On the night of Nov. 20, 2001, a conversation held over Instant
Messenger changed our lives forever. Our 12-year-old son messaged me in
my office from the computer in his bedroom.
Ryan says: can i tell u something
Mom says: Yes I am listening
Ryan says: well i don't know how to say this really
but, well......, i can't keep lying to you about myself. I have been
hiding this for too long and i sorta have to tell u now. By now u
probably have an idea of what i am about to say.
Ryan says: I am gay
Ryan says: i can't believe i just told you
Mom says: Are you joking?
Ryan says: no
Ryan says: i thought you would understand because of uncle don
Mom says: of course I would
Mom says: but what makes you think you are?
Ryan says: i know i am
Ryan says: i don't like hannah
Ryan says: it's just a cover-up
Mom says: but that doesn't make you gay...
Ryan says: i know
Ryan says: but u don't understand
Ryan says: i am gay
Mom says: tell me more
Ryan says: it's just the way i am and it's something i know
Ryan says: u r not a lesbian and u know that. it is the same thing
Mom says: what do you mean?
Ryan says: i am just gay
Ryan says: i am that
Mom says: I love you no matter what
Ryan says: i am white not black
Ryan says: i know
Ryan says: i am a boy not a girl
Ryan says: i am attracted to boys not girls
Ryan says: u know that about yourself and i know this
Mom says: what about what God thinks about acting on these desires?
Ryan says: i know
Mom says: thank you for telling me
Ryan says: and i am very confused about that right now
Mom says: I love you more for being honest
Ryan says: i know
Ryan says: thanx
We were completely shocked. Not that we didn't know and love gay
people; my only brother had come out to us several years before, and we
adored him. But Ryan? He was unafraid of anything, tough as nails and all
boy. We had not seen this coming, and the emotion that overwhelmed us,
kept us awake at night and, sadly, influenced all our reactions over the
next six years was fear.
We said all the things that we thought loving Christian parents who believed the Bible, the Word of God, should say:
We love you. We will always love you. And this is hard. Really hard. But we know what God says about this, so you are going to have to make some really difficult choices.
We love you. We couldn't love you more. But there are other men who
have faced this same struggle, and God has worked in them to change
their desires. We'll get you their books; you can listen to their
testimonies. And we will trust God with this.
We love you. We are so glad you are our son. But you are
young, and your sexual orientation is still developing. The feelings
you've had for other guys don't make you gay. So please don't tell
anyone that you are gay. You don't know who you are yet. Your identity is not that you are gay; it is that you are a child of God.
We love you. Nothing will change that. But if you are going
to follow Jesus, holiness is your only option. You are going to have to
choose to follow Jesus, no matter what. And since you know what the
Bible says, and since you want to follow God, embracing your sexuality
is not an option.
We thought we understood the magnitude of the sacrifice that we --
and God -- were asking for. And this sacrifice, we knew, would lead to
an abundant life, perfect peace and eternal rewards. Ryan had always
felt intensely drawn to spiritual things; He desired to please God above
all else. So, for the first six years, he tried to choose Jesus. Like
so many others before him, he pleaded with God to help him be attracted
to girls. He memorized Scripture, met with his youth pastor weekly,
enthusiastically participated in all the church youth group events and
Bible Studies and got baptized. He read all the books that claimed to
know where his gay feelings came from, dove into counseling to further
discover the whys of his unwanted attraction to other guys, worked
through painful conflict resolution with my husband and me and built
strong friendships with other guys -- straight guys -- just like the
reparative therapy experts advised. He even came out to his entire youth
group, giving his testimony of how God had rescued him from the traps
of the enemy, and sharing, by memory, verse after verse that God had
used to draw Ryan to Him.
But nothing changed. God didn't answer his prayer, or ours, though we
were all believing with faith that the God of the Universe, the God for
whom nothing is impossible, could easily make Ryan straight. But He did not.
Though our hearts may have been good (we truly thought what we were
doing was loving), we did not even give Ryan a chance to wrestle with
God, to figure out what he believed God was telling him through
scripture about his sexuality. We had believed firmly in giving each of
our four children the space to question Christianity, to decide for
themselves if they wanted to follow Jesus, to truly own their
own faith. But we were too afraid to give Ryan that room when it came to
his sexuality, for fear that he'd make the wrong choice.
Basically, we told our son that he had to choose between Jesus and
his sexuality. We forced him to make a choice between God and being a
sexual person. Choosing God, practically, meant living a lifetime
condemned to being alone. He would never have the chance to fall in
love, have his first kiss, hold hands, share intimacy and companionship
or experience romance.
