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Chiquita Blondita




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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Broken Sex, Love, and Intimacy

A few weeks after returning home from my latest trip to Africa, I'm still wrestling with and pondering over lessons learned and issues brought to bear. The long days spent trekking up Mt. Kilimanjaro provided the perfect backdrop for exploring deep thoughts and sharing cerebral conversations with new and renewed friends, along with plenty of joking around and bonding moments to lighten the mood and distract from the physical pain being experienced. During the toughest stretches though, some nagging thoughts came to the surface, life questions, soul searching inquiries that I suspect will rattle around in my head for a while longer before I decide to actually deal with them.

The one thing that crept up out of nowhere and surprised me, the area of my life that I wanted to believe was in check, is sex. Not that I was having any on this trip!

Sex, or rather, my sexual identity, and how I have come to view sex and actualize it in my life, was staring me in the face after sharing my testimony during one long, rocky stretch of road. And I absolutely hated what I saw.

For as far back as I can remember, I have always identified myself according to sexuality- more precisely, the sexuality of females as defined by American pop culture, i.e., an object of desire. Even as a young girl, I loved Mae West, Marilyn Monroe, Playboy Bunnies and Farrah Fawcett. I wanted so badly to "be sexy" and have the attention [read: power] that these women seemed to possess. I have a distinct memory of a family gathering in my parent's house, aunts and uncles, cousins, and I was of course trying to be the center of attention (oh, surprise!). When asked by one of the adults, "Michelle, what do you want to be when you grow up?" my response stunned and shocked them: "I want to be a SEX SYMBOL!" ::lone cricket chirping:: I was maybe 6 or 7 years old. When asked if I even knew what that meant (I didn't) I replied, "Sex Symbols are the most beautiful women in the world and everybody loves them!" After some uncomfortable laughter, I was promptly excused from the adults and allowed to go back to my room.

Funny story if it ended there, but it doesn't. My faulty equation of Sex=Love was just getting started! Add over the next ten or so years a creepy neighbor who liked to fondle little girls, older boys who liked to play doctor, innappropriate contact from leaders at church camps, repeated sexual molestation from a relative, and wanting to be one of the popular girls (but never quite being one) and you have one very broken young girl with a distorted picture of love.

I did my best to hold on to my "virginity" throughout high school, and really didn't go all the way until I was in college- but I was already what you might call damaged goods. And I knew it. I felt dirty, unworthy and unloveable from the inside, and no matter how much or how little I gave of myself, love just wasn't becoming part of my story. Not the love that I believed in, anyway. Not the pure, deep, lasting kind that fuels fairy tales and romance novels. Not even the supernatural, all-forgiving kind that is preached from the pulpits. Somehow, all I was finding was the broken and twisted kind, the leftover kind. The other stuff might exist, but I was exempt from receiving it.

But sex, now THAT was something that I was good at and could find easily- NO PROBLEM! Never mind that all the greatest sex in the world couldn't heal my broken heart. Never mind that even the great loves of my life would still leave me shattered and empty, always coming back to the same questions: What's wrong with me? Why don't you want me?

Through my adult life, I've tried to find the answer to those two questions. I searched through bad, bad relationships. I searched through drugs, alcohol, and partying. I searched through spirituality and religion. I searched and came up empty, time and time again. Even after coming to Christ, and gratefully accepting the gift of God's grace, if I am honest I can say that I still had the questions of my worth and my desirability as constant companions. And if I am really honest, then I can say that sometimes my religious convictions and my actions just don't align at all. Because as much as I fight to ignore it, I still get crazy lonely sometimes. I still want to someday know what it feels like to be deeply, truly, beautifully loved... but I settle for good sex and temporary intimacy, because my heart is scarred and my understanding of love is still a little bit broken.

It was this realization that led me to renew my vow of celibacy upon returning from Africa. Total clarity, a bird's eye view of my pattern, madness, call it what you will... but I know that this is the right thing for me to do. Until I can get what is broken in me repaired, there is absolutely no sense in creating more damage.

I don't know exactly what the next step is- Therapy? Prayer? More hockey? And I don't know if I'm supposed to put some sort of timeline on this. But what I do know is that I may not have had control over the things that happened to me as a child, but I do have control now. And I'm finally on the right path.

5 comments:

  1. I love you even more than I did before. I knew we were kindred spirits. Therapy. It hurts, it sucks but it has set me on the path to freedom.

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    1. Love you dearly, Nic! We are wounded healers, you and me. :)

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  2. Amazing is what you are and I will pray that you will see yourself as God sees you!

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    1. Thanks JoJo! Appreciate your prayers. Most days, I do see a sliver of what God sees in me-- it's those other days that kinda kick my butt! :)

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    2. Wow ... you seem to knock on my heart strings and suprising get ...... music .... loved your sharing

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