Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

STUDY: Religious Counseling Associated With Higher LGB Suicide Risk


Guest LizMarie

Recommended Posts

Guest LizMarie

"Lesbian, gay, and bisexual people who sought mental health counseling from a religious or spiritual adviser were more likely to subsequently attempt suicide than those who sought no treatment at all, says a new study from the Williams Institute.

The study, released by the think tank today, found that LGB people who received therapy from a medical or mental health professional were no less likely to attempt suicide than those who did not seek help, but assistance from faith-based counselors was associated with higher suicide risk."

STUDY: Religious Counseling Associated With Higher LGB Suicide Risk

Two points from this:

  • Professional therapy does not seem to reduce attempts to commit suicide.
  • Therapy from religious counselors increases attempts to commit suicide.

A rather unexpected conclusion?

Also, note that trans folk were not included in this study but this raises questions about therapy among trans individuals as well.

Full study download available here. (Membership required to download.)

Link to comment
Guest KimberlyF

I'm not paying for the study, but blacks are the highest group to seek help from a religious or spiritual advisor, and are also the most marginalized and among LGBT have regularly scored highest rate of attempted suicide vs. whites and latenos?

Link to comment
  • Admin

Kimberly has made my point on this. I also have no desire to purchase the article and the fact that it points toward the African American community is to me the key, rather than religion based counseling in and of itself. I have been to several activities over the past two years where the majority of the participants were African American, and the common theme has been the lack of counseling resources, and the quality and competency of the resources that are available.

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I'm not sure of the exact meaning of this research but it seemed that they were quite clear with this statement: “More troubling is the finding that individuals who sought religious or spiritual treatment had higher odds of later attempting suicide than those who did not seek treatment at all.”

They then noted that whites went to medical counselors and therapists while minorities went to religious counseling. There is no mention of whether this is for financial or other reasons. Too many loose ends but i'm disappointed that none of these approaches helped. Hopefully we can make a difference here as we share so much experience with each other.

Hugs,

Charlize

Link to comment
  • Admin

I think it would be extremely important to know the reasons why the study results came out the way they did. What other variables were there? How many were studied? Without more details, I am loath to draw any conclusions. Like everyone else here, I'm not paying to read it.

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
Guest Sarah Faith

Yeah I'm not gonna pay to read this study either, beyond that studies are released all the time, and often contradicting studies. Meaning people tend to cherry pick which ever study validates their own views. So really for me to take anything in this study serious I'd need to see the methods used to reach their conclusions and a full detailing of conclusions... Also I would say one should avoid taking any study too seriously until it has gone through some serious peer review.

Link to comment
Guest Jennifer T

When I first started dealing with all this mess back around 2000, my first counselors were faith based. and they actually did a good bit to help me understand and come to terms with some things from my childhood. When I finally let it all out (admitted my desire to be a woman) the counselor was phenomenal with regards to how she believed God saw all this and she referred me to the counselor that I deal with now.

Regarding the study, I'm skeptical. But not dismissive. I think too many things (as others have stated) are left unsaid here.

Peace.

Link to comment
Guest Motormouth18

I'm not paying to see the study, either. I don't how having a legitimate therapist doesn't help decrease the percentage of suicides. Having one person who's there for you, almost always helps. I can see where religious therapists might make a person feel worse like what they're doing is sinful or an abomination to God.

Link to comment
Guest Fiona

"Lesbian, gay, and bisexual people who sought mental health counseling from a religious or spiritual adviser were more likely to subsequently attempt suicide than those who sought no treatment at all, says a new study from the Williams Institute.

Frankly, that's of no surprise to me. I don't want to offend religious people here, but many religious 'advisers', I believe, will try to point them in a particular direction rather than attempting to help them figure out who they are and to go with that. Not to mention, how much actual training does a religious 'adviser' get in the way of counseling? Let alone something as specialized as this issue?

Reminds me of Catholics that must go through marriage counseling with a priest prior to getting married. A man, who has NEVER been married is going to tell me about marriage? Really? Hardly.........

Link to comment
Guest KimberlyF

"Lesbian, gay, and bisexual people who sought mental health counseling from a religious or spiritual adviser were more likely to subsequently attempt suicide than those who sought no treatment at all, says a new study from the Williams Institute.

