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Q: I’m gay, is there anything different about paruresis for me to know
about?
A: We
have no evidence at this time that one’s sexuality indicates any need for
changes in treatment. The primary
thing to consider is cultural differences related to sex segregation in
restrooms, and how they affect one’s perceptions of urination and sexual
behavior among adults. The
healthiest way to view our culture’s desire to segregate restrooms by sex is
that urination and sexual activity are completely separate things, and that
whether one is straight or gay a restroom isn’t an appropriate place to be
thinking about sex. It’s a place
for elimination of body wastes. Unfortunately,
this ideal view becomes complicated because the genitals are used for two
purposes. Dr. Christopher
McCullough remarked that if humans were designed to pee from the index finger,
there would be no such confusion between sex and urination. Being stuck with genitals designed for two purposes, both straight and
gay people need to come to terms with how to deal with this reality.
For people with paruresis, the notion of imagining another
person’s sexuality in a restroom without knowing it for a fact is the same
kind of irrational thinking that leads to anxiety when we think others are
paying attention to sounds we make while urinating, or to how long it is taking.
These are all irrational thoughts where we attempt to read another
person’s mind (that’s impossible!) For
both gay and straight people, it isn’t healthy to be thinking about other
people’s views of us, their intentions, or judgments of us in a restroom. We are there to use the restroom, not our imaginations.
There is one specific difference for gay people to
consider, and that is at some gay clubs the restrooms blur the lines between
places for elimination and places for sex. Those situations are far beyond our culture’s unwritten rules for
restroom use. Anyone with paruresis
needs to concentrate on using restrooms where the normal cultural rules apply,
and to learn how to separate the body’s dual functions for the genitals. Once that is achieved, moving on to more challenging and
confusing situations is one’s own decision.
Gay people may need to deal with society’s mistaken
prejudices regarding sexual orientation and sexual abuse. Many erroneously believe that sexual predators, particularly pedophiles,
frequent restrooms and that those people are predominantly gay.
Being gay does not equate to being a sexual predator or
molester. Statistically there are
many more heterosexual predators and molesters in the world.[vii],
[viii]
Noted sexual abuse authority Dr. A. Nicholas Groth wrote:
The research to date all points to there being no
significant relationship between a homosexual lifestyle and child molestation.
There appears to be practically no reportage of sexual molestation of girls by
lesbian adults, and the adult male who sexually molests young boys is not likely
to be homosexual (Groth & Gary, 1982, p.
147).
A person should never bring sexual orientation into mind
when dealing with the idea of sexual abuse or molestation in restrooms.
They are two different and unrelated things.
Getting them straight will help in thinking more clearly about your
paruresis and its treatment.
[viii] Groth, A. N., &
Gary, T. S. “Heterosexuality, homosexuality, and pedophilia: Sexual
offenses against children and adult sexual orientation.” In A.M. Scacco
(Ed.), Male rape: A casebook of sexual aggressions (1982) pp.
143-152. New York: AMS Press.
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