Tag Archives: Catholic and Gay

L’Omosessuale

Whilst on holiday last week, I re-read the masterpiece, which is Louis de Bernieres’ “Captain Corelli’s Mandolin”.

The book is a detailed depiction of the experience of Greece during the Italian occupation of the country in the Second World War but also much more of the historical, mythological and contemporary experience of this beautiful nation and its people.

I was drawn to the character of Carlo Piero Guercio, an Italian soldier with whom I felt the deepest of sympathy and empathy because he was a man conflicted heavily in respect of the suppressed truth of his sexual nature – he is l’omosessuale.

It is rare for me, indeed I can think of no better example, than of this characters account, for me to find written words which describe so fully my experience and conflict, despite recognising that I live in a country which is now very open and accepting of homosexuality.

The character is writing down his feelings in respect of himself and those whom he loves, but cannot touch, in letters which are to be found only after his death.

I write this blog, in some respects in the hope that those who know and love me, will have some means of discovering more fully who I was in life, how I had suffered but much more importantly, how I had learned how to thrive after telling the truth of my feelings to my wife and then, with her generous blessing, experiencing the deepest and most caring and fulfilling and life enhancing support of my coach.

L’omosessuale explains how until his death “I have been condemned to wear a mask decreed by his misfortune”

Despite having revealed my truth to some of those closest to me, for many years before that time my experience is explained here exactly how it was, and also how it is, because I still fear the consequences to my place in the world if my truth was more widely known.

L’omosessuale says “I have been reduced to eternal and infinite silence”

It is difficult to be fully present in the world, despite my recent best efforts to be so, when something so fundamental to the emotional and physiological make-up of my reality is hidden.

L’omosessuale tells us that “I have not even told the chaplain in confession, I know in advance that I will be told that it is a perversion, an abomination in the sight of God, that I must marry and lead the life of a normal man”

My experience was clouded in my youth by a lack of maturity and understanding as to my feelings for men.

I had a girlfriend as a teenager and I loved her and I wanted children.

It was only later, after marriage and children, that I began to unfold the layers of complexity which I carried in my soul and the guilt and the fear were palpable for a large swathe of my adult life.

In discussions I have had with priests, I have experienced their general compassion and care, I do not blame the church or its teachings for my experience, I account for my own unhappiness in relation to my attitude and towards my faith and to my low self esteem which prevented me from explaining my confusion to my family.

L’omosessuale says “I would say to the priest that God made me as I am, that I had no choice, that He must have made me like this for a purpose….”

I wish I had read and understood these words many years ago. When I first read the book eleven years ago, I do not recall these words having comforted me in the way they do now.

I do not feel abandoned nor condemned by God, a loving God, for being who I am.

If you live in a state of conflict in your own life, I appeal to you to open your eyes to your truth, accept it, love it, share it, be with it and know, that you are a unique and precious presence in the world and in the eyes of God.

My next blog will be: Above the Clouds

William Defoe

Yesterday Was All We Had

I was walking towards Ambleside at Lake Windermere in the UK’s beautiful Lake District last Saturday, when I heard the melancholy lyrics “and Yesterday was all we had” ** being played inside a pub.

I thought about my brother, in fact I often think about him, and these words seemed to strike a chord to my heart because they seemed to sum up a sense of hopelessness which I carry with me about our fractured relationship.

There hasn’t been a fall out between us.

I see him quite often.

He does speak with me whenever we meet.

But, our relationship is not close and it hurts that I can’t find a way to make it so.

It’s as if “Yesterday was all we had” and some time, a long tome ago, something was broken between us which seems beyond repair.

The sad thing is, I don’t recall the time or the moment, its as if we just drifted into a state of acceptance that we would not be close.

It seems that the damage was done under the cover of time, a long time ago as we emerged from childhood.

Opportunities were missed to mark out the other for special recognition e.g. as best man at our respective weddings.

And time there was for many years, when I was not the slightest bit concerned about having his brotherly love and support in my life, but now, well now, I need it more that I can say, but it seems “Yesterday was all we had”

It was my brother to whom I first told of my anguished life of suppressing the truth about my gay sexuality, about five years ago.

He promised to help me, but he has not been able to do so. I understand why, and it has nothing to do with me, he has his own family and life difficulties to contend with.

He told me as much last year, and I assured him that I was fine and that I would wait for a more less stressful period to emerge in his life so that we could meet up more regularly as brothers.

I think I wanted him to help me carry the weight of my own inner conflict, which although it has lightened considerably in recent years, it remains a heavy load and at times I feel quite isolated.

