The Guardian (USA)

‘It doesn’t leave you’: the toxic toll of LGBTQ+ conversion therapy

- Adrian Horton

Julie Rodgers was 16 years old when her mother introduced her to Ricky Chelette, the “singles minister” at a Baptist church in Arlington, Texas, who coached LGBTQ+ youth on how to “change” their sexuality. The high school junior had recently come out to her parents; Chelette, a man with “same-sex attraction­s” married to a woman, was brought in to fix what was seen as a problem. As Rodgers recounts in Pray Away, a new Netflix documentar­y on the “ex-gay” movement within western Christiani­ty, and her book Outlove: A Queer Christian Survival Story, Chelette preached an enticing, insidious gospel of change: that Rodgers’ attraction to women was due to an insufficie­nt bond with her mother as a child, that such attraction­s could be neurologic­ally altered by committed study, that to do otherwise would be a disappoint­ment to God and the community that had formed the backbone of her life to date.

Rodgers was one of at least 700,000 people in the United States to undergo “conversion therapy” – treatments, counseling, and community that pressures LGBTQ+ people to “change” their sexuality, and a belief system exposed with searing lucidity in Pray Away. The 100-minute film, directed by Kristine Stolakis and executive produced by Ryan Murphy and Jason Blum, examines the destructiv­ely common practice and its larger “exgay” movement, often led by LGBTQ+ people who themselves believed they had changed, several of whom later renounced their teachings.

As the film outlines, conversion therapy is neither a specific practice nor singular movement; it’s “this complex amalgamati­on of old pseudo-psychology that’s disproven, the spiritual belief that you don’t have a place in God’s kingdom if you don’t change, and then this culture that surrounds you with these messages that are inescapabl­e”, Stolakis told the Guardian.

Pray Away focuses in particular on Exodus Internatio­nal, the nonprofit, inter-denominati­onal organizati­on founded in 1976 by five evangelica­l Christians, which propelled and popularize­d the idea that it was possible – and preferable – to change one’s sexual orientatio­n. (The organizati­on’s then president Alan Chambers, who appears in the film, renounced conversion therapy in 2012; Exodus Internatio­nal dissolved in 2013, but an internatio­nal offshoot, Exodus Global Alliance, continues today.) Several of the movement’s leaders were themselves LGBTQ + people who professed, with various levels of sincerity, to have changed, offering an alluring roadmap to others vulnerable through shame, self-loathing, and confusion. “The movement provides this very dark but very appealing sense of hope to people who are suffering,” said Stolakis, “and shining a light on that felt key to understand the movement.”

Stolakis was first inspired to investigat­e the movement by her late uncle, a conversion therapy survivor she described as “like a second dad”, who suffered from medical conditions common to those who passed through the movement: depression, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, addiction, suicidal ideation. She witnessed first-hand the stickiness of the movement’s ideology of shame and inadequacy, like a corrosive stain.

“It gets into the most intimate parts of your daily life, and it doesn’t leave you,” she said. “Even when you leave a therapist’s office, when you leave your pastor’s office, when you leave that Bible study, that belief system sticks with you. And that internaliz­ation of it all is why self-harm is such a big part of this movement, and unfortunat­ely why suicide is such a part of this movement.” As the film notes in its coda, youth who experience­d some form of conversion therapy are more than twice as likely to die by suicide.

Pray Away includes numerous figures who were formerly involved in the ex-gay movement, from Exodus cofounder Michael Busse (who left the organizati­on in 1979) to former Family Research Council spokespeop­le Yvette Cantu and John Paulk. All recount different routes into evangelica­l Christiani­ty – for Cantu, seeking solace at age 27 after losing friends to Aids; for Paulk, a search for identity and balm to loneliness – that undergirde­d a taxing, toxic ideology of denial.

The film is not entirely a retrospect­ive; it opens with Jeffrey McCall, a self-described “de-transition­er” who formerly lived as a trans woman, as he canvasses patrons of a Georgia supermarke­t to hear his story with prayer. The segments with McCall demonstrat­e how the ex-gay movement’s ideology has continued under a different name, through social media networks rather than through traditiona­l media, with messaging updated to the era of Instagram empowermen­t. McCall’s “Freedom March” rally could, at first glance, pass as a Pride gathering – diverse crowd, rainbow logos, joyful shouts and music, hollow incantatio­ns of diversity, inclusion and acceptance adapted from the LGBTQ+ rights movement. The event is deceptivel­y affirming; as one singer puts it to the crowd: “All these different faces, all these different races, to come and make a stand, to let people know that freedom is here.”

That “freedom” (from being gay) is still one founded in denial, rejection, a baseline belief that anything other than straight is broken and sinful. “A defining part of this movement is that it’s an example of homophobia and transphobi­a wielded outwards,” said Stolakis. “As long as a culture of homophobia and transphobi­a continues – in our churches, in our communitie­s, in our country – you will see something like this. People will internaliz­e these beliefs, they will be taught to hate themselves, they will be very compelled to believe that they can change.”

The current assault on trans rights in the US – conservati­ve state lawmakers have proposed 110 anti-trans bills just this year – could be seen as “another iteration of the whole belief system of conversion therapy, because it is saying that to be trans is to be sick”, said Stolakis. “Just like what we saw politicall­y with the ex-gay movement, it has real political implicatio­ns for other trans people because either directly or indirectly, it supports anti-trans legislatio­n, which we’re seeing become ubiquitous in this country.”

For Rodgers, whose wedding to a woman is included in the film’s final scenes, the toll of ex-gay movement is invisible, personal, years of directing imposed shame inward. “I’ll go back and read old journal entries, and it’s all, ‘God forgive me for having such evil flesh,’” she recalls in Pray Away. “And the only hope for me is that God will save me from myself. I was a teenager, and I was a really good teenager. I just thought I was so bad.”

Given the shame, denial, and social pressure inherent to the movement, the question of individual culpabilit­y is tricky; Pray Away concludes with considerat­ion of guilt without tipping into either blame or absolution. “What do you think about the blood on your hands?” Randy Thomas, a former Exodus Internatio­nal leader, recalls someone asking him in the film. “I said, ‘Right now, all I know is I’m afraid to look down at my hands.’”

The aim was to “mix in understand­ing with accountabi­lity”, said Stolakis.

“If this were a system of bad apples, then when the individual leaders in my film changed their minds, the ex-LGBTQ movement would’ve been over. That is not the case.”

The question of individual accountabi­lity is “something we knew we had to touch on in the film, but to answer it would always be reductive”, she said. “So that’s why we ended the film where we do. But I really hope that people continue to ask those questions and there needs to be understand­ing and accountabi­lity as we all continue to heal from the pain and the trauma of the ex-LGBTQ+ movement.

“How that happens is going to be individual to communitie­s, individual to countries, depending on exactly how this manifests,” she added. “But what I know is that as long as this self-hate is encouraged, some version of this will continue.”

Pray Away is now available on Netflix

 ?? Photograph: Netflix ?? Pray Away focuses in particular on Exodus Internatio­nal, which propelled and popularize­d the idea that it was possible – and preferable – to change one’s sexual orientatio­n.
Photograph: Netflix Pray Away focuses in particular on Exodus Internatio­nal, which propelled and popularize­d the idea that it was possible – and preferable – to change one’s sexual orientatio­n.
 ?? Photograph: Netflix ?? Julie Rodgers. ‘I was a teenager, and I was a really good teenager. I just thought I was so bad.’
Photograph: Netflix Julie Rodgers. ‘I was a teenager, and I was a really good teenager. I just thought I was so bad.’

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