With Hopes of Returning Home as a Functional Straight or Heterosexual Family

July 11, 2009
This poem was sent to me by a wife of the gay husband, who is in such denial that she couldn’t accept her husband’s double lifestyle as a gay married man. As she was pleading, please stay…
Here We Go Again
Please just let me in again
We have so much to do
There is not much time,
For what we need to get done
We wasted the first part of
Now there is nothing left
Too much time has passed
I some how forget the day
Because I closed my eyes,
And you slipped away
But you won’t do that
Or maybe you do not need me,
Like I need you
Accept me as I am
You knew me my positive ways
Now we need to find a new way,
To make this thing work out
What do you have to say?
I have given my plea
Please don’t reject me
You can see what I am worth,
Understand where I may be
For that is the purpose of our lives,
Is to be together,
As a family the way we have been for the past 15 years…
—-Sandy C

Do You Feel Optimistic About Gay Rights Legislation?

June 7, 2009

Do you feel more optimistic about the prospects for gay rights legislation than you did last year?
63% Yes
30% No
7% Not Sure

“We now have a president who is at least sympathetic toward LGBT issues rather than openly hostile, as was the previous administration.”

“The only thing the current administration offers is a lot of lip service.”

“We are definitely moving in the right direction and at a much faster pace.”

–The Advocate featured in the June issue.
Tell US what you THINK???


Honey, I’m gay

January 25, 2009

Honey, I’m gay
Malavika Velayanikal
Sunday, January 25, 2009 3:31 IST
Mumbai: Put it down to societal norms or personal fear of alienation or the need to earn respectability, a significant percentage of gay men are, or have been, married. In most cases the woman only finds out after the knot is tied.

Waheeda* was a bright girl, full of life, and, being the youngest, her parents’ pet. When they found her a handsome groom with a well-paying job in London, dreams sprouted wings. She did not think twice about quitting her MNC job in Chennai to fly out with
her husband after the wedding, little knowing what lay ahead.
When her husband chose to spend their first night together in London with his British friend, she was sad, confused. However, the traditional baggage she carried within stopped her from asking for reasons. When he repeated it the next day, and the day after, she forced herself to confront him. Her worst fears were confirmed: He was in love with someone else and, worse, that the ’someone else’ was a man. She felt cheated, humiliated. Alone and alien, she had no lifeline. Even her parents felt helpless and asked her to ‘adjust’.
Today, Waheeda has found a job, but is still a broken girl. Her dreams are dead. Her health fails her often. A victim of panic attacks, she is an embarrassment to her husband, whom she still lives with.
Waheeda is hardly alone though. Countless others have similar tales to tell. “When a woman learns that her husband is gay, a myriad of emotions overcomes her, ranging from devastation to repulsion,” says Bonnie Kaye, who runs the website www.gayhusbands.com.
Once married to a gay man herself, she offers counselling for straight wives and has penned two books on the subject — How I Made My Husband Gay (Myths About Straight Wives) and Doomed Grooms: Gay Husbands of Straight Wives. She calls a straight-gay marriage a ‘mis-marriage’ or a ‘mistake of a marriage’.
She feels that, in most cases, gay men marry hoping that their sexuality would change, but it can’t. “However, whether or not to stay in such a marriage is your choice,” she adds. Homosexuality, though, is not a choice for the man — he is helpless in this orientation.
“I come from a very orthodox and respectable Muslim family. They are also homophobic. I did not want to cheat my wife, but I couldn’t help it,” was Waheeda’s husband’s reply when asked why he refused to tell her the truth before marriage. In fact, it is the tag of respectability that makes many men closet gays. “Society is almost unforgiving when it comes to homosexuality,” says Bangalorean Divakar*. Apart from close friends, not many know he is gay. “Despite active groups like Alternative Law Forum in the city, I dare not come out in the open about my sexuality,” he adds.
Psychiatrist Dr B Kapur has had homosexual men asking for help in convincing their conservative families against marrying women. “Truly gay men hardly marry, but bi-sexuals do,” he says. In such relationships, he feels women merely have Hobson’s choice. “Living with a bi-sexual husband is dangerous, what with the high risk of Aids and other STDs. And a person’s sexual orientation cannot change, so the woman can only walk out,” he says.
An unscientific survey of visitors to www.marriedgay.org by The New York Times found that more than half of the married gay respondents said their wives did not know of their sexual inclinations. Of those, a slim majority considered coming clean but a third said ‘never’. Statistics on straight-gay marriages is scarce and unreliable. Studies in the 1970s and 80s, using inconsistent methodology, found anywhere from one-fifth to one-third of gay men were, or had at one time been, married. Society being a little more accepting might have lowered the percentage today.
Dennis J Schleicher, author of Forbidden Love with a Married Man; E-Mail Diaries, cites fear as the reason why people chose to go into the closet, get married, and develop a family. In his memoir, he says: “Typically, most children are brought up in a society where finding love in the opposite sex is bred into them. They are taught to start a courtship, which will lead to marriage and later on, children, a house with a white picket fence, a dog, an SUV and a double income family.”
He encourages gay husbands to be open about their sexuality and from personal
experience, assures that the consequence is almost never as bad as expected. “Leave the brain to math, science and technology when it comes to matters of relationships. Use your heart openly and without fear as best you can,” he says. He blogs at http://gayhusbands.wordpress.com/ and offers help to parents, families, friends and the straight spouse as they come to terms with finding out their loved one was gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender.
Most women find it frustrating to stay with husbands who refuse to confess. “I would say he is absolutely repulsed by me. Always has been, since our wedding night, when he wouldn’t touch me. It made me feel really bad about myself,” says Katie*. “Eight years of marriage that has stripped me of my self esteem. You know what it is when a gay man marries a woman? Abuse. I am now going through a separation.”
With dreams deferred, many stay shackled to their marriage; but some, like Preeti*, find escape. Preeti discovered her husband’s sexual preference after two months of living together. Though she found his lack of interest a little exasperating, she dared not wonder why. But when he confessed, she walked out. Perhaps the job security she had, helped. Also she was in her comfort zone, Bangalore. A year later, she got a legal divorce. “It was tough, no matter what. I had no way but out,” she says.
Since then, she has met him a few times when biking out on weekends. “I was indifferent and he, embarrassed,” she says.
Today, she is happily single; except for a shaken faith in men.
* Name changed on request
by Malavika Velayanikal

