A note from the editor:
I invite my friends, in the words of BYU professor Dr. Lori Wadsworth, to "move in to see those who struggle with doubts or grief and still want to fit in. Move in to see how amazing people are regardless of where they are on their faith journey." Move in to see some thoughts that Mormon millennials have written about their lives.
I want to reiterate: no story looks the same. The goal of these stories is to give voice to men and women, those who are married and those who are single, those with kids and those without, those who are straight and those who are gay, the conservative and the liberal, the faithful and the doubtful--and all gray areas in between these categories. Every person faces different spiritual, physical, and emotional challenges and I hope each story helps us think more compassionately about our friends and family as we move in closer and sit with them for a few minutes.
Again from Lori Wadsworth: "What are we doing to make the world a better place? Are we helping those who are hurting? Are we standing up and speaking out to protecting out Heavenly Father's children?"
Stand up and read. Speak out your story. Love those who are different and those who are the same.
Story 1 of many.
The other day I was watching some kids play the board game Life. You know, the one with the little car pieces where you go around the board collecting life experience. I used to think real life was sort of like the game. Like sometimes you had good luck, and sometimes you had bad luck, but you had a few things you could count on like getting married and finding a job.
I invite my friends, in the words of BYU professor Dr. Lori Wadsworth, to "move in to see those who struggle with doubts or grief and still want to fit in. Move in to see how amazing people are regardless of where they are on their faith journey." Move in to see some thoughts that Mormon millennials have written about their lives.
I want to reiterate: no story looks the same. The goal of these stories is to give voice to men and women, those who are married and those who are single, those with kids and those without, those who are straight and those who are gay, the conservative and the liberal, the faithful and the doubtful--and all gray areas in between these categories. Every person faces different spiritual, physical, and emotional challenges and I hope each story helps us think more compassionately about our friends and family as we move in closer and sit with them for a few minutes.
Again from Lori Wadsworth: "What are we doing to make the world a better place? Are we helping those who are hurting? Are we standing up and speaking out to protecting out Heavenly Father's children?"
Stand up and read. Speak out your story. Love those who are different and those who are the same.
Story 1 of many.
The other day I was watching some kids play the board game Life. You know, the one with the little car pieces where you go around the board collecting life experience. I used to think real life was sort of like the game. Like sometimes you had good luck, and sometimes you had bad luck, but you had a few things you could count on like getting married and finding a job.
Ha ha.
Ha ha ha.
At first, I thought I was just
having a lot of unlucky turns. You spin a three and land on a square that says
your boyfriend cheated on you. Your next turn you land on a square that says
you're in an emotionally abusive relationship. The love of your life stands you
up for a date. You become clinically depressed.
Suddenly you look around and
not only are you not winning the game, you're not even on the board anymore.
When I first realized my life
was seriously off the trajectory I had initially planned (what I considered a
very typical Mormon trajectory: go to college, get married, and live happily
ever after), I started trying to evaluate how I'd ended up where I was. It's
like I thought I could identify a specific event that was the root cause of my
problems (having mental health problems, feeling lonely, etc.) and somehow fix
it.
As I was doing this sort of
reflection, I also started realizing a lot of things about myself. I started
realizing a lot of things about me didn't fit with the stereotypical Molly
Mormon I had envisioned myself being.
I realized I was a lot more
politically liberal than most of my LDS acquaintances. I realized that I have a
lot of questions about LDS doctrine. I realized I was not as straight as I
thought I was. More specifically, I realized that I land somewhere on the
asexual spectrum.
Asexual experiences mean a lot
of different things for different people. For me, it means that I like boys
romantically but have no interest in being physically intimate with them. This
isn't a post about asexuality and what it is and isn't. There are lots of other
places on the web to read about that. But if you want to talk about curveballs
I've had thrown at me, that's sort of a big one. Honestly, I'm still trying to
work out how that one fits into my identity as a Mormon as well as my goals to
get married and having kids.
Finding myself outside the
experience I expected to live as a Mormon has been terrifying in so many ways.
At times, I've fallen into being hard on myself, as if my circumstances are a
direct result of me not being smart/spiritual/pretty/charismatic/good enough to
earn the life I wanted.
Many times I have found myself
wondering if there really even is a place for me in Mormonism, and it's a horrible
feeling, like the religion you've given your all to might not fit you after
all. My faith means the world to me though. My faith defines me far more than
anything else—my education, my asexuality, my singleness—ever could. My faith
is something I want to fight for. I'm going to keep trying to find a place for
me in Mormonism. And if there's not a place, I'm going to make one.
The hard thing about living
life off the game board is that you don't know where you're going to end up.
The best part of living life
off the game board is that you don't know where you're going to end up. A lot
of the coolest places I've been have been off the board.
I've gotten to watch the sunset
over the ocean in Japan. I've gotten to see rainbows in Wales. I've gotten to
see sunrises over the Vermillion Cliffs and seen meteor showers from the tops
of the Bighorn mountains. I've gotten to experience so many beautiful things
that I didn't even know were out there.
I'm in a PhD program now, doing
things I never expected to. Things I never thought I would be able to do. It's
hard. It's hard and beautiful and for the most part, I don't really
understand any of it yet. I'm learning to be more patient. More patient
with God and the trials he allows me to experience. More patient with myself
for not being where I thought I would be.
It's
really far from perfect. But I think it's going to be okay.
--an anonymous friend
--an anonymous friend
YAY ANOTHER MORMON ASEXUAL PERSON!
ReplyDeleteI'm ace and I only realized this after I had been married for 18 months. We had a baby and when he was 6 months old my husband started getting cranky. When I asked what was wrong, he blew up because we hadn't been intimate in a while. I thought that was the stupidest thing I had ever heard. I was ready to kill myself thanks to postpartum depression and he was whining about sex. I wasn't very kind or compassionate towards him. We have now been married for 12 years and while it's difficult to be in an ace/hetero relationship, we've found that we can make it work. We just have to communicate.
So you *can* be ace and Mormon. I'd argue that being ace makes you a great Mormon because you're not tempted to get physical ;-) Hang in there!
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