Psycho-Babble Social Thread 743844

Shown: posts 1 to 25 of 158. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry??? » UgottaHaveHope

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:35:18

In reply to Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry???, posted by UgottaHaveHope on March 9, 2007, at 0:29:30

I had this discussion once with my psychiatric nurse with regards to my benzo use for anxiety. He believed that depression was causing my anxiety (and the benzos were worsening my depression) and if we could get my mood very high the anxiety would disappear. It's partly true - that's how amphetamine and stimulating antidepressants like Parnate can be helpful for 'social anxiety' even though they are quite anxiogenic and agitating. They made me feel confident and assertive enough to tackle the world head on. I once needed to cancel a subscription to a magazine notorious for using high-pressure sales techniques, and while on amphetamine I had no problem - the guy backed down immediately. I guess there must have been a tone in my voice that warned him I was on the ball and taking no sh*t?

I don't know which came first for me. I think I've always had agitated/anxious depressions - my depressions seem to have been triggered by circumstances that caused me much anxiety. My mother was ill a lot when I was small, and was dying at one point - I must have known but I can't remember anything about it now. I suppose a lot of my depression and anxiety stemmed form that, OCD too. I remember thinking that if I ran up and down the stairs nine times, (avoiding every third step - multiples of three, my 'magic number') she would be alright. It's a way of trying to take some control of your anxious feelings I suppose.

I also think this has something to do with my homosexuality, I read this by L.Ron Hubbard (Scientology founder) the other day and I have to agree with it in my case. It's the most accurate, concise and persuasive description of my character and the reasons I became this way that I've ever read.
__________________________________________________

"The "aberration" was caused by a child trying to "continue the life" of a dominant parent of the opposite sex."

Minshull described the "the gentle-mannered homosexual" as a classic example of the "subversive" 1.1 personality, commenting that they "may be fearful, sympathetic, propitiative, griefy or apathetic. Occasionally they manage an ineffectual tantrum." They were claimed to be social misfits:

"Homosexuals don't practice love; 1.1s can't. Their relationships consist of: 1) brief, sordid and impersonal meetings or 2) longer arrangements punctuated by dramatic tirades, discords, jealousies and frequent infidelity. It could hardly be otherwise since the tone is made up of suspicion and hate, producing a darling sweetness interspersed with petty peevishness. Their "love" turns to deep contempt eventually."

"Sexual perversion, a category in which he included homosexuality, was termed "covert hostility" and given a score of 1.1, "the level of the pervert, the hypocrite, the turncoat, ... the subversive." Such people were "skulking coward[s] who yet contains enough perfidious energy to strike back, but not enough courage ever to give warning."

"In Hubbard's 1951 book Handbook for Preclears, he set out instructions for Dianeticists to "cure" homosexuality. After claiming that the cause of homosexuality was a fixation on a dominant parent of the opposite sex, he advised: "Break this life continuum concept by running sympathy and grief for the dominant parent and then run off the desires to be an effect and their failures and the homosexual is rehabilitated."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientology_and_Homosexuality
__________________________________________________

It's horrible, harsh and abrasive, but I can't deny the truth of the matter in my own case. I think the cure for much of my mental suffering lies in the path he describes.

Q

 

Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry??? » Quintal

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:35:18

In reply to Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry??? » UgottaHaveHope, posted by Quintal on March 13, 2007, at 23:37:12

I guess what I'm saying Re; stimulants & anxiety, is that there is a point where if your mood is high enough stressors are seen as a challenge, and as a source of motivation. In these circumstances 'anxiety' is closer to nervousness. I usually consider nervousness as an inner tension that sharpens my senses and primes me for action - it's performance enhancing and can be quite exhilarating. Anxiety on the other hand is usually prohibitive and tends to lead to avoidance and poor performance and low self esteem over time.

