Opening the Door

Last week I wrote about the rough patch we hit. Austin, tired of hiding, was slowly coming out to more people. His stomach pains, which had been there for decades, were getting worse. While we had brutally honest conversations, his depression and my anxiety were defining characteristics of this season which lasted the better part of a year. I had days that were okay and days when I was sure it was over.

Looking back, I see several things that were key elements to us moving out of the rough patch and enabling Austin to be the man he was born to be.

A Place for Healing

As long as I have known him, Austin has read and talked about men’s initiation rites and passages. Colonization obliterated centuries of wisdom that once guided indigenous boys on their journey to manhood. In our American culture of the 21st century, we have long cast aside any rituals that were once used to welcome a boy into manhood. In our modernity, we seem to believe that the wisdom of elders is no longer needed and we can become adults on our own. Yet many men (and women) are left floundering, wondering if they have what it takes.

When a friend introduced Austin to The Mankind Project, he was instantly intrigued. They had a spot open in an upcoming New Warrior Training, described on their website as follows –

Take a journey that will fundamentally alter your experience of manhood and the world. Improve every relationship, starting with your relationship to yourself. Show up as the man, husband, partner, father, and brother you were born to be. The New Warrior Training Adventure is a life affirming personal development event, honoring the best in what men have to offer the planet. 

Austin packed his bags and left for the weekend. Neither of us had super high hopes that this would be much different from other weekend retreats or conferences. Yet, when he walked through the door at the end of the weekend, I could see that a thousand pounds had been lifted from his shoulders before he even opened his mouth to speak.

Learning to Breath

I could soon see that much had changed. He no longer hated himself and was finally free to embrace the man he had been born to be. The shame that had long wrapped itself around him was gone. I sensed an opening in his soul, as if he were learning to breath for the first time.

Emotional healing has physical effects as well. He carries himself both lighter and taller these days. And his stomach pains have nearly disappeared.

He also found a freedom to be who he is and not care what others think about him. And that led to the next step of freedom for both of us.

Opening the Closet Door

A few days after that weekend, in the air on our way to a conference, I asked Austin when he planned to come out to everyone. As we talked, we both realized there was no longer any good reason to stay inside the closet – and many compelling reasons to come out. And so began a new era, as he officially came out of the closet to everyone and stopped hiding.

And, while this put us under the spotlight and made us vulnerable as people responded in all kinds of ways, the relief of no longer needing to pretend or hide was incalculable.

Authenticity really is the new beautiful. Queer or not, many of us spend way too much time trying to present ourselves in whichever way we think will get us the most likes. But this kind of living takes so much energy and we have none left to enjoy the life we have, much less be the person we were born to be.

While Austin has no regrets regarding fully coming out, we both realize not everyone has the privilege to do so. Many who are in Conservative families choose to stay hidden because they fear they will be disowned. Some live in countries where they could be imprisoned or put to death if anyone found out their true identity. Some have been married for a long time and fear they will do more damage to their family then they are willing to risk, so they choose to remain hidden.

For those still in hiding

When the air inside the closet
gets stuffy and you struggle
just to breathe,
there is a door that will swing open.
When you are ready.

Those who truly loved you before
will love you still.
And you may be surprised to find
a family you never knew existed.
When you are ready.

A courage you didn’t know was yours
will rise from your chest and
Grow you right out of that tiny space.
To where the dance floor is wide.
When you are ready.

In the meantime
for as long as it takes,
we will sit outside your door.
Close enough so you’re not alone
Until you are ready.

Quiet your restless weary soul.
Until you can hear it whisper.
Until it remembers who you were born to be.
We hold your space for as long as it takes.
Until you are ready.

But if the space is not safe here in the wide open
It’s okay to stay hidden.
We will still hold your place and
Honor your story.
Until the world is ready.



Click on the button above to send me an email and I will let you know when new posts are up! If you or someone you love is in the closet, or if you are struggling with your own guttural grief and need someone to talk to, email me. I may not have time to answer you but I will read it and hold you in my heart.

Torn Wings

The Dream

“Sister, teach us something,” they said. But I was worn out and had nothing to give but exhausted love.

Beautiful women, wrapped in brightly colored cotton saris, reached out their hands to me in my dream and I began to walk with them. As we walked the glittery sand that hugs the land, the waves ebbed and flowed constantly around us. Giant stingrays of the brightest blue began to swim in the water beside us.

These huge creatures, which had frightened me as a child, were moving enchantingly in sync with the waves and the women. We danced the ebb and flow of life in a tangible way that loosened my fear and pulled me closer.

As the waves and the rays would pull close to kiss the shore, we would lean towards the land to give space. It was all a dance of dignity and grace and I only had to follow.

These tender but strong women, I learned, had recently escaped a life of pain in the red light district. Once victims of unspeakable violence, they were finding healing and hope. Every time I saw them, their faces were more relaxed and their eyes shone with dignity restored.

We walked together for some time, ankles dipping in and out of the water, in gentle harmony with the waves and the rays. Suddenly the voice of one of my sons called to me from further up the shore and I hurried to see what he had found. There, further inland where the tide had pooled and turned to mud, a butterfly, as dark as the mud itself, was struggling to rise.

