Tag Archives | Love

Love and Grief, Not Just for People

Three weeks ago, one of the most important creatures in my life nearly died.  He was hours, probably less, away from closing his eyes forever.  I brought him to the ER thinking he had severe back pain, and possibly had a blocked intestine.  Instead, they told me he was in shock, severely dehydrated, low potassium, and was being poisoned by diabetes induced ketones in his blood… I didn’t know he had diabetes until that moment.  It was an unexpected realization that I might lose him that day.  I felt like I’d been punched in the face.  And I felt terrible guilt because I’d missed (in hindsight) some pretty blatant signs he was in much worse trouble than I’d thought, assuming it was his back that had been bothering him.  He managed to make it through that first night, and fought his way out of immediate danger in the following days.  But while recovering from the near death experience, he was diagnosed with an adrenal tumor, that probably had exacerbated his decline, and would prevent him from coming home if not extracted.  And to add insult to injury, he had bladder stones.  After nearly two weeks in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), two surgeries (one to remove the tumor and bladder stones, and one to repair his ruptured bladder two days later) and now after one week at home as we adjust to life on twice per day insulin, my cat appears to be on the road to recovery.  I’m not so sure I am yet.

That’s right… I’m writing about my cat.  His name is Oni (short for Onnicus, appropriately the Finnish word for ‘lucky’), and he means the world to me.

Over the past few weeks as this has gone on, I’ve experienced generally two responses from people who learn about the ordeal.  There are those who get the devotion I have for a non-human companion, and why I did everything I could to save his life regardless of the expense, and there are those who don’t.  With this blog, I wanted to share my story so that perhaps a few of the latter group to gain some understanding that those of us in the first group already have.

Most people understand love in its various forms.  Unless you’re a sociopath, you probably have loved some other person, so you understand the basic emotion.  But sometimes when that love is applied to a non-human, we have trouble understanding what we may not have experienced.  I’m not trying to equate animals with people.  I’m not saying we’re the same.  But we have far more in common with each other, than we like to admit sometimes.  If you’ve ever loved another person, you should be able to understand my love for my cat.  If you’ve ever loved a good friend… you absolutely understand my love for Oni.  He can’t carry on a conversation with me like my other friends can, but where he lacks in communication, he makes up for in loyalty, affection, and love.  He’s comforted me during some very dark times.  He’s made me smile, laugh, cry out of happiness, and lifted my spirits when I’ve been blue.  When I’ve felt utterly alone in the world, he has been there to remind me I am not.  With a loud purr, a gratuitous cuddle, or a meow to greet me at the door when I come home from work, he helped me believe I am needed.  He has been a friend as much as any human I’ve known.  And I have some amazing human friends as well.

When a person we love dies, part of our grief is due to the sense of loss and finality.  We will never share with that person what we have shared before.  All future potential falls into the void.  Gone forever.  Losing a beloved pet stirs the same despair.  As we toil with grief, we often are wracked by regret.  In my case, as I mentioned, I had missed many signs over the previous weeks and days before I brought Oni to the ER.  I allowed him to suffer needlessly, and possibly could have helped him much sooner had I been more aware of his illness.  So along with the normal fears of losing my friend suddenly, I felt tremendous guilt for putting him through this.  The day before I brought him in, I’d gone out to breakfast, spent the day out and about, all the while I should have been rushing him to the emergency room a full 24 hours (at a minimum) sooner than I had.  I’m not sure I’ll ever forgive myself for that.  Its hard to think about.  I felt I’d let him down and might never have the chance to make it up to him.  He’d only know those last hours of pain, and not how much I loved him.  As a person with anxiety and obsessive tendencies, I knew it would torment me until I died.  I’ve lost pets before, mostly during my childhood, and I still feel that pain.  This would have been multiplied by 1000 because of the responsibility I felt his condition.

Those regrets were only part of the picture.  I also wrestled with guilt for the occasional dark thought that would cross my mind.  that maybe it would be better to have it all end now.  That even if he made it through that first night, his life might still be short.  There might be many more emotional days ahead for us.  And I would need to make sacrifices to care for him.  I will worry about him until he takes his last breath, whenever that is, and part of me wanted to end the worry, and deal with the pain of grief instead.  I would have those thoughts, and then feel like a traitor.  Like an evil, selfish person undeserving of the blind devotion of one amazing furball.

