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25 new of 84 responses total.
jazz
response 57 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 01:27 UTC 2002

        Whyzat?
brighn
response 58 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 03:52 UTC 2002

Reparative derives from "repair." Julie, your speech is so full of
justifications, it saddens me. You refer to homosexuality as a bandaid for
psychosocial problems. I didn't say that Reparation Therapy was aimed at all
gays, but I did say it was people whose thinking is, "I'm gay because I'm
broken. Fix me." That's what you said in a lot more words while disagreeing
with me.
jaklumen
response 59 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 03:56 UTC 2002

it should be noted reparative therapy is espoused generally by those 
who are dissatisfied with their attractions.. they may have exclusive 
attractions to the same sex, or they may not.  We aren't going to 
waste time with folks that are happy gay.  We weren't happy with the 
lifestyle, so..

I hate having to explain myself all over again =P
jaklumen
response 60 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 04:04 UTC 2002

Okay, Paul, it's time to leave the prego woman alone.

I don't know about her, but in some aspects, I see my attractions as a 
source of strength-- it is easier for me to be sensitive, gentle, open 
and honest, in some aspects.  I am empathetic to others who are in my 
shoes.  My feelings are good in some ways.

However, it has not been my experience that homosexual relations have 
been good or healthy for me.  It is damaging to my marriage, and it is 
incompatible with my faith.  Some say I should change faiths, and I 
should expect Julie to learn to accept things or maybe she should 
leave.

But Julie is a good woman.  I love my faith.  Putting my sex with men 
to the side-- forever-- is a sacrifice I am willing to make.
oval
response 61 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 08:15 UTC 2002

 ..or your faith is incompatible with you.

jazz .. the reason these groups hate me is because (in one instance in
particular) i am seen as a woman who 'fooled around' with one their 'members'
casually and with a genuine intention of getting to know her better etc
blahblah .. but because i had a boyfriend at the time, and because i am
generally close with men, and because i am not a
unfeminine-stereotypical-dyke-what-have-you they felt that i was your typical
'bi-femme-tease-bitch who didn't "fit" with their social mold and therefore
was unacceptable as a human being type situation. i dont really give a shit,
as i have no desire my individuality for that kind of crap.
i could cite other instances that have led me to feel this way.

oval
response 62 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 08:39 UTC 2002

..umm .. that's .. i have no desire _to sacrifice my individuality_ for that
kind of crap.

and while im hiccupping an ranting and typing like shit...

all the shit i've experienced with women has made me really turned off by the
thought of getting involved with a woman in general. while i'm open and
willing  .. i have to say that the politics surrounding it are not worth it.
i still, however, do not feel as though those 'bad feelings' are in need of
'repair' within myself, nor to conform to any steroetype of lesbianism etc.

i could really rant on the fucked-up-ness of men too .. but i won't, as they
haven't pissed up me off percentage-wise the same way as women, and my -
they're tasty.


..
morwen
response 63 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 10:31 UTC 2002

resp:60 No, Jon, in this case, I think he should be free to voice his 
opinion and I don't feel threatened.  After all this *is* a public 
forum.

resp:58  
>Reparative derives from "repair." Julie, your speech is so full of
>justifications, it saddens me. You refer to homosexuality as a 
>bandaid for psychosocial problems. I didn't say that Reparation 
>Therapy was aimed at all gays, but I did say  That's what you said in 
>a lot more words while disagreeing with me.

Okay, it is true that the term "reparative" derives from the 
word "repair" meaning (according to Webster's Seventh New Collegiate 
Dictionary) "1a: To restore by replacing a part or putting together 
what is torn or broken: FIX b:to restore to a sound or healthy state: 
RENEW 2: To make good: REMEDY", which is basically what you said, I'm 
just clarifying.  Also, generally speaking, those of us that 
seek "reparative therapy" (hereinafter referred to as RT) tend to be 
those of us who believe that there is something fundamentally wrong 
with us, maybe not necessarily the homosexual behavior, but usually 
so.  

On the other hand, I interpreted your comment "it was people whose 
thinking is, 'I'm gay because I'm broken. Fix me.'" to mean that you 
thought that many of us who have sought RT were just a load of 
whiners.  I am most likely mistaken in this assessment due to  certain 
inherent problems in translation between communicating persons with 
differing opinions.  However, if that was, in fact, the case, I want 
to clarify that I in no way *expected* the world to "fix me".  I 
simply went in search of a personal solution.  If Homosexuality were 
something that required a "cure" or a specific "fix", then I wouldn't 
have had to do that, would I?  I will admit that I believed, and still 
believe, that there was a certain part of me that was damaged by my 
abuse and contributed to my eventual sexualization of the problem 
because I was too young at the time to really be able to understand 
how that part of me had been damaged or what sort of "repairs" were 
needed.  

So, in fact,I suppose I am agreeing with you.  Many of us are, in 
effect, saying "I'm gay because I'm broken,"  but I don't think any of 
us are saying "Fix me."  I think it is more like this "I have these 
gay feelings because of something about me that is broken or not 
functioning properly.  Teach me how I can fix it."

It wasn't my intention to "justify" anything.  I merely intended to 
state the facts.  I hope this clears things up a little.  If you have 
any other questions I can answer, I'll be happy to try to do so. 

Oh by the way.  I seem to recall a question regarding whether there 
was ever anyone seeking RT to be free of problems that made the 
heterosexual.  I haven't heard of any, but that doesn't necessarily 
mean that there *aren't* any.  Anything's possible.  After what I'vwe 
been through, I can certainly testify to that.
morwen
response 64 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 10:35 UTC 2002

resp:63  I have funny feeling I may seem to have contradicted myself 
somewhere.  