I suppose they are different manifestations of the same mental energy or nervous tension, one constructive and performance enhancing, the other destructive and soul destroying. Mood often seems to be modifying factor in determining whether that energy is used to work for me or against me, i.e. whether it's perceived as anxiety or nervousness, hence why I suspect the mood elevating drugs like amphetamine and Parnate can be helpful despite increasing nervous tension.

[The nervousness turns into anxiety when 'coming down' off stimulants as mood plummets, hence the popularity of using benzos/barbs concomitantly - the upper/downer combo to create balance and minimize this side effect.]

Q

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal

Posted by yxibow on March 24, 2007, at 22:35:19

In reply to Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry??? » UgottaHaveHope, posted by Quintal on March 13, 2007, at 23:37:12

> I had this discussion once with my psychiatric nurse with regards to my benzo use for anxiety. He believed that depression was causing my anxiety (and the benzos were worsening my depression) and if we could get my mood very high the anxiety would disappear. It's partly true - that's how amphetamine and stimulating antidepressants like Parnate can be helpful for 'social anxiety' even though they are quite anxiogenic and agitating. They made me feel confident and assertive enough to tackle the world head on. I once needed to cancel a subscription to a magazine notorious for using high-pressure sales techniques, and while on amphetamine I had no problem - the guy backed down immediately. I guess there must have been a tone in my voice that warned him I was on the ball and taking no sh*t?
>
> I don't know which came first for me. I think I've always had agitated/anxious depressions - my depressions seem to have been triggered by circumstances that caused me much anxiety. My mother was ill a lot when I was small, and was dying at one point - I must have known but I can't remember anything about it now. I suppose a lot of my depression and anxiety stemmed form that, OCD too. I remember thinking that if I ran up and down the stairs nine times, (avoiding every third step - multiples of three, my 'magic number') she would be alright. It's a way of trying to take some control of your anxious feelings I suppose.
>
> I also think this has something to do with my homosexuality, I read this by L.Ron Hubbard (Scientology founder) the other day and I have to agree with it in my case. It's the most accurate, concise and persuasive description of my character and the reasons I became this way that I've ever read.
> __________________________________________________
>
> "The "aberration" was caused by a child trying to "continue the life" of a dominant parent of the opposite sex."
>
> Minshull described the "the gentle-mannered homosexual" as a classic example of the "subversive" 1.1 personality, commenting that they "may be fearful, sympathetic, propitiative, griefy or apathetic. Occasionally they manage an ineffectual tantrum." They were claimed to be social misfits:
>
> "Homosexuals don't practice love; 1.1s can't. Their relationships consist of: 1) brief, sordid and impersonal meetings or 2) longer arrangements punctuated by dramatic tirades, discords, jealousies and frequent infidelity. It could hardly be otherwise since the tone is made up of suspicion and hate, producing a darling sweetness interspersed with petty peevishness. Their "love" turns to deep contempt eventually."
>
> "Sexual perversion, a category in which he included homosexuality, was termed "covert hostility" and given a score of 1.1, "the level of the pervert, the hypocrite, the turncoat, ... the subversive." Such people were "skulking coward[s] who yet contains enough perfidious energy to strike back, but not enough courage ever to give warning."
>
> "In Hubbard's 1951 book Handbook for Preclears, he set out instructions for Dianeticists to "cure" homosexuality. After claiming that the cause of homosexuality was a fixation on a dominant parent of the opposite sex, he advised: "Break this life continuum concept by running sympathy and grief for the dominant parent and then run off the desires to be an effect and their failures and the homosexual is rehabilitated."
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientology_and_Homosexuality
> __________________________________________________
>
> It's horrible, harsh and abrasive, but I can't deny the truth of the matter in my own case. I think the cure for much of my mental suffering lies in the path he describes.
>
> Q

You're entitled to your beliefs but as a gay male I run screaming from Dianetics, a failed science fiction writer that has -- its revolting to me that the street into Children's Hospital is L. Ron Hubbard Way... anyhow --

it is inferred that Quentin Hubbard committed suicide because he was homosexual and it conflicted with his father's views. There are more deeper analysis available on the net regarding this but this is one possibility.