Frankly, that's of no surprise to me. I don't want to offend religious people here, but many religious 'advisers', I believe, will try to point them in a particular direction rather than attempting to help them figure out who they are and to go with that. Not to mention, how much actual training does a religious 'adviser' get in the way of counseling? Let alone something as specialized as this issue?

Reminds me of Catholics that must go through marriage counseling with a priest prior to getting married. A man, who has NEVER been married is going to tell me about marriage? Really? Hardly.........

I'm Catholic, and attended pre-Cana lead by a married couple. Many times, it is lead by a priest or deacon(many of which are married) with assistance of a married Catholic couple.

As far as qualifications, that would prob be different from state to state. In some, anyone can open a storefront and call themselves a therapist. In others there are rigid standards. Can't tell from this study if it was religious-based therapy, or a chit chat with the local minister. Again, not paying.

It's great how the article focuses on one part of the study, when the bigger issue to me is why one of the recommended/recognized treatments for gender dysphoria isn't making an improvement?

Link to comment
Guest Fiona

"Lesbian, gay, and bisexual people who sought mental health counseling from a religious or spiritual adviser were more likely to subsequently attempt suicide than those who sought no treatment at all, says a new study from the Williams Institute.

Frankly, that's of no surprise to me. I don't want to offend religious people here, but many religious 'advisers', I believe, will try to point them in a particular direction rather than attempting to help them figure out who they are and to go with that. Not to mention, how much actual training does a religious 'adviser' get in the way of counseling? Let alone something as specialized as this issue?

Reminds me of Catholics that must go through marriage counseling with a priest prior to getting married. A man, who has NEVER been married is going to tell me about marriage? Really? Hardly.........

I'm Catholic, and attended pre-Cana lead by a married couple. Many times, it is lead by a priest or deacon(many of which are married) with assistance of a married Catholic couple.

As far as qualifications, that would prob be different from state to state. In some, anyone can open a storefront and call themselves a therapist. In others there are rigid standards. Can't tell from this study if it was religious-based therapy, or a chit chat with the local minister. Again, not paying.

It's great how the article focuses on one part of the study, when the bigger issue to me is why one of the recommended/recognized treatments for gender dysphoria isn't making an improvement?

Catholic priests cannot marry. That being said, I think that searching for answers to issues like this should be from within, with a certified TG counselor; not a religious 'adviser'.

Link to comment
Guest Jenni_S

I'm Catholic, and attended pre-Cana lead by a married couple. Many times, it is lead by a priest or deacon(many of which are married) with assistance of a married Catholic couple.

Catholic priests cannot marry. That being said, I think that searching for answers to issues like this should be from within, with a certified TG counselor; not a religious 'adviser'.

Which is why, as she said, married couples and deacons are involved. I'm also Catholic, and was not required to attend pre-Cana. It was recommended, but we were able to say no. That being said, there's also no such thing as a "certified TG counselor;" one can specialize in treating trans patients, but there is no certification. The best indication I've seen is "member, WPATH."

The best thing one can do is make use of all resources they have available, and learn from them where there are more resources, and keep going with that, while taking advantage of those resources. In my own example, I first brought up transition with my original counselor, who I'd seen for years prior, a LICSW at St. John's. He suggested I check out the clinic at the University of Minnesota, which had a wealth of resources of their own, and connections to many more. Seven years later, I've seen and done a lot of things that go back to that clinic, and I still see that original counselor from time to time, the one that first pointed me in the right direction, to check in and keep me grounded. Make use of everything you can, medical, professional, spiritual if so inclined, peers, groups, and so on. Just sticking with one part of the tree denies yourself a lot of the whole. I think putting it all together makes for a whole greater than the sum of its parts.

Link to comment
Guest KimberlyF

Which is why, as she said, married couples and deacons are involved. I'm also Catholic, and was not required to attend pre-Cana. It was recommended, but we were able to say no. That being said, there's also no such thing as a "certified TG counselor;" one can specialize in treating trans patients, but there is no certification. The best indication I've seen is "member, WPATH."

Yep. There are many social workers who call themselves Gender Therapists, with no specialized training in the field, while many of the PsyDs who helped write WPATH don't list themselves as GTs.
Link to comment
Guest Fiona

I guess the bottom line that is in my mind is that typical 'religious advisers' (based on speaking my my religious friends, my wife and much reading) have an agenda. The religion is more important, which means you should bend to meet the rules. If you feel I'm wrong, then I apologize, and so be it.

