‘[He] Helped Me … Hate Myself’: Conversion Therapy Survivors Speak Out

Sakler says she was white knuckling it, trying to get through life as a “shell of a person.” She began cutting, hitting and hating herself because of the rejection from her church community.

He was given a treatment plan that involved limiting time with LGBTQ affirming friends, reading articles designed to redirect his attractions, and practicing what the therapist called “male characteristic activities,” such as taking charge and asserting control. He told his therapist that his marker of when things would be better was “life [going] back to normal.”

The therapist also worked with his parents, telling them they had failed by allowing the “gay agenda” to threaten their family and “let the devil get into the house.”

 

https://www.unclosetedmedia.com/p/he-helped-me-hate-myself-conversion

As the Supreme Court appears poised to reverse Colorado’s conversion therapy ban, survivors of the discredited practice speak with Uncloseted Media.

4 thoughts on “‘[He] Helped Me … Hate Myself’: Conversion Therapy Survivors Speak Out

  1. Aotearoa is one nation where conversion therapy is banned.

    Unless it’s for autism, when all bets are off. When the bill banning conversion therapy was at the Select Committee stage, a number of submissions from the autistic community were presented requesting the ban be extended to cover autism as well, but they fell on deaf ears.

    Did you know that conversion therapy was first used to “treat” autism before being applied to gay and trans people? For autistic people it can begin at age two and can continue well into adulthood. Some “therapists” recommend 40 hours per week even for children. Some estimates are that up to 80% of autistics who undergo such treatment go on to develop PTSD. It contributes to a suicide rate for autistics that is 9 times the rate for non-autistic people.

    Let’s hope the Supreme Court comes to its senses, but given that it overruled a ban on electric shock “therapy” on autistics on the same First Ammendment grounds, I don’t like the chances of that happening.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi Barry. That is so horrific. Because of how much I hate it I post every thing about it I come across. It is horrifically cruel to force children to fit into a mold, regardless of the mold that someone wants that child to act like.

      I wonder if someone asked these same “therapist” if they could take a cis straight kid and convert them to being gay or trans and they would be horrified because in their mind they are on a mission from their god or tradition.

      All children are different. Some can deal normally in the world. I will admit up front I couldn’t. With what was happening in my home to me I would start every school year with A report cards and then barely manage to pass to the next grade. I got more and more with drawn until I barely passed.

      Autistic people are on a spectrum. Some can function in the world as it is and some need more assistance. Hello I needed that assistance and wish it had been given to me.

      As an adult with bad bones, nerve disease, and muscles decaying I can understand a child with difficulties needing extra understanding and help. It is not a mental illness, it is simply how the child was born.


      Barry I have been sick for three weeks. I need to comb through the comments for all I missed. But I am really concerned about the Cagle cartoons. Did any of the ways I posted them make a difference. I have not used them since you told me they don’t display. It is a waste of effort. It is sad because they have the largest supply of them.

      Oh one other thing I need to ask you if you will. Kamyk has inturduced me to a friend of his in New Zeland that says he pays $200 for high speed internet. But I thought you told me you paid like $40 for gigabit speeds? Did I misunderstand? Oh and Kamyk told me there are two different Islands of New Zealand. I did not know that. Sorry my education is so spotty. He said there is a north and south. When I told him you were really supportive of the indigenous people he said you must be on the north Island.

      I only ask because I really like to learn. Thank you if you teach me, and it is OK if you do. Best wishes always.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Cagle cartoons

        The most recent ones I can find on your blog display correctly, but that is because they don’t have that extra bit at the end. Did you delete that extra bit when you pasted the links into your blog? I don’t remember what the extra bit was as I don’t have a copy of my comment that explained it to you, and although I’ve tried to find the comment on your blog, I cant. But as time and dates have little significance for me, I don’t recall how long ago I gave you that info.

        Anyway, it was the bit that follows “image.png”. Somewhere I read that you said you had to paste the link exactly as you copied it. If you cannot edit the link in your post, although I’m not sure why you can’t as I do it often in WordPress, then paste it into a text editor first, edit it there, then paste into your blog.

        High speed Internet

        I have a 1 GB fibre connection and costs me a little over NZ$100 (approximately US$60). It’s not the cheapest provider available but it provides the services I want at a competitive price and includes a phone landline and my mobile phone. They are discounted when bundled together. If I included electric power in the bundle, I could get an even bigger discount. But they won’t buy back surplus energy from our solar panels, which is why we use a different electricity retailer. In NZ, electric power retailers also sell gas and internet, and Internet retailers also sell electricity and gas. Essentially, whether power companies or Internet companies, they are all just utility retailers. The fibre, copper and pipes are not owned by the retailer, but are owned by network providers. Much like private cars, taxis and freight businesses don’t own the roads they use, and airlines don’t own the airports they use.

        For NZ$200 I could get a 4 GB or possibly 8 GB fibre connection, but for us that would be just wasted bandwidth (and money).

        NZ Geography

        Yes, Aotearoa consists of two major islands and some 600 – 700 smaller ones. The northern island has two names: North Island and Te Ika-a-Māui, and the southern island has the names South Island and Te Waipounamu. The southern island has the largest land mass, but the northern island has by far the largest population (4,000,000 vs 1,000,000). Most Māori live in the North Island. The further south you go, the fewer Māori there are and the less influence Māori culture (Māoritanga) has on the lives of non-indigenous people. By the time you reach the bottom of the South Island, Māori influence is practically non-existent, and people are less likely to be sensitive to the Māori world view. But I think that happens whenever a minority is not visible, be it ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity or neurodiversity. Unfortunate but true.

        A little bit of trivia: Neither of the main islands had official/legal names until as recently as 2009, when New Zealand Geographic Board allocated the English and Māori names given in the paragraph above. A third of the NZ population live within the greater Auckland metropolitan area which is also home to around 60 volcanoes, mostly extinct – the most recent being only a few hundred years old.

        Conversion therapy

        I agree, no matter how one looks at it, conversion “therapy” is nothing but a form of torture. The global consensus among human rights organisations is that conversion therapy is a violation of human rights, and efforts are ongoing to ban and eliminate such practices worldwide.

        O. Ivar Lovaas led the UCLA Young Autism Project, pioneering ABA techniques aimed at “normalising” autistic children’s behaviour. Around the same time, he collaborated with George Rekers on the Feminine Boy Project, which sought to prevent boys from becoming gay or transgender by discouraging gender-nonconforming behaviour. Both projects used behavioural conditioning, including punishment and reinforcement, to suppress traits. In autistics, Lovaas believed that autistic children lacked personhood or humanity unless they could be trained to conform to neurotypical norms, while for gay and trans, it was to suppress traits deemed “feminine” in young boys.

        So while conversion therapy is now widely banned or condemned by medical and human rights organisations, the same cannot be said of ABA. And it seems the worst forms of both can be found in the USA.

        Liked by 2 people

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