I have nothing to do with a group that denies any possible value in medications, steals life savings from people, yet gets their name on the street to a hospital (where there could be child psychiatry), and basically hates homosexuals.

-- Jay

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » yxibow

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:35:19

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal, posted by yxibow on March 14, 2007, at 3:02:42

>as a gay male I run screaming.............

That's pretty much what they're saying here with reference to the character of homosexuals, and the value of people to society lying partly in their ability to deal with truth;

______________________________

"The tone scale is a characterization of human mood and behaviour by various positions on a scale. The scale ranges from -40 ("Total Failure") to 40 ("Serenity of Being"). Positions on the tone scale are usually designated by an emotion, but Hubbard also described many other things that can be indicated by the tone scale levels, such as aspects of a human's health, mating behaviour, survival potential, or ability to deal with truth. The tone scale is frequently used by Scientologists to evaluate humans. According to Scientology, the lower the individual is on the tone scale, the more complex and convoluted one's problems tend to be, and the more care and judgment should be exercised regarding communication and interaction with that individual."

"Hubbard further defined perversion in his 1951 book Science of Survival: Prediction of Human Behaviour. Here he introduced the concept of the "tone scale", a means of classifying individuals and human behaviour on a chart running from 40 (the most beneficial) to -40 (the least beneficial). Sexual perversion, a category in which he included homosexuality, was termed "covert hostility" and given a score of 1.1, "the level of the pervert, the hypocrite, the turncoat, ... the subversive." Such people were "skulking coward[s] who yet contains enough perfidious energy to strike back, but not enough courage ever to give warning."

Hubbard's 1951 book Handbook for Preclears likewise classified homosexuality as "about 1.1 on the tone scale", along with "general promiscuity". He set out what he saw as the cause of homosexuality: a mental "aberration", with the result that "an individual aberrated enough about sex will do strange things to be a cause or an effect. He will substitute punishment for sex. He will pervert others. Homosexuality comes from this manifestation and from the manifestation of life continuation for others." The "aberration" was caused by a child trying to "continue the life" of a dominant parent of the opposite sex. [9]

Hubbard's views on homosexuality were given a fuller explanation in a 1972 book by Scientologist Ruth Minshull, How To Choose Your People, which was published through the Church of Scientology, copyrighted to Hubbard and given "issue authority" by the Scientology hierarchy. Scientology churches sold the book alongside the works of Hubbard until 1983.[10] Minshull described the "the gentle-mannered homosexual" as a classic example of the "subversive" 1.1 personality, commenting that they "may be fearful, sympathetic, propitiative, griefy or apathetic. Occasionally they manage an ineffectual tantrum." They were claimed to be social misfits:

"Homosexuals don't practice love; 1.1s can't. Their relationships consist of: 1) brief, sordid and impersonal meetings or 2) longer arrangements punctuated by dramatic tirades, discords, jealousies and frequent infidelity. It could hardly be otherwise since the tone is made up of suspicion and hate, producing a darling sweetness interspersed with petty peevishness. Their "love" turns to deep contempt eventually." [11]
Homosexuals had no redeeming "social value," in Minshull's view. She cautioned that "homosexuals should not be abused or ridiculed. But a society bent on survival must recognize any aberration as such and seek to raise people out of the low emotion that produces it."

___________________________________

I am not a Scientologist and have no intention of becoming one. It was just a surprise to see such an accurate description of the problem written there, along with a potential cure at a time when conventional psychiatry likes to pretend homosexuality is a healthy variation of human sexuality. At the same time pathogenizing other seemingly normal traits like low mood and poor attention span etc. It seems the Scientologists are in the lead when it comes to theories of human sexuality, most psychology textbooks I've read claim it's a genetic/hormonal problem which seems the lazy way out to me. It really won't do at all.

