Category Archives: Married and Gay

Waking Thoughts

In recent weeks I have felt quite anxious.

This feeling of anxiety has been a regular feature in my life and I am overcoming gradually its destructive power, by becoming better acquainted with its cry for help  – a call from within which requires a response – and also its effects on my mind and body.

Often when I am anxious, I wake up early.

I am restless in my sleeping, and also in my waking.

My waking thoughts are often a surreal experience of eroticism, fear, exhilaration and confusion with a tendency to be trapped in a situation which repeats itself over and over from which I struggle to emerge.

As I finally wake up, whether anxious of not, I am amazed at the experience of how somehow my brain re-boots and reminds me of who I am, where I am, what day it is, what time it is, what my plans are for today, what I am worried about, what I am looking forward to.

My waking thoughts are often the very clearest of the day. I am surprised at how often at the start of the day, a sudden answer appears to a dilemma or a course of action is determined upon, which seems to have come from nowhere.

The deep sub-conscious is processing these things as I sleep, and where feelings of anxiety remain, or issues are unresolved, I know through my Integral Coaching development that I must try to find space in my waking life to be silent – to think, to ponder, to pay attention to my inner voice – to listen to my soul which is the essence of my being.

My next blog will be: The Summons (Verse 4)

William Defoe

Ss Peter and Paul

Yesterday, June 29th was the Feast day of Saints Peter and Paul.

Both were apostles of the early Christian Church who  found their way to Christ through profoundly different paths.

St Peter, the fisherman, who denied Christ before His crucifixion and St Paul who had persecuted the early Christians before undergoing a sudden and dramatic conversion on the road to Damascus.

St Peter who lead the early church in Israel; and St Paul who traveled the known world preaching the Good News of Christ to the Gentiles, were martyred in approximately AD 64 on the orders of Nero, Emperor of Rome.

I have always felt a strong pride for my Catholic faith on this feast day, and in recent years I have tried to reconcile my own life with the faith from which I have never wavered, in a modern day church which has felt to me at times to have lost its way.

The institution of the Catholic Church has its origins in the legacy of Ss Peter and Paul, good men who are the foundation on which the church is built.

I pray that my faith, along with all the other world faiths will promote peace, love, tolerance and fraternity in the world, respecting of each other and excluding none who search for God with an openness of heart.

My next blog will be: Waking Thoughts

William Defoe

 

 

Cucumber

I don’t like the taste of cucumber, but I eat this vegetable virtually everyday of my life.

I like to eat a salad for lunch each day, especially in the summer months, and the way I keep them interesting is by including regular ingredients of lettuce, spring onions, tomatoes and cucumber and then a variety of toppings, cold meats, chicken, egg, spicy chicken, cooked pork, salmon etc.

The cucumber is included each day without notice because instead of neglecting to eat it each day, I have discovered that if I cut it up into fine pieces, it looses its impact as a taste I cannot palate, to become an enhancer of the rest of the food on my plate.

Cucumber is therefore, for me, an excellent example on how living in the present can be possible when having to live through challenges which at times can be difficult to bear.

I have known for some time, through my development, which is enhanced through quiet reflection and outward engagement with the world, that the difficult aspects of my life must be spread over all the other aspects of my life to make them less painful, less demanding of my continual notice, and less destructive in my reaction to them.

I have found, that I am better able to consume the troubles in my life, because they are spread in and amongst the balanced reality of my life.

Searching for truth is not some search for a goal of absolute peace and tranquility  – it is rather being able to welcome all things.

So the secret is to spread the cucumber lightly over the salad so that it is consumed with ease rather than being left in the tupperware bowl all the day to rot and decay.

My next blog will be: SS Peter and Paul

William Defoe

 

 

Head, Heart and Soul

The UK Prime Minister said as he resigned after the UK EU Referendum result that he had put his Head, Heart and Soul into his campaign for the UK to remain in the EU.

I was struck by his reference to Head, Heart and Soul and how he had aligned these elements of self behind his belief in the UK remaining in the EU, because I had struggled as I listened to the arguments to align all three.

My head was saying that we would be stronger and safer in the EU and that the peace and prosperity of the whole continent would be better served by our continued membership.

My heart was saying that we should seize this opportunity to escape this undemocratic, unaccountable institution which was hell bent on a European superstate which I utterly oppose.

So what is soul?

