Monday, August 17, 2020

How to Avoid Being a Jerk to Gay People


My mom gets cold easily

I don't know about you, but I have a lot of experience being a jerk. I rarely behave like a jerk on purpose, it happens most frequently with the people I love, and almost always because I lack empathy.  


For example, I’ve been a total jerk to my dad. His life has gotten considerably harder since my mom was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s four years ago. I have recommended to my dad multiple times that he move my mom to an assisted living facility. The solution is so obvious to me that I can’t help but tell him what to do over and over again. But he doesn’t listen to me, so I watch him choose to make his life harder by keeping my mom at home.  

Classic Buzz and Ginny
A few months ago, I was staying with my parents for a few weeks. I don’t recall what prompted it, but I decided to take a mental journey. I imagined what it would be like to do what I had so often recommended--to take my mom to an assisted living center. I pictured us packing her bags. I pictured us driving her to her new home. I pictured us helping her set up her room and telling her how much she was going to love it there. I pictured us hugging her, saying goodbye, and leaving her. I pictured us driving away and getting home and sobbing. And then I pictured her alone in an unfamiliar place. After thinking through that possibility, I realized in that moment that I was telling my dad to do something that I couldn’t do. 

My advice to my dad had been the wrong advice because I didn’t truly take the time to understand the implication of my advice on my mom. That night I wrote a long entry in my journal praising my dad. He was giving my mom the best gift he could by allowing her to be in her home, and he was doing it at great personal sacrifice. I had been so focused on fixing his problem that I failed to understand his commitment to his wife.  

In Acts 15, amid the rapid influx of gentiles into the church, the leaders of Christ’s Church had a meeting to figure out what to do with all the new members. Some of the Pharisees in attendance insisted that the Gentile converts needed to keep the law of Moses. I don’t know if they this took this position because of centuries of tradition, or because the Gentiles were different from them and made them feel uncomfortable. Whatever the reason, these Pharisees were kind of being jerks. 

In the midst of their lively debate, Peter rises from his seat and asks, “Now therefore why tempt ye God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?” In essence Peter asked: Why are you asking them to do something you couldn’t do? Peter asked them to take a mental journey—to put themselves in the position of the new converts—and really try to understand what they were asking of the Gentiles. Peter wanted them to understand that they would not be capable of making the sacrifice that they were advocating for.

A lot of well-meaning people have been truly unkind to me and other LGBTQ Latter-day Saints. I attribute this unkindness to ignorance and not to malice. So if you are not a gay Latter-day Saint I’d like to make an invitation. Take some time, some real solid thinking time, to go on a mental journey. Put yourself in the shoes of your LGBTQ brothers and sisters and ask yourself what you would do if you experienced their challenges. Here are some situations to consider that reflect some of my lived experience: 

What would you do if you were taught that the whole point of life was to marry someone that you weren’t attracted to? 

What would you do if you fell profoundly in love with a person (who by some miracle seemed to love you even more), but if you were to marry them you’d be barred from heaven?  

What would you do if people at church thought of you and even called you a pervert? 

What would you do if people told you that your orientation was the result of sexual abuse and bad parenting? 

What would you do if you wanted to move forward in the Church and be with a partner, but you knew you couldn’t do both things? 

Agency is contextual and our decisions are not made in a vacuum. The majority of my LGBTQ Latter-day Saint friends have distanced themselves from the Church in some way. I know very few like me who are committed to a life of singleness and committed to moving forward in the Church. Why are there so few of us? Where are all the happy, thriving, single gay Latter-day Saints? Of the LGBTQ Latter-day Saints you know, how many of them have stepped away from the Church? Why is that? What isn’t working? I think that part of the way that we are unintentionally being jerks is by completely blaming their leaving on them. 

That's definitely my shirt
I know they’re not meaning to, but parents can really be jerks to their LGBTQ children. I worry that some parents are afraid that the Atonement won’t work for their kids. So they push them to make the “right” choices. They can’t understand why their kids would make choices different from the ones they have made. 