Q

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles

Posted by Iansf on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » yxibow, posted by Quintal on March 14, 2007, at 3:42:45

Excuse me ... are you serious? Talk about something being "made up of suspicion and hate." I think the Scientological description itself qualifies on that count. It reeks with hate and fear.

John

> >as a gay male I run screaming.............
>
> That's pretty much what they're saying here with reference to the character of homosexuals, and the value of people to society lying partly in their ability to deal with truth;
>
> ______________________________
>
> "The tone scale is a characterization of human mood and behaviour by various positions on a scale. The scale ranges from -40 ("Total Failure") to 40 ("Serenity of Being"). Positions on the tone scale are usually designated by an emotion, but Hubbard also described many other things that can be indicated by the tone scale levels, such as aspects of a human's health, mating behaviour, survival potential, or ability to deal with truth. The tone scale is frequently used by Scientologists to evaluate humans. According to Scientology, the lower the individual is on the tone scale, the more complex and convoluted one's problems tend to be, and the more care and judgment should be exercised regarding communication and interaction with that individual."
>
> "Hubbard further defined perversion in his 1951 book Science of Survival: Prediction of Human Behaviour. Here he introduced the concept of the "tone scale", a means of classifying individuals and human behaviour on a chart running from 40 (the most beneficial) to -40 (the least beneficial). Sexual perversion, a category in which he included homosexuality, was termed "covert hostility" and given a score of 1.1, "the level of the pervert, the hypocrite, the turncoat, ... the subversive." Such people were "skulking coward[s] who yet contains enough perfidious energy to strike back, but not enough courage ever to give warning."
>
> Hubbard's 1951 book Handbook for Preclears likewise classified homosexuality as "about 1.1 on the tone scale", along with "general promiscuity". He set out what he saw as the cause of homosexuality: a mental "aberration", with the result that "an individual aberrated enough about sex will do strange things to be a cause or an effect. He will substitute punishment for sex. He will pervert others. Homosexuality comes from this manifestation and from the manifestation of life continuation for others." The "aberration" was caused by a child trying to "continue the life" of a dominant parent of the opposite sex. [9]
>
> Hubbard's views on homosexuality were given a fuller explanation in a 1972 book by Scientologist Ruth Minshull, How To Choose Your People, which was published through the Church of Scientology, copyrighted to Hubbard and given "issue authority" by the Scientology hierarchy. Scientology churches sold the book alongside the works of Hubbard until 1983.[10] Minshull described the "the gentle-mannered homosexual" as a classic example of the "subversive" 1.1 personality, commenting that they "may be fearful, sympathetic, propitiative, griefy or apathetic. Occasionally they manage an ineffectual tantrum." They were claimed to be social misfits:
>
> "Homosexuals don't practice love; 1.1s can't. Their relationships consist of: 1) brief, sordid and impersonal meetings or 2) longer arrangements punctuated by dramatic tirades, discords, jealousies and frequent infidelity. It could hardly be otherwise since the tone is made up of suspicion and hate, producing a darling sweetness interspersed with petty peevishness. Their "love" turns to deep contempt eventually." [11]
> Homosexuals had no redeeming "social value," in Minshull's view. She cautioned that "homosexuals should not be abused or ridiculed. But a society bent on survival must recognize any aberration as such and seek to raise people out of the low emotion that produces it."
>
> ___________________________________
>
> I am not a Scientologist and have no intention of becoming one. It was just a surprise to see such an accurate description of the problem written there, along with a potential cure at a time when conventional psychiatry likes to pretend homosexuality is a healthy variation of human sexuality. At the same time pathogenizing other seemingly normal traits like low mood and poor attention span etc. It seems the Scientologists are in the lead when it comes to theories of human sexuality, most psychology textbooks I've read claim it's a genetic/hormonal problem which seems the lazy way out to me. It really won't do at all.
>
> Q
>
>

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles

Posted by Declan on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles, posted by Iansf on March 14, 2007, at 16:28:01

>skulking coward[s] who yet contains enough perfidious energy to strike back,<

The funniest thing all morning.

