Expression through writing illuminates my thoughts and feelings in a tangible way. |
There are two creative works of writing on which I have been working for some time. They came to me, as many of my writings do, late in the night on separate evenings as I lay in bed trying to collect my thoughts, feelings, and emotions on particular subjects. These moments arise often when all I want to do is sleep, but when there is a pressing need to express myself in writing. So I fumble out of bed, turn on my desk lamp, grab a piece of paper or open my word processor, and begin to write.
I have to act on writing inspiration when it comes, or I may lose it until illumination comes again. |
I thought that either of them would be ideal first editions with which to shatter the silence of my written voice; but as I continue to work on both of these pieces, attempting to reconnect with the bursting of ideas from whence the writings originated, I still have not quite tapped into the feeling and emotion that first accompanied them, and it is crucial that I make this my goal if I am to finish the works in the way my mind intended them.
But something that I know, which experience has proven to me time after time, is that inspiration will strike again, and certainly when I least expect it. And away to my desk I’ll fly to commune with my computer keyboard or scratch away with paper and pen to record the words that flow from within me until my body and mind feel utterly spent of their creative juices, and the mental fatigue of my gushing emotions overtakes my person unto a deep rest.
But until that time, at which point I will certainly post the pieces spoken of, I have decided to go back to basics—a form of writing which has sustained me through many trials and hardships, and has been my resounding affirmation of emotion and feeling since I was a child: Poetry.
Since my childhood, poetry has been an easy and comfortable form of expression. |
At the time I penned this poem I was a new man in a new town, yet still not far from home, but forming for myself new beginnings. My activity in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, otherwise known as Mormonism, had only recently been rekindled, after a disarrayed immersion in the only alternative life I could think would be worthwhile other than a gospel one. I acted out on my attraction to men and became enveloped in all the guilt, shame, and danger of promiscuous sexual acts with random men. I had joined the LDS faith by way of baptism only a short year before the lust and sex began. At its peak, these habits and practices left me feeling completely distanced from God, and from His love, and seemingly far from the reaching power of the atonement of Jesus Christ.
Reactivating myself in the LDS Church brought light back into my darkened life. |
So I did what it took to make myself worthy and active once again before God and my ecclesiastical leaders, which included confession, the loss of my opportunity to serve as a missionary of Jesus Christ, a long repentance process, and more faith and reliance upon grace than I had hitherto lain upon God’s altar. It was in this time of fresh awakenings and back-to-basics behavior changes in 2007 that I found myself at a higher point than I ever reached in the previous couple of years, but still not fully in touch with my resolve and newfound faith as a gay Latter-day Saint.
My resolve to make faith and religion an active part of my life continues to burn steadily. |
It also represents my perceived inadequacy as a child of God, desiring simply to be worthy of His divine love and blessings, as well as my unresolved state of feeling torn between the religion that I chose of my own free will and the attractions that seemed positively innate. This poem was my voice—and it shattered my own silence that I had kept locked away within myself for so long. Even today it reminds me of where I was, and how far I’ve come in becoming a disciple of the Savior of the world.
Many have told me that this poem has universal emotional qualities. I hope that it touches you in some way that is applicable to your personal challenges.
❧
– Internal Controversy –
~
Why a memory so loathsome?
Why an inclination towards sorrow?
Why sleep away all my troubles,
Why an inclination towards sorrow?
Why sleep away all my troubles,
To have them return on the morrow?
Why such a pang of sickness?
Why such a pang of sickness?
Why such a slave to my thoughts?
Why turn to living in darkness
After winning the battles I’ve fought?
Wrestle with all of these feelings,
Why turn to living in darkness
After winning the battles I’ve fought?
Wrestle with all of these feelings,
Seek after that which I hate—
Watch my faith crumble to pieces;
Learn to succumb to my fate.
Try to control my emotions,
Watch my faith crumble to pieces;
Learn to succumb to my fate.
Try to control my emotions,
Try to resist my own mind.
Why is my innocence tarnished?
How can they all be so blind?
How can my weaknesses crush me,
Why is my innocence tarnished?
How can they all be so blind?
How can my weaknesses crush me,
But yet I don’t feel any pain?
The pressures of normalcy take me,
And ever increase His disdain.
Tightly, I hold to my virtue,
The pressures of normalcy take me,
And ever increase His disdain.
Tightly, I hold to my virtue,
But I feel like letting it go.
The void that has always been in me
Is quickly beginning to grow.
Pounding inside is my heartbeat,
The void that has always been in me
Is quickly beginning to grow.
Pounding inside is my heartbeat,
Restlessly giving me life;
Yearning to stop so abruptly,
Yearning to stop so abruptly,
Putting an end to all strife.
Detesting the face in the mirror,
Detesting the face in the mirror,
Loving the greater design;
Subjecting myself unto sufferance,
While outside my mask is benign.
Feeling my knowledge is adequate,
Subjecting myself unto sufferance,
While outside my mask is benign.
Feeling my knowledge is adequate,
Wanting so much to believe—
All the while, my mind is doubting,
Telling me that I’m naïve.
Patiently awaiting salvation—
All the while, my mind is doubting,
Telling me that I’m naïve.
Patiently awaiting salvation—
But temptation is blocking the way.
Thus, I can reach my conclusion:
These feelings are here to stay.
~
- Wade A. Walker -
August 2007
Thus, I can reach my conclusion:
These feelings are here to stay.
~
- Wade A. Walker -
August 2007
Many Mormons who identify as gay or same-gender attracted often feel like their spiritual side and their carnal side cannot be reconciled. |
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