One thing I decided early on… if Oni had a chance at recovery, a recovery which would extend his life, and make it one worth living, then I would do whatever it took to make it happen.  I would not be able to live with my demons if I pulled the plug — or worse… asked doctors to push drugs into him to end it when there was still hope — when he had given me more joy than I could repay him for.  In some ways, this cat saved my life.  I ow him everything.  Three years ago, I’d lost my job (the details I’ll save for another day, perhaps).  At the time, that experience had felt like a death.  I felt grief for my lost career, regret for choices I’d made, and fear of the unknown.  I went into a pretty big depression.  I didn’t know that kind of darkness was possible for me until then.  My mind wandered into some pretty desolate corridors.  If my cat hand’t been there to give me his fluffy, unconditional love and neediness, I’m not sure if I’d have come out of it.  He needed me to keep him alive, and that gave me a purpose to keep going.  I owe him every chance I can give him.

Dealing with the stress of possibly losing a dear friend was difficult.  The world understands the loss of a parent, or child, or husband or wife, or relative.  Its usually sympathetic to the loss of a human friend (though somewhat less).  The world doesn’t always understand the loss of a pet.  I found it difficult to focus at work (luckily I had a fairly light schedule, and an amazing boss, but I’m not sure how long I can push that leeway).  Not everyone completely understands why I was struggling so much.  While many of those who “get it” were amazing, some of those who don’t made coping with the stress even harder.  When I would say my cat was in the hospital, and explain the situation, many people would say things like “that must be expensive” or “maybe its time to get another cat”.  I heard more stories about people putting their pets down than I’d ever care to hear.  Oh, and did you know, I was working for free that week (with all of my salary basically going to pay off the Vet)?  It was difficult to see the look in people’s eyes (and sometimes hear their overt words) that suggested I am crazy for spending any money on a sick cat.  And I won’t lie… its a lot of money.  Its stressful to think about the amount of money I’m spending on my cat (and its not over… he has more ahead of him).  While I’ve joked about selling a kidney, I am seriously considering moving in with my parents for a year or more and renting out my condo.  No joke.

My only response though is this: If you want to ridicule me for having too much love for another creature that has emotions similar to your own, I’m ok with that.  My love for my cat doesn’t mean I don’t love people.  The ability to love beyond ourselves is a virtue, even if one of the targets is a non-human.  Can it ever be a bad thing to expand our circle of love?  I submit that anyone who can love a cat, or a dog, or a parrot, or any non-human companion, is a person better able to love humans alike.  Money means nothing if I can’t live with the choices I make.  I’d rather lose everything else, than lose my empathy, compassion, and love.  If that makes me crazy, or a source of easy mockery, then so be it.

Peace,

PersephoneK

UPDATED:  Anyone interested in helping support Oni’s recovery can do so via the GoFundMe page a friend of mine set up for him.  I’m so humbled to have such amazing friends.

Oni day before 1st surgery.

Oni day before 1st surgery.

 

Kitty under a blanket... does it get cuter?

Kitty under a blanket… does it get cuter?

 

Oni became an ICU celebrity, loved by all.  He even got two traveling trophies...Stuffed Barney, and the Medal of Hope.

Oni became an ICU celebrity, loved by all. He even got two traveling trophies…Stuffed Barney, and the Medal of Hope.

 

Close to homebound, Oni was given an expansive cat condo in the ICU.

Close to homebound, Oni was given an expansive cat condo in the ICU.

Home!  Showing me his tough scar.

Home! Showing me his tough scar.

2014-02-08 15.47.51

Enjoying a well deserved snooze one week at home.

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How Gay Rights Influenced my Deconversion

Last week Minnesota became the 12th state to legalize gay marriage. The law will go into effect on August 1, 2013. As you probably have surmised from my post last November on the vote to ban gay marriage and immortalize it in the Minnesota Constitution (which obviously did not pass), this decision makes me very happy. This momentous event has caused me to reflect on how important the issue of gay rights has been in my deconversion from Christianity, and ultimately from all religion.

To summarize, it has been very important.

I should start by setting the stage and let you know that I am not gay. Perhaps that shouldn’t be relevant, but I feel that it helps you to understand my perspective a little more fully. I do however have many gay family members and friends. I will not specify any further out of respect for their privacy except to say that many of these people have meant a lot to me throughout my entire life. I mention this not because I want you to let me off the hook for what I’m about to admit, but because it’s a pivotal fact in this story.

