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Outward to Inward, or Vice-Versa

By a Psychotherapist and Evergreen Participant


If you have ever found yourself looking within yourself (attempting to assess what you need from an insiders perspective, while recognizing that at that moment you sense you are an outsider to your own self) then you might have concluded that, on more than one occasion, you may not know what you need because how can you be inside and be objectively outside yourself.

In my process toward an understanding and appreciation of myself, I have engaged in unnumbered private, and often intimate, conversations within my head, of the how's and why's of things and events. Sometimes I blamed or encouraged the negative self-worth images, while at other times I noted the strength and power I have within my soul to move through homosexuality.

Recently, a clarity has emerged with my perception of general healing, and more specifically with same-sex attraction. The theme of current conversations within my head, as well as with friends, has been "letting go" of the life, the feelings, the known reality that has encased and engrossed my life, of which I defined as (dare I say) the thing I loved. How can I give up something I love? It's all I know, right?

For me, I doubt I have consciously said that I loved the gay life, and in fact it has nearly always been to the contrary. However, at an unconscious level, I have fed the belief that being gay was who I was and I needed to accept this reality. And so, during these past two years of taking initiative to participate in individual therapy, along with group process, I have found myself in a state of consternation: do I want to let go of something I have loved? No, I can't let go!

A quantum leap can occur. I have learned now to change the phrasing to say, "How can I let go of something I have found frustrating, debilitating, painful, and hateful?"

This has allowed me to shift from a frame of entrapment to one of permission--permission to accept the notion that maybe it is okay to "let go" of the past and not shame the identity that was so profoundly attached to me. I can accept my perceived known identity and integrate it with what has not yet been developed. I can feel frustrated, painful, hurt, and angry at a life that did not bring lasting happiness, without causing shame and hate upon my core self, a self that was not aware of how to receive appropriate touch, both male and female.

And so, how can this shift bring a sense of comfort within your soul? Honestly, it may not. However, it may. Each of us is unique, and we each must look inward to look outward, or vice-versa. In order to find what can enable our own movement towards healing. What is helpful for me is to write down my thoughts. As they become written, I become clearer as to my thoughts. But words that remain on paper can fade as time passes. So, for me, I need to speak them outwardly, not just inwardly. My friends listen, and in conversation, my thoughts can be accepted, stretched, or understood. I like to process inside and outside.



Originally published in Journey, Volume 4, Number 3, May/June 1994, pages 1 and 3.


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