I know that it is not fair to ask him to carry my load, and I have pondered on that fact very much over the last few months, so my expectations have changed, all I want is a friend – a brother-friend.

The lyrics in the song, seem to sum up the state of my relationship with him, but despite their resonance and their hopelessness, when applied to my need for a brother, they are words which I am not yet prepared to accept.

So perhaps, a day at some point in the future will help me to realise that “yesterday was ‘not’ all we had” because there is always tomorrow.

For this, I pray.

My next blog will be: L’Omosessuale

William Defoe

**Earth, Wind and Fire – “After The Love Has Gone” from their album “I am”

The Futility of Filling the Gaps

A colleague of mine has a habit of making assumptions in order to fill the gaps in his understanding of a given situation.

Recently, he had stayed in a rented apartment with his wife, and although there was a no children policy at the accommodation, he had noticed that there was a spare room adjacent to the rooms they had hired with two single beds in it.

He and his wife had surmised that the proprietors must open this locked room up, for the purposes of accommodating close family and relatives when they came to stay with them in their beautiful home.

On second telling, my colleague explains further that these relatives will have to travel from long distances to stay at the property, as the proprietors wife is originally from Bogota, Colombia, South America.

I listen to the first attempt to fill the gap, and then incredulously at the second deeper attempt which is told as a fact.

Time was, when I would have wanted to respond with a counter argument to dispute the logic, but I did not do so, because it seemed clear to me that it was futile to try to fill the gaps because the logic was based on summation, or assumption in the absence of fact.

It is quite possible, that their logic is truth, but without a credible question having being put to the proprietor as to use of the locked spare room, and also whether his wife’s relatives travel from Colombia to stay in them, there is no basis for a outcome which would resolve the matter.

…and does it matter??

Well, for me, none of the above matters, but I am rather interested in my colleagues attempt to explain the conundrum.

This propensity we have, to explain to ourselves the motives and actions of others in relation to their impact on us, not by direct questioning but by conjecture.

This seems to me to be futile, when the basic premise was that his sister and her children would not be able to rent the property because the proprietor does not accept children in the accommodation.

The danger of conjecture is that we internalise and believe a narrative which is not based on fact, and even if the proprietor was to confirm the summation that his wife’s family stayed in the property, we still would not fully know why children were not allowed to stay there.

Perhaps it is because they are too noisy and they will disturbed the proprietors peaceful home (situated adjacent to the rented accommodation) – oh here I go, I’m at it now – the futility of trying to fill  in the gaps – and I should know better than to do that!

My next blog will be: Yesterday was All We Had

William Defoe

 

Blocked Out Windows

I enjoy running, and running is profoundly important to my sense of self and sense of calm.

Whilst running, I notice things within and without and I am surprised at the clarity and clearness of vision which the physical effort brings forth in my mind.

I am a damaged human being, but before I go any further, I would say, that we are all damaged in our own way by the trials and tribulations and joys and successes of our lives.

One day last week, I noticed the blocked out windows in old mill buildings which overlooked the canal footpath on which I was running.

These blocked out windows made me feel sad.

Sad, but not downcast, because these block out windows retained the capacity to see again. Their potential to be a conduit for light and vision remained.

The boarding up could be torn down in an instant by a property restorer worth their good name, because the potential is limitless, the canals, once derelict and broken are restored, lively and vibrant.

And what about those windows blocked out within ourselves, hiding us from a truth which like those canals our understanding of which has most likely developed and changed.

If only we could find the courage to tear down the hoardings and look with open eyes at the beautiful and the ugly; the happy and the sad; the perfect and the broken;

…….. aspects of what it is, that makes us unique, special, purposeful and wonderful human beings that we are, here on this earth, to be in this present moment, of our lives.

My next blog will be: The Futility of Filling the Gaps

William Defoe

Pulling on the Hand Brake

One day last week whilst I sat, waiting alone in my car, for my wife to emerge from our local supermarket, I released the hand brake on my car.

Although the ground appeared to be flat, the car rolled forward after an ever so slight hesitation.

I quickly pulled on the hand brake and the car stood still.

I began to contemplate what the consequences would have been had I not pulled on the hand brake.

My car would have rolled over the driving lane between the two rows of parked cars and I would have bumped into the car in front of me.

Of course, in the normal everyday action of driving a car, every moment it seems is a risk assessment of the actions I have to take to avoid colliding with another car.

This slowed down focus in the supermarket car park enabled me to analyse and think about the importance of being aware of the presence of a metaphorical hand brake, in respect of my interactions with others.

