Today is my 33rd birthday.
For anybody like me, with a Christian upbringing, that number should ring a bell. It’s Jesus’ age (something about him dying at that age, but never dying, so eternally 33).
As the outspoken atheist in my group of friends, the jokes have started.
I thought it would be the perfect occasion to talk about how I became an atheist.
***
My first sexual experience was when I was 13. He was 13 as well, and, at the time, he was my best friend. As awkward as it was, that moment made everything clear for me. It felt right. Everything made sense when it happened. For once, I understood. I was gay, and that was that.
Until the next day.
Guilt, fear, hate, shame.
Prayer. Lots of prayer.
Confession. 3 Hail Marys and the promise to never do it again.
Confusion. Is this something I am going to have to go through every time I sleep with a guy?
I don’t like to tell people that I stopped believing in God because I realized I was gay. People tend to dismiss it in that case.
Truth is, I’m not an atheist because I am gay. I am an atheist because I took a step back and thought about it. Being gay forced me to take that step back, and I am forever grateful for that.
That’s probably the most important thing I’ve ever done in my life. I stopped believing in my religion first, simply because I found a gap between what I was convinced was right, and what people around me were telling me was right.
After that initial step, it’s amazing how everything crumbles the second you step out of the world you’ve been living in. It’s a tough step. Lots of confusion, darkness, fears. But as the smaller things start to crumble (7 days to build the whole universe?), the bigger things stop making sense (I am born a sinner because someone thousands of years ago ate an apple?)
And then…freedom.
No more guilt about things that are completely natural. No more fear of ending up in hell. No more unanswered prayers.
Suddenly, it was all about me. Within my control. I had the power to decide what was wrong, what was right, and, most importantly for me at the time, who I can have sex with.
I no longer felt someone was looking down on me when I was masturbating, trying out a cigarette, (play) fighting with my brother, or not going to Church every week.
I suddenly had to rely on my humanity, instead of on some ancient book.
I believed in a religion that claimed to be one of love. And then it taught be that I was a sinner on many, many, many levels.
So I left it. And then I taught myself to love myself, my gayness, and sex. No god could ever do that.
BeirutBoy
January 30, 2012
I can totally relate.
joellehatem
January 30, 2012
I’m gonna be quoting you, Raja.
Nour
January 31, 2012
Il n’y a que l’amour qui compte. Le reste c’est des détails! Joyeux anniversaire mon chéri.
Roba Al-Assi
January 31, 2012
Happy birthday 🙂
ohmyhappiness
January 31, 2012
Thanks guys and gals! I appreciate it!
CzICantTell (@CzICantTell)
January 31, 2012
Happy Birthday Raja 🙂 And i have to second what @BeirutBoy said !
अब्देल् (@abdelxyz)
February 7, 2012
your blog entry confuses me. you state clearly that you didn’t leave the xian faith (or became an atheist) because you were gay but then you go on to conclude the blog entry the way you do. regardless, that’s not my beef – my beef is that you need (in future) to recognise that gays do align themselves with the xian faith.
your route seems an easy one – leave the faith that ‘vilifies’ you. but does it? those that choose to remain in the xian or islamic faith and live as gays/bisexuals/trans etc. have a much harder route to take.
nice blog entries, by the way! do keep them up! i will be reading in future!
Abdel
P.S. why don’t you write about non-gay issues?! write about nancy, or haifa!
x
Raja
February 7, 2012
Abdel you’re completely right. Gay men and women have every right to choose to believe in whoever they choose. It’s not for me though.
I did not leave Christianity because I am gay. I left because I took a step back and thought things through. The reason I took a step back is because I found contradictions between the overall message of love, and the way it is applied to gay people. So, if you want to skip steps, yes, I left it because I am gay.
I would like to think that I would have left even if I wasn’t gay. I just would have needed to find something else to make me stop and think about it. It probably would’ve been something else.
The only part I don’t agree with in what you wrote is when you say that I took the easy route. Leaving god is not easy at all. You leave a space of comfort to step into a space of unknowns. I say that in the piece above. Once you get through the unknown or learn to live with it, then it’s easy.
Thanks for reading and thanks for your comment.
PS Non-gay issues coming right up, just as soon as I figure out this football thing straights are always taling about.
अब्देल् (@abdelxyz)
February 8, 2012
Quote: The only part I don’t agree with in what you wrote is when you say that I took the easy route. Leaving god is not easy at all. You leave a space of comfort to step into a space of unknowns. I say that in the piece above.
