In my first post on #sexUUality I said I
wanted to have a conversation about sexuality. To quote myself, I said, “I
want to begin a conversation with you, my ten faithful readers, the other
bloggers, and myself about how healthy, sacred sexuality can appear in our
lives, through the different phases of our lives: single, coupled, exploring;
in times of wild passion, aching desire, or deep rest. I want to include our
bodies and our hearts and our spirits in this conversation as well. I want to
talk about when our passions deepen our understanding of who we are and how we
love, and when our passions seem to betray us, leaving us vulnerable to pain.”
So, for the past couple of posts, I’ve been writing about
different ways of seeing our sexuality as sacred and holy, as diverse and
complex, with so many more flavors than vanilla (although vanilla is a flavor,
too, in the words of butch lesbian comedian Lynn Lavner.)
And when we can live into our wholeness, our whole-i-ness, by
being authentic to our truest self, it truly is a holy, healing, sacred moment.
But what happens when our passions seem to betray us, or when we seek healing
in a way that leaves us feeling shame and guilt and regret?
What happens when we find ourselves in situations where we
feel incapable of stopping something that is happening, or when, in the midst
of emotional and spiritual pain we allow things to happen to us or actively
engage in sexual activities that don’t feel sacred or bring healing to our
lives and in fact, mire us in the tar pits of shame and its BFF self-loathing?
Because the truth is, those things happen, too. And sometimes they happen to us, and
sometimes we choose them. This is what I heard from one of my ten faithful readers
when I asked for suggestions on what to post about sexuality: Nothing has caused me
deeper, more-lasting shame than allowing myself to be used sexually when this
felt like a violation. I was a teenager and young adult then and have currently
survived into my late sixties without being able to find my way out of that
deep shame and into embracing sexuality as a fulfilling aspect of being human.
I'd like you to write about healing sexual wounds.
This is the power of shame and, I believe the
exponentially increased power of shame when it’s connected to our sexuality. My
reader feels shame for things she allowed to happen, even though it felt like a
violation. My heart aches for this person—and all others—who take on the
responsibility of sexual activity that wasn’t their idea and wasn’t pleasurable
to them. In our teens we are so vulnerable to this type of sexual exploitation.
For my reader, something happened that she felt incapable of refusing. For me,
it was slightly different.
I
remember one summer day when I was waiting for the bus transfer downtown. It
was early morning, I was about 15 years old and was working the opening shift at
Sir John’s Steak and Cake House. I didn’t have a car and so took the bus, which
I boarded about a block and a half from my home. The first jaunt took me to
downtown and dropped me off at a transfer station. It was about 6:30 AM and I
was leaning against the wall of a business that wouldn’t be opened for hours; I
was tired and thinking of the much needed cup of coffee I’d brew first thing
when I arrived at the restaurant. Then a car pulled into the parking space in
front of me. I looked disinterestedly at the driver but he waved me over. Being
a non-visual person, I thought maybe this was a father of a friend that I hadn’t
recognized so I walked over.
“Hey,” the man said, “How are you?”
“Good,” I replied. I noticed a car seat in
the back seat. This was the late 70’s and the fad was just beginning to catch
on. It was unusual enough for me to remember. “How are you?” I returned politely.
“Good,” the man drummed his fingers on the door
where the window was rolled down. “So,” he said, “let’s go get naked.”
I felt stunned and as if I had been slapped
in the face. I didn’t know what to say. I wish I could say that I responded
angrily and righteously and that I took down his license plate number as he
sped shamefully away, but that’s not what happened. He was an adult. I was a
child. Instead I said, as if regretfully, “I can’t. I have to work.”
He then wanted to know where I worked and I told him! He left then and I returned
to the shelter of the building. Do I look
like a prostitute? I wondered. At that age I was still being mistaken for
being even younger than I really was, but I instantly thought I must have
looked like a prostitute, leaning against the wall of that building, like I was
selling my body for money, like it was my fault that he pulled over and waved
me to his car.
I carried that shame with me for a long time.
I can’t even imagine the weight of the shame my dear reader carries for things
that actually did happen.
