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Abandoned by Faith

LAURA ROSE CARDONA

My piece focuses on the insecurities that lie within the state of change, especially when such shifts polarize oneself. In this piece, I discuss my battle between Christianity and homosexuality.

“I love you. God bless you. Good night.” A quick kiss on the cheek, adjusting my blanket so that I was properly tucked in, before she smiled, turning away and exiting the room. This simple sentence of eight words has always been the staple of my mother’s bedtime departure. It was as if she was so afraid that I would somehow slip away so deeply into a slumber that, for whatever reason, I would never awake again, and this blessing was the only way to guard against such a tragedy. I could not recall a single night in my life that this blessing was absent from our goodnights to each other. Even in the swells of our most stormy arguments, we would always manage to momentarily hold our anger beneath the rippled waters long enough to gaze upon each other and whisper the final words of the evening:

“I love you. God bless you. Good night.”

Always, without fail, until one day, the angers suffocating within the waters beneath us rose above my mother, choking her with such fury that she was, for the first time, unable to deliver her faithful blessing, and I was alone, unprotected in the night.

Although I wasn’t entirely alone. There was a man, or at least the image of a man—as the scripture goes—who had, for my entire life, followed me, shadowing my every move. This figure was God. Our relationship was like that of a boat in rugged waters. Sometimes, like when I was just a little girl, I was sure he was there behind me, serving as my protector and guide. However, as I began to mature in my teenage years, my faith wavered.

I recall laying on my bed when I was only twelve years old, my body curled into a C-shape as I held my pillow near my chest. I was in bed later than I should have been, all because I had just wrapped up a near six-hour conversation with a friend at my middle school. Even though we were no longer on the phone together, I wondered why her voice still echoed through my mind, preventing me from sleep.

I began reminiscing about all the moments we had shared up to this point. The first time I spoke to her was when she dropped her sharpener on the ground and I, feeling compelled to help her, crawled on all fours across the classroom tiles to retrieve it for her. She would message me during class, despite the fact that she sat only a few rows away from me, and I would respond without hesitation or thought. Once I plucked a flower from its stem in the botanical hall of the Bronx Zoo to present to her as a makeshift present, only to flee the zoo in screams as a bee I disturbed vowed revenge on me. I remembered all this and more, and it played in my mind like a projector, almost mockingly, laminating my many failed attempts to capture her attention. My affection poured like a pipe that had been busted and was spewing water, except this pipe was more like an artery streamlining from my heart, and the liquid was nothing but love, and that’s when I realized: I was in love with her.

Such a simple thought sent my mind awry. How could I love someone of the same sex? How could God let this happen to me? At the very least, Eve had the choice of choosing the apple, but here I was, performing for an operating theater, strapped to a medical table, the apple of lust gagged in my mouth, while the devil grinned above me, wasting no time in bringing his surgical knife down, extracting God from my heart and my heart from my God.

The hole carved within me by Satan burned with passion. I set out to fill the void with love—or was it lust? What did I care at this point? Like a bride on her wedding day, the scriptures abandoned me, left me in solitude at the altar with nothing but the vows of the Bible to accompany me, except now the parchment was just a painful reminder of what we could have been together. So I averted my attention to the bridesmaid. Every girl that encircled me was a target that I could thrust my naïveté upon, desperately trying to claw some sense of my sexuality out from the fog of rejection and denial. Yet no matter how much I thirsted for attention, the hole within me did not sprout with life. It seemed the rains of sorrow made no good fertilizer, and the flames of desire did little to quell its cold. So I sat at that altar, wondering where was my groom, wondering why my parents didn’t walk me down this aisle of pity, but most of all, wondering why my mother no longer uttered:

“I love you. God bless you. Goodnight.”

Rise Speak Change

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