Allow me to clarify a bit more.  "I have these gay feelings because of 
something about me that is broken or not functioning properly.  
Please, help me figure out what it is so that I can fix it."

Hopefully, that is closer.
brighn
response 65 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 15:38 UTC 2002

Julie, if your complaint is that my characterization of Exodus is that the
people who go there are passively and dependently asking Exodus to "fix them,"
rather than taking responsibility for their own "fixing" by reaching out for
help, ok, I'll accept that. I'll amend to "Exodus helps people who don't want
to be gay to not be gay."
 
Jon, on a different thread, get off it. Suggesting that Julie should be given
special treatment because she's pregnant, or that I should "cut her some
slack" (private email) because she's pregnant, is disempowering garbage. Julie
is an adult, she made the adult choice to get pregnant (IIRC, if not, she made
the adult choice to engage in acts that might make her pregnant, and the adult
choice to stay pregnant), I'm not going to put on kid gloves and start
treating her like a child. As she said, she can defend herself. Just because
you're LDS doesn't mean you have to act like Brigham Young.
morwen
response 66 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 21:27 UTC 2002

lol.  Be nice, Paul. Thank you very much for the vote of confidence.
Jon, thank you for attempting to defend me.  Gentlemen, I concur with 
Paul in this case.  Just because I'm pregnant doesn't mean I should be 
treated differently.  And Paul, I think you should probably give Jon a 
little credit.  He's going to be a daddy soon and it's his first time.
I think you could stand to be a little nicer to him.  I don't think he 
was acting like Brigham Young.  I think he was acting like a 
protective husband.  

In any case.  Maybe it is time to freeze this item and talk about 
something else, if all we can do is argue.  Lets just agree that we 
disagree and move on.  Okay?
jazz
response 67 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 21:45 UTC 2002

        One thing, to bring these two threads together, that's always bugged
me is the way that some people don't seperate a sexual preference and a
lifestyle.  They really don't have anything to do with each other, other than
the fact that some groups seem to center around little in the way of common
interest except for a common sexual preference and a love for drama.
brighn
response 68 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 4 22:41 UTC 2002

#66> Since you asked so nicely, I'll stop picking on Jon. ;} All the same,
I can't resist this, but I'll provide this preface so you KNOW I'm joking:
 
What, Julie? Now I'm supposed to be nice to Jon because HE's pregnant?
Boyoboy, you're just two peas in a pod, aren't you? Special treatment all
around.
snowth
response 69 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 5 23:57 UTC 2002

(I'm glad you said it Paul, I was just about to make fun of Julie for the same
thing, but (a) you got to it first, and (b) you're already in trouble for
picking on the soon to be parents. :)
jaklumen
response 70 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 10:17 UTC 2002

brighn: ignore e-mail reply then, I hadn't read this yet

yeah, yeah, I'm pregnant too, about to give birth to a fat cake
jazz
response 71 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 14:38 UTC 2002

        While reading through a book on the therapeutic techniques of Milton
Ericson, I noticed that, in almost every example of the great therapist's
work, he was deliberately acting as a normative, not just working with the
subject's problems, but also bringing them back in line with his percieved
notions of what a person should think and feel, and what their role in society
should be.  It troubled me, and it still troubles me.

        I'd also like to state that the idea that, if you are bisexual, that
you can and should have one partner of each gender, isn't necessarily a part
and parcel of bisexuality.  I can't see how it's any different than a
heterosexual or homosexual who prefers, say, blondes and brunettes,
rationalizing that they should then have one partner of each gender.  If
you've got an arranged polygamous relationship, or you're not in a committed
relationship, then you are of course free to do as you've negotiated, or as
you will.  But if you go introducing the idea of bi privilege into a committed
relationship, don't be surprised if it has negative effects, and don't blame
bisexuality for it.
phenix
response 72 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 15:18 UTC 2002

i'll take a burnette, a redhead and a blonde please.
with a side of gradients, maybe some blue or artificial red
morwen
response 73 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 17:22 UTC 2002

jazz:  hmm.  Maybe I need to have this "bi privilege" thing defined 
for me because I don't recall ever saying I was claiming it.
jazz
response 74 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 18:11 UTC 2002

        It's a local term for the concept that, if one is bisexual, one can
or should have a partner of each gender.  Jon mentioned it a couple of
responses back, though not by that term, but I'm too lazy to go back and
quote.
phenix
response 75 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 18:25 UTC 2002

oh hey, she can have a freind, as long as i'm the male partner for both
michaela
response 76 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 18:47 UTC 2002

I've already told my boy that he can have a boy, but I get to watch...or at
least take pictures.  He was all for it, but then he realized it would still
feel like cheating, even though I'd said it was okay (and encouraged it). 
I feel bad that he won't get the experience of being with a guy, but I'm also
okay that he feels weird about touching anyone but me.  :)
oval
response 77 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 22:53 UTC 2002

menage a trois?

jazz
response 78 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 23:42 UTC 2002

        I think that's what she's getting at.

        I actually had a girl I was in a committed relationship with bring the
idea up.  I wasn't really into it.  It would've been unhealthy for the
relationship unless it was just the right person.
oval
response 79 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 23:50 UTC 2002

yea, it's easy to find a dynamic of 3 that's comfortable for everyone.

oval
response 80 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 6 23:52 UTC 2002

err .._not_ easy.

michaela
response 81 of 84: Mark Unseen   Apr 7 04:25 UTC 2002

Um, no.  I didn't want a threesome.  I wanted to watch and/or take pictures.
That does not mean "threesome".  It means watch.

      :)
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