Nice to see some people are getting lots of sex.

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles

Posted by Phillipa on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles, posted by Declan on March 14, 2007, at 18:16:49

I believe strongly that homosexuality or lesbianism is biological period. Love Phillipa And also just returned from pdoc's and he said he want's me off all ad's said they make my anxiety worse and now down to 12.5mg of luvox then off. And changing valium l5mg to long acting xanax 2mg twice a day with lunesta. Thinks my anxiety is related to thyroid. And that in my case anxiety leads to depression control the anxiety and no depression.

 

Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry???

Posted by notfred on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry??? » UgottaHaveHope, posted by Quintal on March 13, 2007, at 23:37:12

Lets move out of the dark ages, this study was in
1957:

http://www.glbtq.com/social-sciences/hooker_e.html

Hooker's friends had dared her to subject them to the standard psychological exams so as to determine whether conventional wisdom regarding the degeneracy of homosexuality was true. She administered three personality tests, including the Rorshach ink-blot test, to thirty pairs of men--one homosexual, one not--matched by IQ level, age, and other factors. These tests were accepted by the community of medical and mental health professionals as indicating the presence of emotional and mental disorders. Presumably, homosexual persons would be easy to differentiate owing to the presence of pathology.

Hooker turned the results of the tests over to a panel of three prominent experts, asking them to diagnose which of the sixty men had a psychiatric disorder, as revealed by the test. She further asked these experts to determine which of the men in each pair was homosexual, not having indicated beforehand that any might be, or the ulterior motive behind this research. The experts concluded that the gay males were no worse, and sometimes better adjusted than the rest, and proved unable to identify correctly the gay male in each pair.

On its face, this research suggested that the assumption that homosexuals were necessarily psychiatrically disordered is erroneous; what is more, it suggested that such diagnoses of disorder may be based not on objective fact, but, instead, may be grounded in popular stereotype.

Hooker concluded from her research that the patterns of homosexuality are as varied and as complex as those of heterosexuality, and that one cannot assume that homosexuals can be easily distinguished from heterosexuals on the basis of emotional and psychological adjustment.

 

Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry??? » notfred

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry???, posted by notfred on March 15, 2007, at 1:51:11

Interesting then that nearly all the emotionally disturbed males posting here are homosexual. Quoting studies to the contrary won't make it not so.

In my own case the homosexuality is almost certainly not of a biological nature as some seem to believe, nor is there reason to suspect it would be since there are no other homosexuals in my family. It was almost certainly produced by being alternately mollycoddled and abandoned by my mother, resulting in an unhealthy obsession with her. I particularly like quote "The "aberration" was caused by a child trying to "continue the life" of a dominant parent of the opposite sex." because that is exactly what my mother instructed me to do. After being disabled she bred me as an extension of herself - a probe into the world that she could control and manipulate as she desired. She told me this.

This even went as far as buying girls clothes and dolls for me to play with - to replace the belongings she wanted but never had as a child. I had to wear a pink cardigan she knitted me with her favourite sheet music as the dominant pattern. I vividly recall flushing with shame at discovering a 'One Size Fits All Ladies' label inside my new pair of gloves during a school trip (again, a deep fuchsia color with chintz pattern). No wonder I was a loner.

So that's why blanket statements of homosexuality being biological just don't cut it with me, and also why those words of L. Ron Hubbard are so persuasive. They carry the ring of truth.

Q

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal

Posted by Ken Blades on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » yxibow, posted by Quintal on March 14, 2007, at 3:42:45

Q~

You might want to take a look at this...might
give you another outlook on Hubbard/Scientology/
homosexuality.

http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_scie.htm

I am NOT pushing Scientology..
far from it! Unless you have lots of money to
flush down the john!