And who knows what we do, and why, in our younger years? We are
still soft-skulled creatures, our ability to reason and make informed decisions
not yet fully formed until our mid-20s. And we carry baggage—family drama and
trauma that scars us and can disfigure us like the foot-binding practices of
early Chinese cultures—so that actions we take aren’t organic or natural to
what we would have normally done.
And sometimes, in the naiveté of youth or in
a time of sexual curiosity we choose to explore things or we allow things
that we ultimately regret. And in our sex-phobic culture if that sits unopened
or unexplored, it can be covered with the mold of shame that then becomes the
overwhelming flavor we taste and smell in our sexuality—not vanilla or other
exotic flavors; just the mold of shame.
The truth is that sometimes we will have
regrets, sometimes we will make mistakes, sometimes we will even sin. I love
the scene in the movie “Shortbus” where a wizened old man asks an adorable young
gay man (“Seth with a C”) “How did you sin?” Ceth becomes defensive and asks “What
do you mean?”
The old man asks again, “How did you sin?”
When Ceth responds defensively again, the old man talks about his tenure as
mayor and his sin was that he became impermeable. Then returning to his
unanswered question to Ceth he says, “Whatever your sin is, I’m sure you did
your best.”
So how can there be sexual healing? How can
my faithful reader and others (or, okay, maybe all) of us find healing for our
sexual shame? I wish there was a definitive answer to that. I went through
years of therapy and reading self- help books and plunging myself into
experiencing myself as a sexual being that was sacred and good. I still don’t
have it down pat.
Brene Brown, who is quoted above suggests
sharing those shameful stories with others, though she cautions, “Our stories are not meant for everyone. Hearing them is a privilege,
and we should always ask ourselves this before we share: ‘Who has earned the
right to hear my story?’ If we have one or two people in our lives who can sit
with us and hold space for our shame stories, and love us for our strengths and
struggles, we are incredibly lucky. If we have a friend, or small group of
friends, or family who embraces our imperfections, vulnerabilities, and power,
and fills us with a sense of belonging, we are incredibly lucky.”
Another healing thing to try is to imagine yourself as you
were in that moment that seared you with shame. See the vulnerable, wounded
person—as a child or an adult—that you were. And take the hands of the younger
you and tell her or him, with your broader perspective from the now you
inhabit, that it wasn’t their fault, that they did the best they could, that
you love and cherish them.
It sounds hokey but it’s very powerful.
In a decidedly non-sex positive blog I recently read, the author refers to
Father Smith, the main character in The
World, the Flesh and Father Smith, by Bruce Marshall as saying “the young man who rings the bell at the
brothel is unconsciously looking for God” I find some truth in this. When we
engage with another sexually, when we expose our bodies in such a vulnerable
manner, we really are, often, seeking a sense of the sacred, a sense of
connection with the holy. So when we fail or when we
realize we’ve been
manipulated or coerced into something that actually does us harm, shame is the
first responder. But shame doesn’t have to have the last word. We can reclaim
our sacred bodies, our holy sexuality, our embodied sense of loving and living.
It’s not easy. But we owe it to our past and present and future self to try.
Because our bodies and our sexualities
are sacred and holy; we are fearfully and wonderfully made, according to the
Hebrew psalmist and we are all too beautiful to allow anyone or any memory to
rob us of our divinity.
And we owe it to ourselves to seek to find this last
testament to our own lives so artfully written
by Raymond Carver, from All of Us: Late Fragment
And did you get what
you wanted from this life, even so?
I did.
And what did you want?
To call myself beloved, to feel myself
beloved on the earth.
by Raymond Carver, from All of Us: Late Fragment
And did you get what
you wanted from this life, even so?
I did.
And what did you want?
To call myself beloved, to feel myself
beloved on the earth.
I hope that my faithful reader who asked the
question and all those who read this answer can call themselves beloved and to
feel beloved on this earth. You are all beloved to me.
3 comments:
Thanks, Nori.
So true when you feel your child-body betrayed you by reacting physiologically. Hard to let that go...
I agree lk, our bodies are bodies and respond to certain stimuli, even when it's not wanted. Big hugs.
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