spclk said:
Nova, I indeed did not mean to compare drug addicts to homosexuals other than their behavior as you stated. I just find human nature an interesting study and wondered what the opinions from others was regarding using therapy to help change behavior "IF" change is desired in the case of someone who is homosexual. We don't really know if he is homosexual, bi-sexual, or was just experimenting. We also don't know if these are feelings he has had his whole life or if they result from a life experience.
I personally believe, that yes, many people are born "homosexual", but I also believe that many turn to that due to experiences in their life that have influenced it (though far fewer). Thanks for your excellent response!
You're right. We don't know. But for a man of Haggard's generation to risk divorce, ruin and public stigma, the desire must have been pretty strong. (We aren't just talking about one drunken evening, after all.)
Given the shame that still attaches to homosexual behavior - particularly among those of Haggard's religious community - I find it hard to believe he was just "experimenting." (Were we talking about a teenage boy, I would feel differently.)
In my experience, it isn't uncommon for women to turn to lesbian relationships after a difficult heterosexual marriage or just because they really care about one particular woman. In my 35 years as an out, gay man, I have
never met a gay man who claimed anything of the kind. (Yes, I've heard a yokel on TV claim he was "turned gay" when he was molested as a child, but oddly, I've never heard a self-accepting gay man say that.)
Pretty much every gay man I've ever met says he knew he was "different" long before he reached puberty. Even once-gay men I know who eventually settled into an open and honest marriage with a woman say the same.
So (a) I doubt the sexual relationship with what's-his-name was Haggard's first; and (b) I doubt he risked so much for something that was opposed to his basic nature. (Turning it around again, there are many women I love very much. And I'm certainly not repulsed by women physically. But risking my home and relationship with my partner to have sex with a woman is very, very hard to imagine. (No offense to any of the great women here at WS!))