Ken

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Ken Blades

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal, posted by Ken Blades on March 15, 2007, at 7:43:57

Thank you for the link Ken, it contains the same information listed on the Wiki site I posted earlier. Maybe they used that page as one of their sources?

I'm not very taken by the Scientology methods as a whole, but that particular passage on homosexuality has resonance for me. Hubbard's view was not original - as stated it reflects the ideas held by psychiatry and their attitude towards homosexuals at that time. My mother's old 1959 Psychology has similar theories, but the proposed cures are much harsher. They seem to be proposing the 'Psychosexual Hermaphroditism' theory of homosexuality here.

__________________________________________________

UNNATURAL ATTRACTION

Inversion or homosexuality;

This is the emotional 'love' for a member of the same sex, with or without physical gratification. There are a few people of both sexes who by reason of glandular abnormalities are not properly differentiated into one sex or the other. These 'feminine' men and 'masculine' women may have the physical sexual formation of one sex but the emotional disposition of the other, and so may be manifestly homosexual. It should not be thought however, that all men who look feminine, or all women who look masculine are homosexual, for this is emphatically not so. Much more commonly homosexuality is determined by an obstruction of emotional growth at the undifferentiated adolescent stage, or regression (a harking back) to that stage of development of sexual emotion. As has been pointed out, there is a tendency for the sexes to be segregated at this mid-adolescent stage, so attachments to persons of the same sex are easily established. Homosexual tendencies may start at this stage because of obstruction or regression which are determined by conflicts and guilt feelings. As a rule, these are due to bogey teaching, or absence of teaching on sexual matters, or to terrifying experiences before the child has reached an appropriate stage of sexual maturity so that the patient fear the next advance towards the full development of his, or her, sexual life.
__________________________________________________

Q

 

Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry???

Posted by notfred on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:25

In reply to Re: Larry Hoovers, Quintal, Yxibow, Blueberry??? » notfred, posted by Quintal on March 15, 2007, at 4:30:14

Quoting studies to the contrary won't make it not so.
>


But it does show that in the general population this is a falsehood and a stereotype.

 

homosexuality is a normal variation of sexuality

Posted by one woman cine on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:26

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » yxibow, posted by Quintal on March 14, 2007, at 3:42:45

.."along with a potential cure at a time when conventional psychiatry likes to pretend homosexuality is a healthy variation of human sexuality."

Homosexuality doesn't need to be cured and psychiatry isn't pretending it's normal. Because it is normal & that's the general scientific consensus from biologists to physicians.

Variations occur all the time, not just sexuality - try reading "Sexing the Body" by Fausto-Sterling.

Thanks for including the quotes by Hubbard - no wonder they are listed as a hate group here in the US.

 

Let's keep it civil here, please

Posted by Dinah on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:26

In reply to homosexuality is a normal variation of sexuality, posted by one woman cine on March 15, 2007, at 14:45:02

The civility rules require that nothing be posted that could lead other posters to feel accused or put down.

This would apply to comments made both about homosexuality and about Scientology.

If anyone has questions about this or about posting policies in general, or are interested in alternative ways of expressing themselves, please see the FAQ:

http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/faq.html#civil

In particular:

"Please respect the views of others even if you think they're wrong. Please be sensitive to their feelings even if yours are hurt. Different points of view are fine, and in fact encouraged, but your freedom of speech is limited here. It can be therapeutic to express yourself, but this isn't necessarily the place."

Also, if anyone sees anything they consider uncivil, please use the option to notify the administrators, and be careful to respond with civility.

Follow-ups regarding these issues should be redirected to Psycho-Babble Administration. They, as well as replies to the above posts, should of course themselves be civil.

Dr. Bob is always free to override or upgrade deputy decisions. His email is on the bottom of each page. Please feel free to email him if you believe this decision was made in error.