Hate the Sin; Love the Sinner and other Crap I Believed

It was during middle school that I began my journey into a very strong Christian faith. At some point along the way, I adopted a fairly common evangelical Christian mentality towards homosexuality which is to “hate the sin, but love the sinner.” At first, this seemed perfectly reasonable, loving, and in line with my understanding of what I believed the bible taught on the subject. I believed that god made man and woman, and that they (one man, one woman) should be together for the primary purpose of having children, and to create a perfect holy union within the trinity. I believed that within those boundaries were the only acceptable ways of expressing sexuality.

Prior to my path to devout Christian, my religious training was more general. I have discussed in other posts that my parents are believers, but not overtly dogmatic towards any denomination of Christianity. We attended a Lutheran Church, but frequently missed services, and I was a hit and miss Sunday school student. I cannot think of any discussions on the morality of homosexuality prior to my middle school years. And although I cannot remember the specific timeline, at some point I went from not having any memorable opinion about homosexuality, to believing it was a sinful lifestyle condemned by god.

In short, and to be clear, I now believe my religious understanding entirely shaped any opinion I later adopted regarding homosexuals and the immorality of homosexual behavior during the years of my faith.

I Think I Love Ya

At the same time, I still truly loved (in my mind) those in my life who were gay. But god’s message had put me into conflict with how I felt about my gay friends and family members. So to justify this belief, I likened homosexuality to alcoholism. I told myself it was the behavior — the physical acts of love — that offended god, not merely being gay. For, a recovering alcoholic can lead a healthy and moral life. It is only when they fall off the wagon that the downward spiral begins. And although at the time, I did not know any of the science surrounding the topic, I believed that a homosexual lifestyle was a choice, at least to some degree. Even if an inclination towards homosexuality is innate and inherited, it didn’t mean indulging in that behavior was ok. This too, I likened to alcoholism, and separated it from the idea of racial identity, and civil rights, where a person is born a certain way. We all had been given free will, I reasoned, and were empowered by god to push aside our base instincts and urges. We all have burdens to bear, and some were given the burden of being gay. This tactic worked for me for a long time. I had never felt hatred or anger towards gays. The emotion was closer to pity. I felt terrible that they had been afflicted by this demonic tendency and hunger for someone of the same gender. I prayed for them. I truly wanted them to find salvation in the house of god, and be able to live free from sinful behavior. I believed I was righteous, and I believed this was what god expected me to believe.

I look back on this way of thinking with extreme shame and humility. I now see clearly that I was wrong.

Over time, the thorny contradiction between god’s will and how I wanted to treat the people I loved poked at me. Some of the gay people I loved came out of the closet (none of those revelations were truly surprising frankly), and I began to feel conflicted between what I believed god wanted from me and what I felt was moral behavior towards a fellow human being who I loved and who loved others in return. I learned a little bit about the science of homosexuality as well, and came to the (true) conclusion that there is a strong biological component, and that even if the trait is not born in a person (which I believe it is), then it develops from an early enough age that it might as well be from birth. I began to question how a loving and just god could afflict his children (a fairly large total number of them at around 3% to 8%) in nearly every culture, yet condemn them for acting on their natural impulses. It would have been one thing if those impulses hurt others, but how is it hurting anyone if one person physically loves another person who consents to that love?

Why Does a Loving God Condemn Those Who Love and Are Loved in Return?

This single idea — that absent the word of god saying homosexuality is a sin, there is nothing else that makes it so – was a significant factor in my ultimate deconversion. After realizing the cruelty in god’s condemnation of such a victimless “sin”, in fact, of a behavior that actually promotes love towards other humans, I began to see other similar disconnects between the morality of Yahweh and the more evolved morality of modernity. I will not go into all of those here, but it’s not a small list.

After I made this leap in my own moral intuitions, it still took me some time to completely shed the baggage I had purchased during my religious obsession. For a while, I held onto the idea that civil unions would be a good alternative. That preserving tradition was a worthy goal. Or that keeping marriage between a man and a woman would prevent the slippery slope argument eventually leading to polygamy and goat marriage. I realized several years ago, even after I had begun to call myself an atheist, and truly believed that homosexuality was completely normal and moral, that even those arguments were deeply rooted in religion. They were reflexive beliefs more than well-thought out. It took more self-education in many areas of philosophy and science before I was able to articulate for myself a cogent world view that did not require a god for morality.