If parents and have taught their children truth, and have helped them have experiences with the Spirit, then they just have to trust that their kids can find their path. I have been able to make the choices I have made because my family gave me the freedom to make hard choices. Because there was no one putting a yoke on my neck. When parents express confidence in their children’s ability to receive revelation then they are more likely to seek that revelation and follow it. If we push people to do what we want them to do all we’re really doing is pushing them away. And we’re kind of being big jerks. 

To quote Disney’s Pocahontas, “If you walk the footsteps of a stranger, you’ll learn things you never knew you never knew.” If you want to avoid being a jerk to the LGBTQ people in your life, never ask them to do something that you yourself couldn’t do. If you want to avoid being a jerk, take some time to really put yourself in their shoes. If you want to avoid being a jerk, imagine how you would employ your agency given the context of their lives. Imagine how you would want someone you love to react to your difficult decisions—decisions that might seem completely foreign to them. We can never really know what it’s like to be someone else, but it’s a real gift when we try. And we can trust the Savior to guide our actions, and the paths of those we love.

24 comments:

melinda and tim said...

Beautiful. Thank you for this post!

Day said...

Oh Ben-such truth. I have thought about your dad and the sacrifice he is making-but if you ask him, in his heart-he could do nothing else. Your description of the actual possible event is too painful to even imagine. Thank you for reminding us of this truth.

Josh Zeal said...

Praise the Heavens! Yes, I completely agree with the suggestion to think before you tell people to do something that you yourself, have not/will not/can not do/think/behave in the way you suggest another to do.

Thank you for this kind reminder.

PS. I think a reason, of many reasons why there aren't very many LGBTQ Latter-day Saints living a single life is because the majority of of the Latter-day Saints don't ever entertain the idea of being single for their entire mortal existence. It almost feels like, people are treated as lepers if you don't marry.

In all fairness, we do not know if Christ was even married. There isn't any definitive proof to say whether He was or wasn't. But if He can live the 'perfect' life without the bonds of marriage, People can make it back to Heaven without it too.

Unknown said...

Rather than Foucauldian discipline and punishment, we ought to encourage and support. I believe that will give people the power to choose—and more often than not, choose wisely. Thank you for your post, Ben.

Anonymous said...

I just love this so much. Tender merci for me today thanks!

erin said...

I love hearing your perspective, and I love how you model what you are teaching in this post. You show empathy and kindness to those who don't understand, just as you are asking for in return, and give an example of how you are also learning and improving. Thanks for being a such good teacher! Hugs!

Drew Armstrong said...

Your shirt looks great on your mom. Love Ya Ben...

oopsey.daisy said...

Ben, thank you for being tactfully blunt. These are important points. I appreciate you sharing the tender story about your parents to remind us how critical empathy is!

I believe most people want to do good and be good. However, though few actually mean harm, hurt can still happen when we aren’t careful to temper our words with a healthy dose of empathy.

There are few issues stickier than this one and, as a mother of a child who is gay and as a friend of others who are, I echo your words. I believe that, if Jesus were among us, He’d never be a jerk. Instead, He would love and be kind to all of us, no matter our race, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation or anything else that might differentiate us. And He would never make us feel other. Instead, I think he’d wrap His perfectly compassionate arms around each of us and tell us He understands. And we’d know He does. This is the example I want to follow. Thanks again for your post!

Heather said...

Good stuff. Thank you for showing us how to see better.

Freda's Hive said...

As a mom of 2 gay adults that have left the church because of not fitting in. Thank you.

Becky Edwards said...

Such a great post, Ben. Empathy is such an important life skill in our path to becoming more like Christ.

Samantha Edwards said...

Amazing post!!

Samantha Edwards said...

Amazing post!

Henrique Souza said...

I loved this! Thank you so much for this amazing post!

Jayne said...