And so, just before his 18th birthday, Ryan, depressed, suicidal,
disillusioned and convinced that he would never be able to be loved by
God, made a new choice. He decided to throw out his Bible and his faith
at the same time and try searching for what he desperately wanted --
peace -- another way. And the way he chose to try first was drugs.
We had unintentionally taught Ryan to hate his sexuality. And since
sexuality cannot be separated from the self, we had taught Ryan to hate
himself. So as he began to use drugs, he did so with a recklessness and a
lack of caution for his own safety that was alarming to everyone who
knew him.
Suddenly our fear of Ryan someday having a boyfriend (a possibility
that honestly terrified me) seemed trivial in contrast to our fear of
Ryan's death, especially in light of his recent rejection of
Christianity and his mounting anger at God.
Ryan started with weed and beer, but in six short months was using
cocaine, crack and heroin. He was hooked from the beginning, and his
self-loathing and rage at God only fueled his addiction. Shortly
thereafter, we lost contact with him. For the next year and a half, we
didn't know where he was or even if he was dead or alive. And during
that horrific time, God had our full attention. We stopped praying for
Ryan to become straight. We started praying for him to know that God
loved him. We stopped praying for him to never have a boyfriend. We
started praying that someday we might actually get to know his
boyfriend. We even stopped praying for him to come home to us; we only
wanted him to come home to God.
By the time our son called us, after 18 long months of silence, God
had completely changed our perspective. Because Ryan had done some
pretty terrible things while using drugs, the first thing he asked me
was this:
Do you think you can ever forgive me? (I told him of course, he was already forgiven. He had always been forgiven.)
Do you think you could ever love me again? (I told him that we had never stopped loving him, not for one second. We loved him then more than we had ever loved him.)
Do you think you could ever love me with a boyfriend?
(Crying, I told him that we could love him with 15 boyfriends. We just
wanted him back in our lives. We just wanted to have a relationship with
him again... and with his boyfriend.)
And a new journey was begun, one of healing, restoration, open communication and grace. Lots
of grace. And God was present every step of the way, leading and
guiding us, gently reminding us simply to love our son and leave the
rest up to Him.
Over the next 10 months, we learned to truly love our son. Period. No
buts. No conditions. Just because he breathes. We learned to love
whomever our son loved. And it was easy. What I had been so afraid of
became a blessing. The journey wasn't without mistakes, but we had grace
for each other, and the language of apology and forgiveness became a
natural part of our relationship. As our son pursued recovery from drug
and alcohol addiction, we pursued him. God taught us how to love him, to
rejoice over him, to be proud of the man he was becoming. We were all
healing, and most importantly, Ryan began to think that if we could forgive him and love him, then maybe God could, too.
And then Ryan made the classic mistake of a recovering addict: He got
back together with his old friends, his using friends. And one evening
that was supposed to simply be a night at the movies turned out to be
the first time he had shot up in 10 months -- and the last time. Ryan
died on July 16, 2009. And we lost the ability to love our gay son,
because we no longer had a gay son. What we had wished for, prayed for,
hoped for -- that we would not have a gay son -- came true. But not at all in the way we had envisioned.
Now, when I think back on the fear that governed all my reactions
during those first six years after Ryan told us he was gay, I cringe as I
realize how foolish I was. I was afraid of all the wrong things. And I
grieve, not only for my oldest son, whom I will miss every day for the
rest of my life, but for the mistakes I made. I grieve for what could
have been, had we been walking by faith instead of by fear.
Now, whenever Rob and I join our gay friends for an evening, I think
about how much I would love to be visiting with Ryan and his partner
over dinner. But instead, we visit Ryan's gravestone. We celebrate
anniversaries: the would-have-been birthdays and the unforgettable day
of his death. We wear orange, his color. We hoard memories: pictures,
clothing he wore, handwritten notes, lists of things he loved, tokens of
his passions, recollections of the funny songs he invented, his Curious
George and baseball blankey, anything, really, that reminds us of our
beautiful boy, for that is all we have left, and there will be no new
memories. We rejoice in our adult children, and in our growing family
as they marry, but we ache for the one of our "gang of four" who is
missing. We mark life by the days B.C. (before coma) and A.D. (after
death), because we are different people now; our life was irrevocably
changed in a million ways by his death. We treasure friendships with
others who "get it" because they, too, have lost a child.
We weep. We seek Heaven for grace and mercy and redemption as we try not to get better but to be
better. And we pray that God can somehow use our story to help other
parents learn to truly love their children. Just because they breathe.
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