But it was this single issue that first revealed the Christian god (as I knew him) to be truly ancient, outdated, and immoral. It frustrates me today when I hear strains of “hate the sin, love the sinner” being expressed regarding this issue, even as I understand where it comes from. One reason I wanted to write this post is to explain that I do not believe most religious people who share that belief are haters or bigots, though they are often portrayed that way, even by other Christians. I think reality is more complicated than that. I do not doubt that many faithful Christians have grappled with the conflict I felt. It is a difficult choice to make between one’s all powerful god who controls your immortal soul’s destiny, and family and friends. Indoctrination is a powerful drug. Many who adopt an anti-homosexuality position tend to be regular people trying to live a good life, and trying to be a positive force in the world. Very few out there come even close to the level of vitriol spewed by the despicable Westboro Baptist Church. Regardless, of that, I do not fully give them (or my former self) a pass. If your god is forcing you to make a choice between him, and your treatment of other humans merely for behavior that has absolutely no impact on you or other sentient creatures whatsoever, I beg you to reconsider whether or not your god deserves that love and respect.

Photo Credit: http://img1.etsystatic.com/000/0/5583029/il_fullxfull.175325241.jpg

But They’re Not True Christians…

Some Christians get around this by claiming that anyone condemning homosexuality or homosexuals is not a “True Christian.” To those who say I have misunderstood the bible’s teaching in this respect, I would say, that is free for you to believe, but I believed and still believe there is more than adequate justification within the pages of the bible to support a position that gay love is morally repugnant. The notion is immortalized in the word “sodomy.” That said, if you must choose between being a fundamentalist Christian who condemns homosexuality, and a believer who cherry picks the parts you support and throws out the parts that offend you, I would rather you are the latter. I applaud your decision to ignore morally despicable teachings in favor of love for your fellow man, but not all of your brethren have been fortunate enough to grow up with that liberty in their faith. That is one thing I love about being an atheist. Unlike when I was a believer, and I felt that I had to find the truth in the whole bible, I can now choose any part of any world philosophy I want, and throw out others I have no use for without having to call myself a “true” anything.

For me, it all comes down to what are the things that improve human well-being and what are the things that destroy it? That is where my line of morality and immorality is drawn, and where the difficult discussions of right and wrong begin. I have yet to hear any reasonable argument that puts homosexual behavior of consenting adults remotely close to the “destroy well-being” category of behaviors. How can mutual love ever destroy the happiness of those who are in love, or those who live amongst them? If you can articulate an argument without invoking god (directly or indirectly), I’d be curious to entertain it, but I’d be surprised if you can.

A Path Towards Moral Maturity

As I think back to my former self, I am saddened by her and for her. I am saddened that she ever felt like she had to choose between her friends and family and her god, and I am horrified at the thought that she might have made anyone feel like a sinner. I am glad that I was able to shed my religious veil of self-righteousness relatively early in my life, and before I had met as many people as I have now, or will as my life continues. “Hate the sin, love the sinner” has its place in the world. There are many situations in life where we can deplore a loved one’s behavior, but still love them as a person. Homosexuality should never be included in that category, because at its heart, there is nothing inherently wrong with it. It’s a natural behavior that hurts no one any more than heterosexual behavior does among consenting individuals. As a result, although it’s under the guise of reasonability, the mantra to condemn the behavior but love the individual falls flat. If you have ever judged someone for their homosexual behavior while purporting to love them, you should know you have probably hurt them deeply, because the only way they can ever gain your acceptance is by suppressing something within them that is perfectly normal and good. If you find condemnation to be a moral way of treating your fellow human beings, then I feel sad for you, as I did for myself. I can only hope you may one day reconsider. 

Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes

As a Christian apostate, I have gotten a taste of what it is like for gays and lesbians to come out of the closet. In fact, the atheist community has adopted many of the tactics used by the LGBT community, and it has begun to pay real dividends in society’s acceptance of us. They bravely paved the way, often under real threat of violence and harm. I am thankful for that. I feel a little bookend of solidarity with them in their fight to change hearts and minds. I know from personal experience, that we all are capable of changing our thoughts, even on such emotionally charged topics as homosexuality and religion. I’m inspired by their willingness to be themselves in the face of hateful speech (even if inspired by misguided good intentions), and ancient ideologies still looming large in our culture. The tide is turning, and I am confident that in fifty years, or so, people will wonder what all the fuss was about, both when it comes to gay marriage, and atheists walking among the masses. Maybe by then atheists will also be able to hold office and serve on juries in all fifty states. But it is because of the LGBT community in part that I speak out about atheism, and my personal experiences as a former Christian. It is why I celebrate the new law in Minnesota and the previous states. The times they are a changin’.  Thank the stars!

Peace and love,

PersephoneK

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