Dinah, acting as deputy to Dr. Bob

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal

Posted by Ken Blades on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:26

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Ken Blades, posted by Quintal on March 15, 2007, at 12:24:15

Hi Q~

Since homosexuality has been[until recent times]
considered a disorder of psychosexual development,
an abnormality, of course there had to be some
explanation for it[psychiatry HATES a vacuum lol].
There have been different theories and different
modes of 'treatment' over time, none of which have
stood the test of time. The supposed inclusion of
prohibitions against homosexuality in the Old Testament is the genesis of the 'pathology'
classification, and continues to be used
by religious zealots like Dobson, Nicolosi, Socarides, Reisman as their bases for
'therapeutic' extermination of homosexual
behaviors. The people are self-righteous,
deluded, Biblical fundamentalist whackos.

I understand how you might identify with
some of these supposed explanations found
in Hubbard, etc, but I hope this does not
last....it ain't good for your mental health!
A lot of the circumstances theorized as
organic to the development of homosexuality
are also experienced by those who are
heterosexually oriented as well. How
do they manage to 'escape'? Blows THAT
theory!

No one really knows for sure why homosexuality
exists..whether it is genetic or partially
genetic and partially experiential, it makes no
difference. You're gay and it's ok. Gay people
can have the same psychiatric problems as the
rest of the population but they exist separately
from one's orientation. It is likely that the negative experiences that a gay person is likely
to have during childhood and adolescence would
tend to aggravate the emotional problems one
would be burdened with later on.

You're ok Q....other than being a nut like the rest of us lol!

Ken

 

Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder' » one woman cine

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:26

In reply to homosexuality is a normal variation of sexuality, posted by one woman cine on March 15, 2007, at 14:45:02

>Homosexuality doesn't need to be cured and psychiatry isn't pretending it's normal. Because it is normal & that's the general scientific consensus from biologists to physicians.

Homosexuality clearly isn't normal (it may be acceptable in many circles, but not normal), and I don't know of any biologists or physicians that would categorize it as such. ADHD and low mood don't need to be cured either; they could be considered a normal variation of human behaviour, yet in modern psychiatry they are pathogenized, categorized as disorders that should be treated because of the impairment and pain they cause to a person wanting to be a successful and respectable member of society. I don't see why homosexuality shouldn't be classified as such. In my view it's only political correctness that's standing in the way.

>Because it is normal & that's the general scientific consensus from biologists to physicians.

My old pdoc told me "that isn't something we usually treat" when I told him my sexual orientation. It was clear by his expression and tone of voice that he regretted more aggressive treatments for homosexuality were not at his disposal. I'm sure many heterosexual psychiatrists hold similar views but don't speak them out of fear of litigation and losing their job - peer pressure I suppose. It is still mentioned as a adjustment disorder in the DSM.

Q

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Ken Blades

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:26

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal, posted by Ken Blades on March 15, 2007, at 15:42:06

Thank you for the reassurance Ken, but I'm very relaxed about the whole issue - that's why I feel comfortable bringing this stuff up for discussion.

>I understand how you might identify with
some of these supposed explanations found
in Hubbard, etc, but I hope this does not
>last....it ain't good for your mental health!

How would you know what's best for my mental health? It doesn't depress me to hear statements like those made by Hubbard, I find them interesting and liberating.

>A lot of the circumstances theorized as
organic to the development of homosexuality
are also experienced by those who are
heterosexually oriented as well. How
>do they manage to 'escape'?

I don't know anyone who has had the sort of upbringing I had and still turned out a normal, well adjusted heterosexual man.

>Gay people can have the same psychiatric problems as the rest of the population but they exist separately from one's orientation.

No, I don't think they do. A lot of the depression and anxiety (particularly social anxiety) homosexual men suffer is directly due to their sexuality and the problems it causes adjusting to society. I'm confused by the results of the Hooker study because it's always been clear that rates of depression and suicide are much higher among gay men than their heterosexual peers. Gay men make up the majority of male mental health consumers as far as I'm aware, and it is always likely to be that way no matter how tolerant society becomes because afterall few people want to be gay, and beneath all the veneer and bluster of Gay Pride self-loathing still runs deep.

