably the wrong term, it was more a lecture. I certainly didn’t get a chance to express and opinion. The subject was the consequences of having sex. When mom was done explaining how I would be punished if I ever told them I was having sex, my godmother piped up and assured me that when mom was done I would then be turned over to her so she could kill me. Not really a good way to encourage open sharing and constructive discussions about sex.

I still have a lot of hangups around talking about sex. I’m working on being able to talk, and this blog is actually a part of exercise. It’s not easy for me to blog, even pseudonymously, but it’s somewhat safe and I think it will help. Having a understanding lover helps immensely. I know Cam would like for me to talk more about sex. He asks “what do you want” or says “tell me what to do to you.” But if I say “i can’t” there are no negative consequences. When I do answer I get what I want, which is the best type of positive reinforcement.

My name is Fiona and I am a product of abstinence only education.