Weekend Herald

Woman shocked 200 times to ‘cure’ her

Welcome for ban on gay conversion therapy practices

- Michael Neilson

Joan Bellingham was drugged and received more than 200 electrocon­vulsive shocks — all meant to “cure” her of being gay.

Many of her friends have been through similarly-traumatic “therapies” and a handful subsequent­ly took their own lives.

“The guilt you are made to feel is horrific. It leaves you feeling lonely, empty, worthless.”

Bellingham, 68, is welcoming news this week the Government will ban so-called gay conversion therapy within a year, with legislatio­n drafted mid this year.

Following years of advocacy, by groups such as Ending Conversion Therapy, Labour had campaigned on a ban ahead of the general election but then went silent.

Activist groups reignited the issue, and Green MP and rainbow issues spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Kerekere launched a petition last week. In days it had amassed 157,764 signatures and was presented to Parliament shortly after the ban timeline was announced.

“To see all forms of this banned would just mean the world to me,” Bellingham said.

“If there was one last thing I could do in my life it would be to make young ones today do not go through what I went through.”

CONVERSION THERAPY is a Western practice based on a belief that people with diverse sexual orientatio­ns or gender identities are abnormal and should be changed so they fit within hetero-normative standards.

It can take place in health clinics, but mainly involves faith-based groups providing counsellin­g, prayer and group support activities.

Waikato University senior lecturer in psychology Dr Jaimie Veale said there was no conclusive data about how many people had been through so-called gay conversion therapy in New Zealand, although there was plenty of anecdotal evidence.

A survey of trans people, “Counting Ourselves”, of which Veale was principal investigat­or, found 17 per cent of respondent­s (one in six) experience­d a health profession­al trying to stop them from being trans or non-binary.

In Australia, a 2018 study found 10 per cent of Australian­s who were attracted to people of the same sex or were gender diverse were vulnerable to conversion therapy practices.

“So we know these practices are occurring, but by their very secretive nature we don’t know how widespread it is, and there has been little resources put towards finding out,” Veale said.

“But we know it is all based on this idea that it is a mental disorder, a pathologis­ing view, and that these are really very harmful practices.”

Up until 1973 “homosexual­ity” was listed as a mental disorder by the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n (APA), and was “treated” by health profession­als.

Worldwide, as with Bellingham, ECT was used along with drugs, chemicals and a range of different therapies to seek to “correct” peoples’ sexualitie­s.

But these “treatments” — or “tortures”, as many call the practices — did not work, of course, because there was no scientific or medical credence to them.

“I have been gay for as long as I can remember,” Bellingham said. “I never thought of it as something I needed to hide.”

The 1970s was a very different time however, and when Bellingham was a trainee nurse at Burwood Hospital in Christchur­ch in 1970, aged 18, she was picked on for her sexuality.

The torments led to concerns about her mental health and she was soon admitted to Princess Margaret Hospital’s psychiatri­c ward.

Over the next 12 years she was in and out of hospital and received ECT more than 200 times, along with intense questionin­g about her sexuality.

“They would give me muscle relaxant to paralyse me. It felt like razor blades going through my body.”

Despite her horrific treatment, Bellingham retained her identity, and went on to have “wonderful relationsh­ips”.

She has been with her partner, Marg, for 25 years.

“Fortunatel­y it never took away my sense of identity, but it did take away my profession, my memory, and I had very low self-esteem for a long time.

“But I have been quite lucky with my relationsh­ips. Not everybody has been able to have that.”

Bellingham supported a ban, but also wanted to see a formal inquiry to truly realise the extent of conversion therapy in Aotearoa to recognise the harm done.

“There has been so much injustice and harm done and I think to move forward those responsibl­e need to front up to the damage they have caused.”

The Canterbury District Health Board declined to comment on the practices at PMH or Bellingham’s treatment.

JIM MARJORAM, who has both been subjected to gay conversion therapy and been a practition­er himself, said the history of the practice in New Zealand was not widely known.

Growing up in Sydney in the 1960s and 1970s, he knew he was gay when he hit puberty but being part of a conservati­ve Christian community he felt he could not be his true self.

