Quakers and Sexuality-John
Calvi,
Guilford College Conference Address February 22, 2002
Excerpts appeared in Friends Journal June 2004
I like the idea of having a conference on Quakers and sexuality. I think it’s very brave and a little bit dangerous. Of course, the only thing that Quakers talk about less than sex is money, but I won’t get into that.
Talking about sex in any
context, even a Quaker, one can be dangerous because we don’t all use the same
language. We have different experiences. Sex holds different
priorities in various people’s lives. So, I just want to be clear that I
am speaking only from my own experience. I am not speaking on behalf of
gay men even though I am a member of that circle. I’m not speaking on behalf of
first generation Italian-American immigrants even though I am in that circle.
Or Quakers who know how to yodel, I’m
just speaking from my own experience.
My own experience includes several different levels. One level is that I was raped and beaten as a young child so I understand sex as a power to hurt. I am also someone who has spent the last twenty years giving massage and energy work to people who are recovering from traumatic experience. From this I understand the power of touch, and sensuality, and intimacy to bring someone back to their fullness, to bring someone back to their joy of life after they perhaps thought they could never love life again.
I’m also speaking to you as someone who is 50 years old and came out during that glorious golden age of gay male sexuality after penicillin but before HIV. I want to tell you it was a good time to learn how to dance, to get out there and have some fun. During this time, gay male sexuality began to move from a place of being sick and illegal towards being something that could be wonderful. It could be a delight. You could meet new people. You could even meet a future spouse like I did at the gay swimming hole.
Another part of my experience, along with having a full dance card for several years, is that I am now 15 years happily monogamous, which is a very different experience. I am talking from all those different levels.
I recently spoke with a Quaker sex educator, of which there are very few. When I asked Peggy Brick of New Jersey, “Are you the only one?”, she said, “Well, actually the Quakers have been very slow about sex education. Other churches have done a lot more than we have.” There were some Quakers who had done sex education a few decades ago but she said they were mostly dead.
I’ve pretty much come to the conclusion that it’s nearly impossible for Quakers to have sex. I’m sorry to inform you of this but it’s nearly impossible for a couple of different reasons.
One obstacle is the tradition of simplicity. There is a desire among Friends, a testimony, a witness, to keep life simple. Anyone who is going fall in love or try to get laid is going to mess up their simplicity. We are talking major trouble here. Are they going to call back? How does my hair look? And that’s just the beginning. Wait until you’re in the seventh year of a marriage and you realize you’re still at the beginning! If you really want simplicity, if you’re really devoted to that as a witness, I would recommend that you never have sex with anyone and that you never fall in love. It can’t be done simply. It feels too wonderful. It feels too deeply.
There’s another obstacle. This is, essentially, that Quakers don’t like power. Quakers would prefer that no one have a lot power. We would like to divvy it up so everyone had just a little bit and no one would have a great deal of it. If you are looking to retire from the entire concept of power, sex is just not going to work because it’s such a powerful force. It is such a large thing. It’s such a wonderful power.
I had a friend named Mary. When she was almost seventy years old, she was tired and had arthritis and it was changing her body and she was hurting all the time. Well, Mary fell in love with a fellow who was about twenty-two. They went into her bedroom, locked that door, and didn’t come out until about three weeks later. Her arthritis was almost gone. She said, “ I wish my doctors had explained this to me years ago.” She was standing upright. She was smiling. The power of true love, the power of sexual attraction is huge. If power scares you, then there is going to be some difficulty. One of the lovely things about sexuality is to discover that power within yourself, to feel how lush it is, to feel how beautiful it is in someone else, and to join those things together. It’s wonderful.
There’s another problem with Quakers having sex. It is that there’s a very strong unspoken tradition among Quakers: you’re not suppose to bring attention to yourself. Think about that time that you had a while ago – or maybe that you are looking forward to having, – that time when you have been with that person who just melts your butter, this person who you look at and you think, “Ooh-la-la!” How wonderful. How very wonderful. And you start to feel that wonderful tingling feeling and you say, slowly with a deep voice and heavy breath, “Darling, I just love what you’re wearing tonight and I just want to tell you I love you so much and I thank God we’re together and I’m just wondering if you could come over here and be by me for a while.” Now if you don’t want to call any attention to yourself, you have got to take that whole feeling and set it aside. It’s going to sound something like a mid-western insurance salesman cause you’re going to say something in a high whiny voice like, “Honey, would you mind if… Oh no, no, it’s not that important.” With sexuality you want to love that power. You want to feel it. You want to know it in yourself. You want to find a way to work with it, live with it, and love it. That’s very important.