For me, and I suspect for David Cameron, and indeed all of us, the soul  is the connective which links the logic of the head and the emotion of the heart.

The soul is ultimately the deciding factor in the choices which we ultimately make in our decisions.

Some people will pray for guidance as they search to make a reasoned choice, a choice which fulfills their deepest truth to the issue at hand.

Others will reflect and listen to their inner voice as they process the arguments made from both sides of the argument.

I found that it was hard for me to align Head, Heart and Soul.

My emotional response to Brexit was the strongest emotion, and yet as the time of the vote became nearer and nearer, the logic of my head disturbed my sleep and made me feel anxious as the two opposing tensions within self called me from within to be heard.

My soul was at last satisfied when I considered the opinions of my adult children who all wanted the UK to remain in the EU.

My soul latched onto a wider family perspective and gave me an opportunity to show myself attune to their aspirations.

As I walked from the polling booth, having voted to Remain in the EU, my Head, Heart and Soul were aligned, my inner voice and truth had been heard.

The supremacy of an emotional response to my needs, which has been such a destructive feature of my life in the past , was heard in the wider context of my whole truth.

My next blog will be: Cucumber

William Defoe

 

 

Opposing Views

My wife and I have opposing views politically.

Whenever there is an election, we walk up to the polling station holding hands and vote in our respective ways.

No attempt is made by either of us to change the others mind.

After exercising our democratic right, we usually call into the pub for a drink – summer elections in the UK are the best because it normally means a pint of beer for me and a glass of wine for my wife, in a lovely English Beer Garden.

We walk back home holding hands.

In the constituency where we live it is my wife’s political party which always wins – it is a safe Westminster seat for her political party.

My wife could decide not to vote because her party would win without her, and my vote has the appearance of not making a difference, but I believe that it does.

My vote counts as a part of the overall “share of the vote” and it gives the result of the election legitimacy for the Government whether it is of my choice or not, and also importantly, to the Opposition.

 

I think that an important part of exercising our democratic right is to accept the result when we find ourselves on the losing side.

To miss out on this opportunity to respect opposing views in a democracy is a recipe for anarchy.

And I speak here as a voter for “Remain” in the UK’s EU Referendum.

A majority of my fellow citizens who voted, voted for Brexit, so Brexit it is!

My next blog will be: Head, Heart and Soul

William Defoe

 

Saved Login

There are so many occasions in this internet age when I am asked to provide a log-in and a password.

Help is at hand on a lot of sites for the log-in to be saved so that you do not have to remember it.

It is tempting to take up the offer of a saved log-in but I never do, because it is my instinct to retain the memory of it by entering my details every time I need to access each site.

It takes that little bit of time longer to key the information in and also the need to overcome the frustration of entering the wrong log-in or password for the site I am accessing, thinking it is another, but in the end the discipline of having to type it in and remember it is worth it.

I often find that after a few days annual leave from work, I will pitch up at my desk and freeze momentarily as I struggle to recall my e-mail address, or name and the latest password that I have chosen to access my work station.

I think forcing myself to remember and use my log-in and rejecting the offer to have a saved log-in is quite akin to keeping up the daily exercises I now undertake to keep my life in the present.

These daily actions include a combination of periods of silence, reflection, inner inspection of self, physical exercise, blogging, sex (well not every day!), reading, journaling, writing my diary, prayer, attending Mass, making myself available to my family.

I know that when I let these exercises slip, I lose the connection which I have developed to self.

I run the risk of losing the control I now exert over my fears, and I run the risk of losing the control of my continuous work to be calm.

This work of being present, this work of being safe, this work of facing inward to self and increasingly outward to others is too important to  risking its loss to my life by treating it as if it was a saved log-in.

My next blog will be: Opposing Views

William Defoe

 

 

Courage

I have occasionally been told by those who are close to my journey to live in the present, that I have been, or that I am courageous.

Perhaps I am being courageous, for example in writing this blog.

Perhaps I am being courageous in trying so very hard to change the way I react to happenings in my own life and in the lives of those around me, particularly when they affect me.

Perhaps I am being courageous in acknowledging at a very deep level within me, the truth about my conflicted sexuality after suppression and denial and rejection of this truth for so many difficult years of my life.

I have not felt courageous.

At times I have felt that in suffering for so long in the darkness of isolation and fear, I have been just the opposite, that is to say, weak.