– reading my comment again i notice that i may have said something to belittle or undermine your situation – forgive me, it is ignorance on my part. it was unintentional and i take it back. i’m sure both routes are just as difficult – both routes would involve dealing with a hostile society whether it was religious or not and with family members who won’t be so accepting.
Josiah Gagosian
February 8, 2012
It’s nice to see such polite discourse on a comment string for once. I’ve just recently discovered your blog and will be following it in the future. I’ve been interested of late in the plight of GLBT people in the Middle East. Partly spurred by my discovery of Mashrou Leila and also because I’ve been delving lately into my own Armenian heritage, studying the language and looking into dual citizenship.
I also had a very conservative Christian upbringing here in the U.S. and I would say that my homosexuality also led me (or forced me, rather) to take a step back and assess the situation. Would a truly loving God condemn me for something I had in no way chosen?
I struggled for years with alcoholism, suicide, and self-destructive behavior as a result of the way I was raised.
For me, the answer was to cobble together my own personal spiritual system based on the teachings of Buddhism, Gnostic Christianity, Sufism, as well as a healthy dose of science and reason.
Be strong and remember that you’ve got people thousands of miles away pulling for you, yeghpayr. Oh, and Happy Belated Birthday from a fellow Aquarian.
For me, the answer was to coble together
ohmyhappiness
February 9, 2012
Josiah, thank you very much for your comment. I’m happy to see that Mashrou3 Leila got you to dig a little deeper into what is going on here. I’m sure you know that a couple members of the band are actually of Armenian origins.
Thank you for reading and thank you for the birthday wishes. Happy (late/early) birthday to you too.
Josiah Gagosian
February 10, 2012
Yes, I knew about Haig Papazian being Armenian…it’s a toss up between him and Hamed as to which one I think is cuter. I do have a weakness for Arabs, Persians, and even (God forbid!) Turks. heh. But in all seriousness, I greatly admire their (Mashrou’ Leila’s) vitality and courage. It isn’t easy being gay and speaking out in the U.S. and I’m sure it’s much harder in the Middle East where the political and social upheaval is more pronounced. Regardless, there are crazed fundamentalists everywhere and its up to us as more rational individuals to try and foment change. The internet has proven to be an amazing source of encouragement and international cooperation though, and I find that to be truly amazing. I wish that things like the It Gets Better project had been in place when I was 17 and first coming out. It would have saved me some pain and torment for sure. My parents sent me to a gay-to-straight conversion therapy. And a few years later, after a nasty breakup with my first boyfriend, I started cutting myself and drinking heavily. It took a long time, but I’m much happier now that I’m almost 30. I’m at peace with who I am. Even happy with who I am. And I can’t stop writing and painting. It’s like a switch went on and suddenly I’ve had this flood of creative energy. I suppose that’s really my new religion.The Act of Creation.
michael e
February 19, 2012
As a pastor in a very gay-friendly denomination, I grieve that you were made to feel so badly for natural things like sex, masturbation, horseplay and smoking a cigarette. I would see none of those things as sinful, and that’s what I tell the teens in our youth group.
I’m not troubled you became an atheist. The God whom I know has no problem with you, and after you die you’ll know better and all will be cool. Christ had no problem with Thomas disbelieving his resurrection.
I love your passion for, well, passion. It is good to have a body, and feelings, and thoughts, and to be free. my God is upset with
michael e
February 19, 2012
Sorry, my phone sucks.
The only thing my God is upset with is the refusal to love and embrace other human beings with justice and kindness. I think God is rather fond of you. 🙂
A Lutheran pastor
Rita Chemaly
February 24, 2012
OUF!! R!! Non seulement je lis tes billets mais les commentaires!! c’est aussi delicieux que le caviar…. hmmm je rebondis sur ce que le Pasteur dis : “The only thing my God is upset with is the refusal to love and embrace other human beings with justice and kindness. I think God is rather fond of you.”….
I am fond of You… 🙂 Happy belated Birthday!!
Rita
siroun
March 12, 2012
very nicely written raja,
for me, the stepping back and looking at the big picture did not come because of my sexuality, rather because of my job 🙂
I am a teacher of Biology, and when I truly understood life, and its origin, and its gradual change, I came to the realization that there is no need for a higher being. We as human, though we hate to accept, are just another animal, sharing this planet….
I teach evolution with passion, and it makes me happy that every year, I get a few students, who truly understand the science and start to question their knowledge about the universe. Nothing gives me more fulfillment than seeing the (?) in their eyes 🙂
the ironic thing is, the blame has shifted from “she convert kids to homosexuality” to “she converts kids to atheism”
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