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1224760


Sigourney Weaver Stars In ‘Prayers for Bobby,’ Based on A Mother’s Coming to Terms with the Suicide of Her Gay Son

December 29, 2008

In “Prayers for Bobby,” Mary Griffith is a devout Christian who raises her children with the conservative teachings of the Presbyterian Church. However, when her son Bobby confides to his older brother he may be gay, life changes for the entire family after Mary learns about his secret. While Bobby’s father and siblings slowly come to terms with his homosexuality, Mary believes God can cure him of what she considers his ’sin’ and persuades Bobby to pray harder and seek solace in church activities in hopes of changing him. Desperate for his mother’s approval, Bobby does what is asked of him, but through it all, the church’s apparent disapproval of homosexuality causes him to grow increasingly withdrawn and depressed. Guilty over the pain he is causing Mary, Bobby moves away, yet hopes that some day his mother will accept him. His subsequent depression and self-loathing intensifies as he blames himself for not being the ‘perfect’ son and is driven to suicide. Faced with their tragedy, Mary begins to question her faith when she receives no answers from her pastor concerning her devastating loss. Through her long and emotional journey, Mary slowly reaches out to the gay community and discovers unexpected support from a very unlikely source. The film is based on the 1995 Leroy Aarons book of the same name.


“Another Aspect of the Tangles that Married Gay Men find Themselves in, what Happens to the Other Man? ……”

October 25, 2007

     Periodically, myself the author of an explosives and controversial memoir “Forbidden Love with a Married Man; E-Mail Diaries.” and founder of several support groups and international lecturer, receives e-mails from the “other man” or the “other woman”. These terms, because of their link to an affair outside the marriage, tend to have a stigma attached to them. Perhaps their rights will change with time.
     These people, emotionally or romantically attached to another person who is already married, are often more concerned about the well being of that person, than about their own well being. That is ok to a point, but there is an old saying:
     “Never, ever get involved with a married person”
This paints a particularly black picture, but this is deliberate.
     Many single people become the “other person” in a love triangle because of what their heart is telling them, but more often than not, because they do not know the whole truth about their new friend, who has withheld the information that they are already married. This is where the lies start. They are not necessarily intentional lies – they are what they want the other person to hear.
     With the discovery of the marital status, there could be promises that the married person will leave their spouse and children, and come and live with the “other man or person”. Such promises are rarely fulfilled.
     The reason for never ever getting involved with a married person is that in the majority of cases, the married person will never leave the marital nest unless forced to do so. They want their cake and eat it too.
     This can lead to a lot of pain and hurt for the “other man”, to frustration and to lost time, when they could be perhaps finding someone else who is not married to spend their life with.
     So think twice, unless you are married yourself, to becoming the “other man”. That “other person–man” has feelings just like anyone else.  Trust me.  I was there.  I have published diary to prove it…!!!

Be Safe-

Dennis J. Schleicher

author of “Forbidden Love with a Married Man; E-Mail Diaries”