And then there has been that sense of guilt over my past mistakes and the controlling aspects of my behaviours, which came from a place of love, but which were manifest in anger, sulking and mood swings which were depressing in their pattern and frequency.

I have recently been reading Pema Chodron’s book ‘Fail, Fail Again, Fail Better’ which I have referred to in some of my earlier posts.

In this simply wonderful book she talks about the courage we hold within  – the courage we experience on the inside when we connect to our inner voice of self love, compassion, understanding and hope.

I have been trying to notice this kind of inner courage, which has been hidden (not purposefully but intrinsically) in my own life.

I have noticed that I have found within me a capacity to listen when others are speaking, holding down the impulse to speak – that’s courage.

[It is not that I don’t speak any more, it is just that I am patient in exercising that practice, having given space to the other person who needs to speak.]

I have noticed that that I have found within me a capacity to stay silent when my old reaction would have been to scream – that’s courage.

[It is not that I don’t scream anymore, it is just that I am patient in giving space to the other person who needs to scream (about the past – and my impact on them) their space to do so.]

I have noticed that I have found within me a capacity to just be – an inward focus which is a deep, deep, deep, scary deep excavation of my self-hood – that’s courage.

[I have created a space to be with self on a very regular basis and this has been for me the bedrock of my awakening to the biggest question of all – who am I?]

I have noticed with greater clarity the needs of my family,  and I have reached out to show them that I can be trusted to hold their otherness  – to accept their view of the world as being their own which is different to mine – that’s courage.

I have embedded a discipline within my life to notice when I am veering towards judgement of self or judgement of others  – that’s courage.

I have embedded a discipline in my life to notice when I am straying away from the present, to the past or to the future, without grounding myself back to the present – that’s courage.

My new found proneness to periods of silence, reflection, perhaps prayer, and this sense of calm, peace and compassion which enables me to love self is my deepest courage!

I hope that you find within the courage you bring to the world – notice it!

My next blog will be: Saved Login

William Defoe

 

 

 

 

Little Bird

Living my life has at times felt like an unbearable ordeal.

In recent years, I have got to grips with a new way of being in the world, and I have found a way of accommodating and accepting  much more of me than was hitherto possible.

I have also made strenuous efforts to accommodate and accept much more of the views and opinions of others by putting myself in a place where I can hear their pain and sense their vulnerability.

In getting to grips with self and others, I have shifted my life into the present, letting go of the past, and this has been possible, I believe, because I have learned to trust in a better future.

In being able to trust, I have had to be prepared to stay silent and listen when what is being said, and what I am hearing, (not always the same thing!) is challenging my ability to remain calm.

It is essential that I do stay calm, because to trust means I have to be able to get up close to what I most fear, I need to be able to get up close to a different view, I have to be able to get up close to the vulnerabilities of others.

Whilst on holiday in May, a little bird visited my breakfast table outside on the patio overlooking the sea.

This little bird stood chirping for my attention, on the back of the vacant chair opposite me and my wife, in the hope of earning a crust.

Each day, I would break off a piece of crust from my toast, and place it gently on the table close to where my hand was rested.

I was amazed and thrilled when the little bird hopped onto the table  and bopped, bopped, bopped, over to the crust, grabbed it and flew to the floor to consume the reward it had gained for its tenacity and bravery.

A key focus of my life at the current time is for me to help to heal the wounds of family division, for which I sense that my past behaviour is a cause.

It is too simplistic to blame it all on my past behaviours, in fact I think to do so, is unhelpful in terms of being able to be a conduit for change.

My remarkable shift in attitude and capacity to live in the present, should be, and is, the catalyst by which I draw strength to heal the wounds of family division – I know it can work, I am living proof that it can.

I will be the little bird which will chirp happily from the sidelines in the hope of an invitation to move in close.

I will be the little bird who will bop bop bop towards the source of the pain in others.

I, like that little bird will learn to trust, learn to take the risk, which, with each passing day lessens, as the promise of a reward for my efforts becomes a reality.

My next blog will be: Courage

William Defoe

Conflicted

In the aftermath of the terrible attack at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida I have been thinking about the victims and the family and friends of all those in the LGBT community whom have died,  and to them all, I send them my heartfelt sympathy and prayers.