Think what it would be like if we Quakers were more honest about our sexual lives. Think about some of our lovely elders after meeting on Sunday morning, coming out on the porch and saying, “Oh, thank God. Last night I got laid, relayed, inlayed, and parlayed! My whole body feels better. Thank God for giving me these feelings. I love my life more now. I like being in the world more. I can spend more time now with the pain of the world because I have felt its beauty deeply. Thank God! I can come home to my body and feel this wonderful inclusion.” Isn’t that wonderful? But, if you can’t call attention to yourself, that’s going to be a problem.
There are some wonderful parallels between a spiritual life and a sexual life. These are not always lives that we connect. We live in a very noisy world which in many ways is contrary to a deep spiritual life, working against a deep spiritual life, especially in U.S. culture. Popular culture is loud and tells everyone to go out and buy everything all the time.
In some ways, a sexual life is the same. There’s such a noise in popular culture about what sexuality should be or could be, being used to buy and sell things and people. In some ways we don’t touch the deeper parts of either of these unless we actually seek them out, wonder about them consciously, and try to learn about them within our own lives. If you look at the external details of someone’s sexual life or spiritual life, we all look very different. It’s an incredible mosaic. But then if you look at the essential details on the inside, the needs of each of us, the longing that each person has, these essences on the inside are remarkably similar, person to person, and from sexuality into spirituality.
Another way there is a similarity between sexuality and spirituality is that it’s sort of a big, blind date that everyone goes out on because we have this hunger within us. There’s a desire and a hunger for grace, to feel that aspect of the divine within ourselves, to feel some familiarity with a power greater than us. There is also that yearning for romance and for touch, just the right touch for us. It is extremely individual and unique.
I was talking with a young, gay friend in Mexico. He had just gone out on a date and was wondering if it was true love or whether it was passionate fun. In describing it, he became sad. After talking about it for a while, he realized it really wasn’t the sadness of what had happened on this date. It was the sadness that can come because there is this great longing to stop looking. We all have this great longing that there is going to be true love, someone who we’re not going to have to do a lot of translating with because they know all about us. This great longing within each of us is both in the realm of the divine and in the realm of sex.
There’s another parallel. This is hard to talk about because it’s a concept that a lot of people are beat up with. It’s the idea of sin. I’m thinking of sin as the things that take us away from the Divine, things that take us away from knowing spiritual life more deeply. Parallel within sexuality, I’m not sure this is the right word — but it’s a word that can be used- and that is whoring. Here’s what I mean by that. I don’t mean prostitution. I mean sex that takes you away from honoring yourself, sex that takes you away from feeling deeply, from beautiful intimacy, sex that takes you away from personal power. The interesting thing about the whoring of sex and the sin in spiritual life, is that there is no part-time work. If you are signing up for one of those two activities, it’s full-time and it will take you away from your best self. All of those concepts have to be understood individually because they are all going to mean different things in each of our lives for each of our experiences. There isn’t going to be someone to tell you the right way for you to do life with God and life with sex. It is such intimate seeking that it has to be done with individually, finding the right language and trying to tell one another what we’ve seen and felt along the way.
I think the most important similarity between both these realms is the concept of surrender. I don’t mean giving up. We have aspects of ourselves that long for something larger and greater than ourselves. If you learn how to surrender in one realm, you can transfer that wisdom into other realms. If you know about surrendering to true love, then there’s the possibility that you can use that learning for surrender to deeper spiritual experience. If you have done the surrender to deeper spiritual experience, you can use that learning for surrendering to true love. This is never an easy surrender because life hurts so much. Sometimes true love comes along- if it does come along, and it sometimes seems we have been waiting a long time, too long, but when it does come along you have to ask yourself- “Can I unpack the bags? Take out all my disappointments, take all my anxiety, and set it aside and really join with this other person?”
This is true in terms of romantic love but it’s also true of sex that is just fun sex, (which is not necessarily romantic sex). There are lots of different kinds of surrender, lots of different ways of learning about this very important concept. When we learn surrender in one place, we can use it to surrender in another place.
I want to conclude with a description. The description is this- I take a very tender part of myself and relax it completely. I find that I am able to surrender to something larger than just me. There are many different and amazing feelings and lots of sensation. It becomes very exciting and is exhausting. There’s a conclusion and then I come back to just myself. I feel that withdrawal and it’s just me again. I try to feel and understand everything that’s happened. My query to you is: Am I describing surrender to the Holy Spirit in meeting for worship or am I describing a really hot date? It might be that they are remarkable similar.