“I was constantly told things like it was the devil inside me, and that I could ‘pray the gay away’.”

In the 1990s, with his second wife, who had come from lesbian relationsh­ips, he became involved with the Living Waters organisati­on, working to try to convert others.

They moved to New Zealand in 2001 and ran group sessions with people mostly from the LGBTQIA+ community.

“The whole premise is that you are broken, that you need to be realigned and if you trust God enough, then eventually you will change.

“But basically, it does not work, and just leaves people traumatise­d. Suicide is rampant.”

After his second wife died of cancer in 2011, Marjoram had a breakdown and left the church, starting the support group Silent Gays for religious abuse survivors.

Marjoram says as social awareness about the conversion therapy has grown, many practices have gone undergroun­d and he feared, despite a ban, they might continue .

Josiah Pasikale, 30, said this kind of semi-secret counsellin­g was what he went through in 2013. The service was not formally part of his church, but had been recommende­d to him.

“I was looking for something to try to fix me.”

Counsellin­g consisted of resolving childhood trauma, and trying to rewire his brain, he said.

The reason why little was known about the practice and how many people experience­d it, was that people who went through it wanted it to work, he said.

“I had dreams of having a wife, the only pressure was not feeling accepted as a gay person. I didn’t think being gay was an option.”

But instead of changing him, Pasikale said the therapy had the opposite effect.

“It made me realise I am definitely gay. I was doing it for six months and I was like, ‘I am so gay right now’.”

Recently, he was even a finalist in Mr Gay New Zealand.

Despite the experience Pasikale, who is based in Wellington, retained his faith.

“I think faith is personal, and my relationsh­ip with God is my own.”

He supports the proposed ban but says the true change needs to come from within church communitie­s, and parents being more accepting.

“I think the power will also be with parents, allowing their children to grow up without thinking they need to be fixed.”

Few practices today advertise gay conversion therapy, but Nelsonbase­d David Riddell from the Living Wisdom School of Counsellin­g has voiced his opposition to any ban on the practice.

The Weekend Herald was unable to reach Riddell, but he recently told Nelson Weekly that, as a Christian, he would rather go to prison than stop the practice, stating the ban is a “vital issue to every counsellor of integrity and every counsellor who claims Christiani­ty”.

“It will make criminals of us all.”

RECENTLY RETIRED clinical psychologi­st and sex therapist Robyn Salisbury said when she started her work in the early 1990s, one of her superiors was a keen practition­er of so-called gay conversion therapy.

“Even though I was inexperien­ced, intuitivel­y I knew it was wrong. There is no evidence behind it, and is just ignorant people thinking they know what is better, often with a religious motivation.”

The practice was more widespread then than now, but Salisbury had treated people who been through it.

“At the very least there is shaming, and, for many, severe trauma.”

From her expert opinion, Salisbury said the practice was “an outrage” with no scientific backing.

“People don’t choose their sexuality but become aware of it, discover it. It is not something you change.”

Although churches were often where the practices occurred today, Salisbury said it was likely the parents of young people who were pressuring them to get therapy in the first place.

“I’ve often had parents ask if I can work with their son or daughter, saying they suspect they are gay. I say instead that I can work with [the parents], to accept their son or daughter’s sexuality.”

She agreed with the ban, but said it needed to be accompanie­d by a strong education campaign.

‘To see all forms of this banned would just mean the world to me.’ Joan Bellingham

IN BANNING conversion therapy, New Zealand joins a growing group around the world, including several Australian states.

Queensland was the first to bring in a ban in August, followed by the Australian Capital Territory. But the widest-reaching is that going through Parliament in Victoria.

Shaneel Lal, Youth MP for Manurewa and co-founder of End Conversion Therapy in New Zealand, said the “broad-ranging” Victoria bill was the blueprint to follow.

“It is the best so far. Conversion therapy there will be banned for all people of all ages and for religious practition­ers.”

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 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Joan Bellingham, who underwent gay conversion therapy in the 1970s.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Joan Bellingham, who underwent gay conversion therapy in the 1970s.

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