In recent years, I have honed my skills of controlling my response, and in particular to provocation, to avoid bumping and colliding into situations which I would have better avoided, if only I had taken a moment to react with the caution I apply whilst driving.

The idea of releasing my hand brake and rolling into another car whilst participating passively seems to me to be a ridiculous notion.

But focusing on this aspect, in minute detail, in a quiet moment has enable me, I think to finally understand that my response to others, by pulling on the hand brake will avoid damage to myself and others in much the same way.

My next blog will be: Blocked Out Windows

William Defoe

A Treat To Say Thank You

In the days leading up to, and including, the Easter weekend, we helped our daughter move out of one apartment and into another.

It was hard work I can tell you.

As parents, we do these things for our children, and I am beginning to appreciate that this habit of supporting and guiding does not end at the point at which they enter adulthood, it continues unabated!.

The difference came though, in an unexpected surprise a couple of weeks later when my daughter called in to see us and invited us out for lunch on the following Saturday.

I was pleased that she had asked us, and in a strange way, I felt it was an appropriate gesture given the immense effort and time which her move had required from us over a holiday weekend.

However, when the time came to go for lunch, I had this strange feeling, which I can only describe as an uncomfortable state of mind because, in truth, I did not want her spending her money on us.

We went for lunch, and my daughter bought and paid for everything and she refused absolutely to let me contribute towards it.

A part of me wanted to say to her, “ok now, you have brought us out, I can see you have done the right thing, but now let me pay – I can afford it, money is more difficult for you at this stage of your life, than it is for us.”

But………….  I let her pay!

As I came out of the restaurant, I told her how lovely it was for us to be acknowledged by her and thanked in this way. It had been a nice treat.

I think I find it hard to be thanked for what I do.

I carry within me, remnants of feelings that I was a failure as a husband and a father, despite doing the best I could with the load which I carried in private in respect of my sexuality at a time when I found it totally alien to my way of life, and a threat to all I believe and hold dear.

I have come to realise that my liberation from self judgement, and my acceptance of all of me, and my love for all that is me, has enabled me to feel able to accept a treat from those who love me, when they want to say thank you for what I have done for them.

My next blog will be: Pulling on the Hand Brake

William Defoe

 

 

Having a Sense of the Sacred

There is much to be concerned about in parts of the world, where intense religious fervour leads to intolerance and violence.

I think that having a sense of the sacred should provoke a response of humility, thankfulness and respect.

To have a sense of the sacred is to show respect to all life, animal, human and divine.

In a crude sense, showing respect,  can appear to be self demeaning because it is deferential to something or someone, whom we feel we have a sense of awe and wonder for.

In the UK, we as citizens, although not required to do so, bow our heads or bend our knee to the sovereign, our Queen. This, at its basic level is because, this lady has been marked out by God, through her anointing at her coronation to serve us.

In church services I will bow towards the priest as I walk up to the lectern to read as a sign of my respect for his anointment to priestly holy orders at his ordination.

I may also find myself, inclining my head, when I am introduced to someone for the first time. It is almost an innate response within me to show respect, to imply friendship, to imply that I am not a threat.

These examples of having a sense of the sacred, have their origins in a deity, but they are more human in their execution.

For me, the fullest interpretation of having a sense of the sacred is in the act of worship.

As a practising Roman Catholic, the most sacred of entities is the bread and wine which is consecrated by the priest, into what I believe, to be the Body and Blood of Christ.

This is a matter of faith which I take on to myself in full consciousness of free-will and choice.

As a Eucharistic Minister, I have the honour of supporting the distribution of Holy Communion (the Body and Blood of Christ) to my fellow believers, and it is a time when I want most of all to have a sense of the sacred.

When I pass the chalice* containing the Blood of Christ to a communicant, this involves momentarily, letting go of the vessel while the communicant takes a sip of this most holy of drinks.

As the chalice first leaves my possession, and then as it is returned to me, moments later, the exchange is  conducted with intense reverence and with utmost care so that none of the precious liquid is spilled.

At each exchange I bow my head, and I am fully conscious that this is my choice to do so, I want to do so, because, for me, having a sense of the sacred makes my capacity to be present in the world infinite, just as Christs presence in the world is infinite in His love for me in the Eucharist.

My next blog will be: A Treat to Say Thank You

William Defoe

*a chalice is a goblet, usually lined or fully made of gold into which the wine is consecrated to become the Blood of Christ.

Territorial Ducks

I very much like the season of late Spring here in the UK.

I have started a new morning run along a local canal, and the low sun dapples through the lattice fencing and trees, to illuminate my path and dazzle my eyes.

