|
By Wayne Besen In the shadow of Mary Cheneyâs apologist memoir, âNow Itâs My Turn,â comes an apology from former New Jersey Governor James McGreevey in his new book âThe Confession.â With Mary receiving a mllion dollars for her âtell nothingâ and McGreevey receiving a half million for his âtell-all,â it has suddenly become quite lucrative to announce oneâs homosexuality. Perhaps, next yearâs National Coming Out Day should be held in a bank?
Cynicism aside, McGreeveyâs book is a tome that hits home with an agonizing and gut-wrenching portrayal of life in the closet. It is an invaluable resource because it vividly points out that living a lie is not only self-destructive, but also ruins the lives of people sucked into the sham. As a result of McGreeveyâs deception, two wives were left without a husband and two children were left in broken homes. I guess this is another rousing success story for the âfamily valuesâ crowd that continues to create mixed orientation marriages that are surely doomed to fail. McGreeveyâs book is helpful because it underscores that sexuality is not a frivolous lifestyle choice and it also helps dispel the tired myth that people can âovercomeâ their same-sex attractions though prayer or willpower. Indeed, McGreevey read the script and acted the heterosexual part with the best of them. Like the âex-gayâ ministries of the Christian Right, he practiced behavior modification and role-playing. âI studied the moves, figured out what worked and what didnât, practiced and perfected my perfect authenticity.â Part of his self-help âtherapyâ included ogling Playboy centerfolds, prayer, and reading psychology books. When the psychobabble didnât work, McGreevey turned to the âall you need is a good woman approach â or, in his case, women.. âAs the years went on,â McGreevey wrote, âI became as avid a womanizer as anybody else on the New Jersey political scene. But my attraction was largely artificial, my sexual performance a triumph of mind over matter.â Sadly, right wing groups spend millions of dollars to trap people in false and empty existences. The âex-gayâ group Exodus International, for example, has twelve full-time employees who share the goal of reprogramming people to live duplicitous lives, much like McGreeveyâs. They even have seminars to train people how to walk, talk and act so they can appear heterosexual. The problem is, even if a person changes outward behavior, it does not change who they are inside. The dissonance created by what is in oneâs heart and the nonsense that these groups funnel into oneâs heads can lead to pathological behavior. In great detail, McGreevey discusses how his efforts to change led to a seedy double life. âAs glorious and meaningful as it would have been to have a loving and sound sexual experience with another man, I knew Iâd have to undo my happiness step-by-step as I began chasing my dream of a public career and the kind of âacceptableâ life that went with it. So, instead, I settled for the detached anonymity of bookstores and rest stops - a compromise, but one that was wholly unfulfilling and morally unsatisfactory.â McGreevey underscores how conservatives are largely responsible for the very existence of the âgay lifestyleâ they disingenuously claim they abhor. But, just as their efforts to ban contraception cause more abortions, the rightâs efforts to turn gay people straight has kept the adult bookstores in business. In essence, Focus on the Family indirectly subsidizes gay porn palaces and bathhouses. On Amazon.com, âThe Confessionâ is coupled with âBrokeback Mountain,â offering a one-two punch to the closet. Taken together, no thoughtful person could conclude that it is healthy or desirable to pressure people into mixed orientation marriages. It would have been preferable if James McGreevey had come out without a cloud of scandal hanging over his head. It is still unfathomable that he appointed his one-time boyfriend Golan Cipal to a job that dealt with national security following 9-11. Still, in a counter-intuitive way, the dishonor of McGreeveyâs resignation was helpful in revealing the full ugliness of the closet and the sick ways repression manifests itself. With âThe Confessionâ McGreevey is getting a second chance to show that living in his own truth offers a personal power that surpasses even that of sitting in the governorâs mansion.
|