>You're ok Q....other than being a nut like the rest of us lol!

Again, thank you for the support, but I'm not OK or I wouldn't be here. I don't think denial helps solve the problem at all.

 

Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder'

Posted by notfred on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:27

In reply to Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder' » one woman cine, posted by Quintal on March 15, 2007, at 15:48:40


"Homosexuality clearly isn't normal (it may be acceptable in many circles, but not normal), and I don't know of any biologists or physicians that would categorize it as such."

Well, there are quite a few that do, given that it is no longer listed as a pathology and happens throughout the animal kingdom.

Take a look a kin selection.

 

Twerps

Posted by Declan on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:29

In reply to Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder', posted by notfred on March 15, 2007, at 17:08:16

Edmund White in "My Lives" dealt with the normative aspect by saying that (by implication) he 'wasn't some middle class twerp trying to be normal'.

 

Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder'

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:32

In reply to Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder', posted by notfred on March 15, 2007, at 17:08:16

>given that it is no longer listed as a pathology

I think we've already discussed that topic.

>and happens throughout the animal kingdom.

Why would that automatically mean it's not a pathology? Surely many illnesses and disorders are naturally occurring (especially when they're biologically determined)? Besides, models of animal sexual behaviour are not reliable models for human sexuality.

Q

 

Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder'

Posted by Declan on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:32

In reply to Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder', posted by Quintal on March 15, 2007, at 17:50:18

Why people would go to semi-scientific sources like psychiatry for definitions of pathology is beyond me.

At least religion (other than fundamentalism) sometimes has something decent to say about desire and the implications of disordered desire.
Disordered desire is one definition of Original Sin.
Buddhism is OK on the subject too.

 

Sexuality With Reference to Gender » one woman cine

Posted by Quintal on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:32

In reply to homosexuality is a normal variation of sexuality, posted by one woman cine on March 15, 2007, at 14:45:02

>Variations occur all the time, not just sexuality - try reading "Sexing the Body" by Fausto-Sterling.

Yes, I read "Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex" a while ago. It was a very enlightening read that answered many unspoken questions I harboured from an early age.

I'm more acquainted with that issue than you'll ever know.

Q

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal

Posted by Phillipa on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:32

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Ken Blades, posted by Quintal on March 15, 2007, at 16:39:38

My best friends have always been gay and I've worked with a lot of gay males and they are not uncomfortable with their sexual orientation nor did any of them see psychiatrists. We have a lot of neighbors here that are very successful and gay. I've never met anyone here in the States that Thinks there is something wrong with it. I just think everyone's a persona and is entiteled to their sexual preferences. Love Phillipa

 

Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder'

Posted by FredPotter on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:32

In reply to Re: Homosexuality is an 'adjustment disorder', posted by Quintal on March 15, 2007, at 17:50:18

Edward O Wilson says in one of his books that homosexuality has an evolutionary advantage to groups in the form of baby-minding, presumably while the Mother is out working in the fields or sewing skins. Why isn't the homosexual out working we ask? This kin-selection is not endorsed by Richard Dawkins (not very much) which may be a good thing. Whether it is on a parallel with memes I haven't the energy to work out
Fred
Fred

 

Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Phillipa

Posted by FredPotter on March 24, 2007, at 22:46:32

In reply to Re: Scientology, Homosexuality, and its tentacles » Quintal, posted by Phillipa on March 15, 2007, at 19:07:23

But Phillipa it's not the real deal. They can't (usually) have children. Me, I hope for grandchildren and if one of my boys turned gay I would be disappointed for that reason. I also have gay friends and often they're more artistic and sensitive, but not always. None of this is to say they are ill, unhappy or to be given therapy or treated differently. Just my groat's worth
Fred


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