On the canal itself, the ducks seem to be in a never ending battle to fend off unwanted rivals for their female partners, and they will fiercely defend the territory which they have marked out as their own.

It is fascinating to see what the ducks perceive to be their territorial space – a space which appears to have no physical limits, but which has more to do with proximity to the space in which they are residing.

In my own life, I have perceived and experienced encroachments into my space in a physical, social, intellectual and emotional sense.

The inner struggle to maintain a rigid set of values, seen through a narrow prism of what is, and what is not acceptable, has taken its toll on my well being and on my relationships, some of which have been damaged or lost.

The territorial ducks would have to exert less effort to defend their territory, if they could withstand encroachment to a wider limit., and so of course would I.

If I can learn to experience my life on a wider canvass, which tolerates differences of opinion, differences of tastes and beliefs, differences of values and morals, the judgement on myself and others diminishes, and my expectations become more manageable and flexible.

I have experienced in recent years, a profound sense of living my life, of noticing it, loving it, valuing it, without having this constant feeling that I am there to put things right, or to be liked.

My relationships, particularly with those whom I love, has shifted from direction and control, to listening and being present with them in the moment.

I have experienced a greater sense that the space which I have created, is more likely to be protected and defended by others, because within my territory, there is space in which others can flourish which they don’t want to lose.

My next blog will be:   Waving Handkerchiefs in Fatima

William Defoe

My Foot at a Right Angle

Last Saturday evening, I was in a local pub with my wife and a group of friends.

In one of the new micro-pubs* which are opening up with great frequency in the area where I live, I found myself propped up, by leaning against a pillar, with my right shoulder, and my right leg straight down with my foot out in front of me.

However, when I looked down to my left side, my left foot had disappeared – it was not visible from the angle of its placement to my line of sight.

It felt a bit weird. I had bent my left leg and then turned the knee outwards at 90 degrees, and then the foot at 90 degrees. This gave the appearance that my foot was at 180 degrees to its normal position  – as if the foot was on, back to front.

It was also invisible, because the calf of my left leg bulged out and obscured my view of my foot.

I must have been momentarily distracted from the group conversation, because I found myself, moving the foot in and out of my line of sight and feeling quite strange at what looked  like some magical contortion of the foot.

I think, this ability to discover unusual capabilities about what is physically possible for us all, has something to say to each of us, about giving ourselves up to a willingness to be surprised.

As I get older – into my mid-fifties – I sense a physical aging, but also a growing fascination with the vein structures in my hands and feet.

The act of bringing our hands up to our face, and looking intently at the folds in the fingers and the life-lines on the palms, refresh and renew our sense of who we are and how our body has evolved with us, and for us, throughout our lives.

The twisting and turning of the joints, the bending and straining of the back and neck and arms and legs and hands and feet, speaks to me of my capacity to strive for a wider context, a depth of meaning, and an acceptance of not having all of the answers.

I move my foot from its right angle and use it purposefully to walk towards the bar…… now, can I remember what I have been asked to provide my friends with …. oh yes, three pints of bitter, one dry white wine, a diet coke (no ice) and a rum and black.

My next blog will be : Territorial Ducks

William Defoe

 

*A micro-pub is usually a small space with a well stocked bar of real ales with limited seating. They are modern, light and look like shop fronts from the outside, rather than a traditional public house.

Finding Resilience

I have come to realise that I am in essence a vulnerable adult – vulnerable that is to my emotional state.

In recent years I have been engaged in a process of deep inner work of finding resilience through continued development.

To be in the search of finding resilience is to be in the work of continuing practice because it is through the practising that I feel safe or should I say safer from reacting on an emotional level to the world around me.

My practices are manifold and include:

  • sitting quietly listening to my inner voice;
  • noticing and appreciating the natural world and feeling myself to be a part of it;
  • running;
  • writing;
  • reading coaching material which is recommended to me;
  • visiting my coach and bringing everything;
  • reaching out to my family to be a source of support for their needs of me in their life;
  • prayer;
  • friends;
  • working;
  • eating;
  • relaxing;
  • sleeping;
  • listening to others;
  • reflecting;
  • loving;
  • learning something new;
  • reminding myself of the things I am passionate about.

Above all, finding resilience for me, is to be engaged in the important work of accepting all aspects of self, in deepening my capacity to be expansive in my thinking; of being less reactive to events, being more reflective; more honest and open with others; and more empathetic.

Finding Resilience is to be engaged in the habits of practices which give stability and hope and peace to a conflicted life.

My next blog will be: Cornfield

William Defoe