Muttly
Diamond Member
@EveHarrington I think you are conflating therapy that deals with sexual orientation and conversion/"reparative" therapy. Nothing prohibits someone from going to a therapist and talking about their sexuality and how they want to live their lives.
I don't know where you are getting that any therapy that helps someone "embrace their straight side" is banned in New York. I have read what's going on in New York.The key word in the New York bill is "change". Conversion therapy is not about exploring or understanding sexuality it is about *changing* a person's sexuality. No, his isn't about someone who was being molested as a child sorting out their sexuality. I mean, that's a lot of what my therapist is doing, but she's not starting from the working premise that homosexuality is wrong... or that it is right. That's good therapy. That's not what happens in conversion therapy. In conversion therapy, there's only one acceptable outcome.
As far as the Rabbi goes, think you are actually referring to Dr Schwartz who is a Jewish therapist, not rabbi? He is a conversion therapist siting his fears. You don't have a huge crowd of therapists in New York and other states talking about their fears that they won't even be able to talk about the possibility they are heterosexual because it's a non-issue if you aren't practicing conversion therapy. What you describe as happening right now, is a fear tactic that some in support of conversion therapy, are espousing. It's not the reality.
I don't know where you are getting that any therapy that helps someone "embrace their straight side" is banned in New York. I have read what's going on in New York.The key word in the New York bill is "change". Conversion therapy is not about exploring or understanding sexuality it is about *changing* a person's sexuality. No, his isn't about someone who was being molested as a child sorting out their sexuality. I mean, that's a lot of what my therapist is doing, but she's not starting from the working premise that homosexuality is wrong... or that it is right. That's good therapy. That's not what happens in conversion therapy. In conversion therapy, there's only one acceptable outcome.
As far as the Rabbi goes, think you are actually referring to Dr Schwartz who is a Jewish therapist, not rabbi? He is a conversion therapist siting his fears. You don't have a huge crowd of therapists in New York and other states talking about their fears that they won't even be able to talk about the possibility they are heterosexual because it's a non-issue if you aren't practicing conversion therapy. What you describe as happening right now, is a fear tactic that some in support of conversion therapy, are espousing. It's not the reality.