A timely reminder. I didn’t even realize I’d been getting tempted to be unkind recently. One of those no-no questions has popped into my head from time to time but it never felt right to ask it even though I kind of wanted to. So glad I never did. Thanks for helping me know how to be a better friend!

Lucas said...

This is one of the best things I've ever read. Thank you!

Anonymous said...

Thank you for writing this. As an ally, I think it should also be noted how many parents (and family members) leave the Church or stop activity because of how doctrine and policies affect their child. When it becomes personal, it becomes real.

Cindy B said...

Great article. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

Unknown said...

Beautifully written and many great points to ponder.

Anonymous said...

Great! I say this as a leader in the church who happens to be gay. This will move us in the direction of kindness inside and outside the church.

Matt Allen said...

Great piece!!

Unknown said...

What a wonderful piece you have shared. I wish for this to be shared elsewhere. People who really could benefit from this essay are not in this group. You really hit the nail on the head. This applies beyond LGTBQ+ as well. My daughter and her husband left the Church abruptly, recently. They choose not to discuss their reasons so as to not undermine the faith of others. But I know it's also because they value relationships and want to maintain them-- but they also have felt vulnerable. People in the Church (especially family) can "be jerks" toward anyone who leaves, or those who are following a less than traditional life path. It is very hard to stay in the Church when things are taught or said that conflict with what your very heart and soul tell you is right. Because your heart and soul are who you ARE. It's hard to explain such a thing to many in the Church. Those who leave are seen as failing, unfaithful, unworthy, deceived, etc. Family and friends fear losing them in eternity. They can also feel threatened, because disagreement and dissenting beliefs challenge their own belief system, and being challenged in this way can be unsettling and frightening. Traditional members don't like their boat rocked that way, and to assign explanations that blame and lack insight or empathy. For whatever reason, my mind and heart have always been so uncomfortable with the neat and tidy explanations of the way the world supposedly works, and the oversimplification of God and his Children. That sort of thinking might help a lot of people in the Church to make sense of the world and the purpose of life, but since my 1970' s childhood my heart knew it felt judgmental and incorrect. Id go to church and hear the teachings, and it didn't feel like Jesus. Whether it was throwing other religions under the bus, my Dad calling nonmembers "Gentiles", categorizing certain people as "Jack Mormon" or "apostate", it felt wrong. Thinking we Mormons have the " Fullness of the Gospel" and talking about how we have the Gift of the Holy Ghost, and The Truth seemed to me to encourage pride and blindness, like the beam in an eye. President Benson said "The great son of The Church is pride". Historically, pride was woven into the culture and the spoken word, if not the true doctrine itself. Religions challenge is to become better by learning to love and be better people, but also challenge is by in imperfections of our own imperfection, and thus the imperfection of members and leaders alike. It can be very difficult if not impossible to reconcile all of the past and present, with basic, true teachings of Christ. So some, like my daughter, leave as a matter of conscience. She didn't have to explain it to me, I get it. I've been there. It's hard for a lot of members to see that while membership in the Church brings peace, joy, and happiness to many, it can feel the opposite to others-- and hard for them not to feel threatened by that. It's easier to flock with those that share your worldview, and assign blindness to those who see things differently. And so the divide appears... And widens...Zion is not a place, and it's not just The Church either. Zion is a people joined in unconditional love. Genuine love. Not loving people because the have "the potential" to one day "progress to become more like"...ME. Maybe I'm not the only one who has considered that the City of Enoch may not have been a city where every person was literally in the Covenant? Maybe the grace and mercy was so powerful, they could not be kept from God. Grace and mercy are primary attributes of Christ, but these things can't exist fully in the absence of error, or differences. Unity is the goal, but unity in Zion does not imply sameness.

Aaron Carter said...

Loved this post. I have asked a few people those same questions in the hope that they can even for a second try and put themselves in my shoes. When they really take that moment to ponder those questions, understanding and empathy always result from it.

Anonymous said...

I've often thought "Jerk" should be a diagnosis in the next DSM. After my son came out, I think I would be the first one to receive that diagnosis.