Link to comment
Guest Jennifer T

Fiona, it is my experience that all 'groups', religious or not, have an 'agenda'. And honestly, so do most individuals. And whatever seems important to any group or individual will be what they stress. That's neither good nor bad, can be either good or bad and simply just is the way things are. We take what is useful to us and move forward.

Peace.

Link to comment
Guest Fiona

Fiona, it is my experience that all 'groups', religious or not, have an 'agenda'. And honestly, so do most individuals. And whatever seems important to any group or individual will be what they stress. That's neither good nor bad, can be either good or bad and simply just is the way things are. We take what is useful to us and move forward.

Peace.

I hear ya. But an actual therapist is less than likely to have an agenda. If a therapist tries to turn you rather than help you, then move on to a new therapist. In reality, I don't need their opinion, I need their help. Help me understand ME! I've dealt with therapists because of my daughter's and found that many have the idea that meds will help everything, which is BS.

While I hear you, much like doctors, mechanics and so many other 'caregivers', find one that will help you understand yourself, not try to CHANGE you! I am what I am. I'm 47 years old and it's not going to change. I know that I have overwhelming feminine feelings. Trying to convince me that I'm wrong and should work on being a male, is not helping, it's brainwashing. And in 99% of cases, that BS will NOT work. I am what I am.

Perhaps this is one of the reasons that I simply don't trust people. To hell with their agenda......

Link to comment
Guest KimberlyF

Fiona, it is my experience that all 'groups', religious or not, have an 'agenda'. And honestly, so do most individuals. And whatever seems important to any group or individual will be what they stress. That's neither good nor bad, can be either good or bad and simply just is the way things are. We take what is useful to us and move forward.

Peace.

Yep. There have been numerous reported cases of therapists who string patients along with the promise of soon they'll get the prescription or letters they need, as the patient continues month after month. At $X an hour. Money is a very powerful agenda for a whole lot of people.

And many who call themselves gender therapists are also the very ones who have suggested reparative therapies. Not every GT is pro-transition.

I always tried to find someone that I could connect with, open up with and feel positive about the experience at the end of the day. If not, personally, I'd find another.

Link to comment
Guest Jennifer T

Fiona, it is my experience that all 'groups', religious or not, have an 'agenda'. And honestly, so do most individuals. And whatever seems important to any group or individual will be what they stress. That's neither good nor bad, can be either good or bad and simply just is the way things are. We take what is useful to us and move forward.

Peace.

Yep. There have been numerous reported cases of therapists who string patients along with the promise of soon they'll get the prescription or letters they need, as the patient continues month after month. At $X an hour. Money is a very powerful agenda for a whole lot of people.

And many who call themselves gender therapists are also the very ones who have suggested reparative therapies. Not every GT is pro-transition.

I always tried to find someone that I could connect with, open up with and feel positive about the experience at the end of the day. If not, personally, I'd find another.

Well spoken Kim.

Link to comment
Guest Fiona

Ok.

My apologies if I've offended you. That response is kinda unresponsive.

Also, this site doesn't deal with multi-quotes very well. It seems to confuse and intermix them.

Link to comment
Guest Fiona

Fiona, it is my experience that all 'groups', religious or not, have an 'agenda'. And honestly, so do most individuals. And whatever seems important to any group or individual will be what they stress. That's neither good nor bad, can be either good or bad and simply just is the way things are. We take what is useful to us and move forward.

Peace.

Yep. There have been numerous reported cases of therapists who string patients along with the promise of soon they'll get the prescription or letters they need, as the patient continues month after month. At $X an hour. Money is a very powerful agenda for a whole lot of people.

And many who call themselves gender therapists are also the very ones who have suggested reparative therapies. Not every GT is pro-transition.

I always tried to find someone that I could connect with, open up with and feel positive about the experience at the end of the day. If not, personally, I'd find another.

Yeah, I get that. But there is also the 'god' complex where they think they can 'fix' you. They may think I'm broken, and perhaps, maybe I am. But I don't care to be fixed. I love my 'broken' self. In reality, I LOVE my feminine side. I love the fact that I have these feelings because a large part of me wants to be female, and it's no one else's right/business to try to 'correct' that. I would just ask that they try to help me understand and come to terms. After 47 years, I think I'm ok with it. But I may still seek counseling....