The ground here was dark and murky, a sharp contrast to the bright, glittering sand at the shore. In utter astonishment, I watched as the largest butterfly I had ever seen struggled to pull herself out of the mud. Her wingspan was large enough to lay in, but those wings were ravaged with holes so large the sun and the sky showed through. I could feel her struggle as she fought to pull herself out of the muck. Finally pushing, pulling and tugging with all she had, her torn and wounded wings carried her out across the waters.

The image of the butterfly pulling herself out of the muck resonated deeply with me. I longed to walk with purpose and confidence, like the women in my dream but felt more like the wounded butterfly, struggling in a muck that threatened to suffocate me.

Waking Up

I woke from my dream with the powerful thrum of beating wings in my ears and looked around the dark room, trying to separate my dream from reality. My husband of 11 years was snoring peacefully beside me . Our three sons slept in the next room. Outside, the streets of Dhaka which swelled with constant noise during the day, lay still. While the city and its creatures slept, I lay awake, held tightly in the clutches of my dream.

The image of the butterfly pulling herself out of the muck resonated deeply with me. I longed to walk with purpose and confidence, like the women in my dream but felt more like the wounded butterfly, struggling in a muck that threatened to suffocate me.

My artistic husband had his dream job, working for an international development agency, as part of a job creation program. Our three sons spent their days at an international school and loved every minute of it. My guys were all thriving and happy, but I was not.

This introverted girl, who refuels by barefoot walks in the grass, digging in the dirt, picking flowers, reading a book under the trees or simply sitting alone and in silence, was struggling to survive the concrete jungle of Dhaka city and its extremely extroverted populous.

By the time the dream found me, I had spent about seven years in Bangladesh. And, while I love the country and its warm and friendly people, I struggled to find my own niche and ways to recharge. Anytime I ventured out to one of the city’s green spaces, I would immediately be surrounded by a crowd of friendly and very curious people. Most days I would shut myself in my apartment and turn on the air conditioner to block out the constant noise of horns, beggars and hawkers from the street.

It wasn’t that I hated my life there, for there was so much I loved. Cooking is my thing and I would throw down a home cooked meal and game night every Friday night. Our apartment would fill up with so much laughter that our neighbors below would call up and ask us to quiet down so their son could study.

I busied myself making things like burritos, quesadillas and mini pizzas, chocolate chip cookies and sweet gooey cinnamon rolls, all from scratch. Then I would stock the freezer of the team guest house so that the expatriate staff could have a break from rice and curry when they came into town.

I also started a blog and discovered how much I loved weaving words together. Despite all of this, I felt like a fish out of water and struggled to find my niche. Depression pulled me into its toxic embrace and I felt more and more alone. Austin, my husband, was moving away emotionally and I knew something wasn’t right but couldn’t put my finger on it.

The Beginning of a Dark Night

Determined not to blow through the country’s entire supply of tissues by myself, I reached out for help. The agency we worked for was very supportive and had us fly to Thailand for a week of counseling at a lovely retreat center. We dropped our boys at my in-laws and gladly left the noise and chaos of Dhaka behind.

The next morning, we caught a Songtaew, the local transport, from our hotel to the counseling center. My nerves were immediately calmed by the gentle water fountain in the middle of the entry and the quiet green that surrounded the place. I was ready to face my shit and work through it. We soon settled ourselves into a big yellow sofa, ready to get started. But before we delved into my stuff, my husband had something he wanted to say to me.

I looked into the Austin’s eyes and saw an earth-shattering pain that clattered silently in the space between us. We hung in that space for a moment before he told me that he was attracted to men, and had been for as long as he could remember.

I looked into the Austin’s eyes and saw an earth-shattering pain that clattered silently in the space between us. We hung in that space for a moment before he told me that he was attracted to men, and had been for as long as he could remember.

In an instant, my tiny world crumbled at my feet. We had an hour session and this had taken about a minute. That’s all it takes, just a short minute, to sweep away everything you thought you knew and had built your life upon. Just one minute to take a woman who is struggling to survive to being sure that she never will. I have no idea what we did for the next 59 minutes, if we talked or just sat in silence. I have no idea. The next thing I remember is sitting beside a river, bare feet by the water, gentle city noises around us but no other human in sight. We were just a liquid ribbon of water and a broken couple on the grass, trying to make sense out of this.

I was crushed. Broken. Wounded. Sobbing bits of my soul until I felt like a giant piece of snot. Austin, who had just braved his heart and told me his most vulnerable truth, sat with me and tried to understand the depth of my despair.

Nothing had prepared me for this. We had been happily married, or so I thought, and my brain struggled to register the fact that my husband had just come out to me.

In that place of deepest loss, where there are no words, I sat. There was just a guttural grief that washes over everything and takes even the strongest spark of life and snuffs it out. I felt like the butterfly in my dream, curled up on the river bank, wings torn, muddied, the ocean not big enough to contain my tears.


Click on the button above to send me an email and I will let you know when new posts are up! If you or someone you love is in the closet, or if you are struggling with your own guttural grief and need someone to talk to, email me. I may not have time to answer you but I will read it and hold you in my heart.

Photo courtesy of Adrienne Gerber Photography.