As the search for a motive for such a senseless act of violence is sought, I heard the term “internalised homophobia” being used to describe the attacker, who may have hated his own homosexuality so much, that he turned his anger on others who represented for him the outward sign of his own internal hatred.

I speak from the experience of having suffered with a conflicted part of self, which caused me to feel deep pain, isolation and fear as I wrestled with the emerging truth which I refused to accept  – that in fact I am homosexual.

All the school yard bullies who had accused me of this reality, which caused me to clam up and deny it,  seriously inhibited by capacity to mature into a fuller understanding of my truth.

And then there was my family, loving and kind, but very much traditional in values of a strict and harsh moral code, which served to protect and nurture me but which caused deep inner conflict and turmoil..

And then there was the strict teaching of the Catholic faith which viewed homosexuality as an abomination and a disorder, which conflicted me because I had developed a very sincere belief in the Catholic faith, a respect for its hierarchy,  and also for its teachings.

And then there was my marriage to my wife, whom I love with all my heart, and our dear children, whom we had jointly brought forth into the world to love and care for – to have exposed my truth as it became more fully apparent, and recognised for what it was by me, brought me the very worst sense of inner conflict.

And then when my anger and frustration and anxiety was wreaking greater and greater havoc on my ability to function in this conflicted state – I came to the point where I told my wife the truth, and due to my faithfulness in marriage, she accepted me in wholeness and love.

It would seem then that my problems were over, my wife still loved me, she had not outed me or left me or humiliated me, but the greater struggle still, was to find a means of accepting self.

The term “internalised homophobia” above is used in reference to an outward hatred of homosexuality, the origins of which are conflicted within.

In my case, the “internalised homophobia” which I experienced was manifest outwardly in anger, rigid conformity, high expectations of others, whilst inside I experienced a kind of hatred of self, anxiety, fear and at times a sense that my life was too hard to live.

When I first went for Integral Coaching, one of the most profound moments of my life, on my very first visit to see my coach, was when I told her that I had prayed and prayed and begged that this “cross” of homosexuality be lifted from me.

It was just not compatible for the life I had been born into and which I had chosen to live when I had lacked the maturity to understand and make sense of my otherness.

Her words, as I cried in anguish at the liberation of speaking out the pain which I had held within me for over 20 years, were that I had to accept it.

This notion of welcoming and accepting my homosexuality had never crossed my mind – never – because I had not understood, that I had the capacity to live a life which was all encompassing.

This does not mean that I can express physically my feelings for my own sex, because I have chosen to remain married, but it does mean that I can honour my own truth, value it, accept it, love it, laugh at it, welcome it, cry with it and do all this within my marriage and within my faith.

My reason for writing this blog over the last two years has been to reach out to those who are conflicted, and in being so, have rejected an element of themselves which refuse to be ignored.

The way to liberation for me has come through the love of my wife; the support of the my coach through the Integral Coaching techniques of expansive and holistic thinking; and my  own growing capacity to listen to my inner voice and learn to love self.

[To all those hurt in the shootings in Orlando and to those who have lost family and friends and for the communities in Orlando, I offer my thoughts and prayers at this sad time.]

My next blog will be: Little Bird

William Defoe

 

Father and Baby

As I lounged on my sunbed in Fuengirola a few weeks ago, I was drawn to the segregation of duties within a beautiful young Spanish family who were sat a few metres away from me.

As a young mother played with her son, aged approximately 4 years old, at the edge of the sea in front of me, her husband/partner was sat on his beach towel with his baby son of about 6 months old.

The baby was sat on the same beach towel, bolt upright and as his father spoke lovingly to him, both his arms lifted at the same time, and if I could have seen his little face, I am sure it would have beheld the broadest of smiles.

The reaction of the baby to his father’s words and care, reminded me very strongly of the reaction I get when I pay attention and listen to my inner voice.

It is a feeling which speaks of a connection with self at the very deepest level, and overtime it allows me to develop more fully my potential in the world.

As the young father protects and nurtures his baby with his love, so too does the inner dialogue with self, protect and nurture me and this gives me the confidence, belief and strength to reach out past the barriers which have kept me closed in, to a more courageous and compassionate existence.

Thank you beautiful Spanish baby boy for teaching me so much as your back was turned away from me.

It was your connection with your father through your smile which I could not see, and in your involuntary arm movement which I could see, which helped me to deepen further my understanding of self.

My next blog will be: Conflicted

William Defoe