By Kathy Cherry
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A personal blog by a graying (mostly Anglo with light African-American roots) gay left leaning liberal progressive married college-educated Buddhist Baha'i BBC/NPR-listening Professor Emeritus now following the Dharma in Minas Gerais, Brasil.
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This Day in Gay History
RICHARD C. FRIEDMAN was born on this date and was an academic psychiatrist, the Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College, and a faculty member at Columbia University. He was also a courageous ally of the gay community. He conducted research in the endocrinology and the psychodynamics of homosexuality, especially within the context of psychoanalysis. Friedman was born in The Bronx, New York.
In the 1960s when marriage and adopting children seemed an impossible dream for gay men, Dr. Friedman was our champion. His 1988 book, Male Homosexuality: A Contemporary Psychoanalytic Perspective showed that sexual orientation was largely biological and presented a case that helped undermine the belief held by most Freudian analysts at the time that homosexuality was a pathology that could be cured.
His wife, a clinical social worker at the Weill Medical College of Cornell commented, "Straight people had the same personality issues, and they got away with murder; but gay people were stigmatized, and he didn't think that was right."
His work was a direct challenge to popular Freudian theories and thrust him into the center of debates among the more established heavyweights of psychoanalysis. It led to a model in which analyst and patient simply assumed that homosexuality was intrinsic, said Jack Drescher, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University who knew Dr. Friedman and would later offer his own critiques of Dr. Friedman’s theory as new approaches to working with gay and lesbian patients emerged.
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Generosity
keeps faith with our appreciation of each other. It stems from a
natural empathy with everything that, like us, has the courage to take a
shape in the world.
John Tarrant, “The Erotic Life of Emptiness”
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE
The final awakening is the embracing of the darkness into the light. That means embracing our humanity as well as our divinity. What we go from is being born into our humanity, sleepwalking for a long time, until we awaken and start to taste our divinity. And then want to finally get free. We see as long as we grab at our divinity and push away our humanity we aren’t free. If you want to be free, you can’t push away anything. You have to embrace it all. It’s all God.
- Ram Dass -
When
we look into our own hearts and begin to discover what is confused and
what is brilliant, what is bitter and what is sweet, it isn’t just
ourselves that we’re discovering. We’re discovering the universe.
Pema Chödrön, “Where Is Buddha?”
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE
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With
each session of silence the fog lifts a bit more, until one day the ego
“I,” with its insistent look-at-me voice, drops away, revealing the
true self afloat in a vast blue sky.
Joan Duncan Oliver, “The Sound of Silence”
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE
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