A therapist that hasn't gone through any of this truly doesn't know what we're going through. So a large part of me distrusts them because if they haven't gone through this, how could they possibly know?

Everyone, I'm not trying to be argumentative, I guess it's just in my nature to distrust people. :(

Link to comment
Guest Jennifer T

Fiona, if you love yourself and are happy with who you are, none of this would really apply to you anyway, right? You've achieved what many seek counseling for. I'd love to know what it's like to love myself.

Link to comment
Guest Fiona

Fiona, if you love yourself and are happy with who you are, none of this would really apply to you anyway, right? You've achieved what many seek counseling for. I'd love to know what it's like to love myself.

At this point, I just don't know anymore. :(

Link to comment
Guest ashleynikole

I'd love to know what it's like to love myself.

Jennifer, I didn't realize I didn't love myself until I truly started to love myself. Granted that only came for me after wrestling with God for months on the issue. I mean, we had a knock down, drag out. I felt like Jacob wrestling with God for answers. Answers as to why there was so much pain in my life, answers as to why I had followed Jesus for 20 years and never got the healing I so desperately wanted. Answers as to why others got to have healing and I couldn't because I believed to want to live the life of the girl inside of me, the way my spirit longed to be, was wrong and not made for me, after all if God wanted me to be female, He would've made me female.

When I got to the end of my struggle, the bottom of my barrel, and had my all out with God, only after asking, did He tell me why He created me like this. At that point, I decided that I was going to trust what He said was true, then seek His face in His Word to see if it rang true.

I started asking myself on every decision if I liked this or was just doing it because I always had or someone else told me so or whatever. I started learning more about who I was, not the physical me, but the emotional and spiritual me, the me deep down inside. I started analyzing every thought, holding it captive and saying, "Is this me or not?" If I didn't think something was me or I didn't like it or it just didn't gel with me, I ditched it. If I loved it, it stayed and if I liked it, it stayed. This process over the last 11 months has freed me to understand myself and ultimately love myself.

I'm scared of my pending divorce. I'm scared of my loneliness. I'm scared of being a single parent of 5 every other week. I'm scared of dating again. I'm scared of a whole lot of things, but I'm very excited to learn more about me, and then show the world who that me really is, who the me that God created to be really is.

You'll find that love and I believe it starts with acceptance of whatever God tells you about yourself, no matter how weird and no matter how foreign.

God bless

Ashley

Link to comment
Guest Jennifer T

I'm glad you've found that, Ashley. :-)

I wish you peace this day and God's hand on your heart as you journey forward.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   6 Members, 0 Anonymous, 160 Guests (See full list)

    • Mirrabooka
    • Petra Jane
    • Maddee
    • KathyLauren
    • RaineOnYourParade
    • Adrianna Danielle
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,061
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Vivelacors
    Newest Member
    Vivelacors
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Aelia
      Aelia
      (22 years old)
    2. Just-Jenny-finally
      Just-Jenny-finally
      (65 years old)
    3. KelcieK
      KelcieK
      (50 years old)
    4. Krimson Kya
      Krimson Kya
      (35 years old)
    5. Robin
      Robin
      (56 years old)
  • Posts

    • RaineOnYourParade
      Green tea and a granola bar this morning (haven't eaten it yet tho)   6 mins into the school day and I wanna go home, I am not feeling it today lol
    • RaineOnYourParade
      Yeah, there's a lot of guys 5'8"+ over here ^^' Nice to know it wouldn't be an issue elsewhere tho   Hands are surprisingly gendered lol
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Been a good morning so far.Another ex GF and I did meet up last night.She has not see me since 1997.It was a little shock for her to see I changed at first.Good thing is she has accepted knowing I live a much happier life.Said she saw I was hurting inside.
    • MirandaB
      If I'm doing something where I interact with people for any length of time I usually do something with my eyes (mascara, brow fill-in and taming). Bigger events I'll do some makeup but always try to be as subtle as I can, plus I think my freckles make me seem younger to people. I know it's too much when my brain suddenly thinks "clown!"    
    • Heather Shay
    • Willow
      Good morning    wow, this is what 6 AM looks like not looking out the windows at work. Interesting week of start times 7,8,7,7,4.  ASM is off most of the week.     No coffee this morning, at least not until I get to work.  I’m going to see if no coffee makes a difference in how I feel today, I’ve head a headache for several days now, nothing has helped.  I do realize that stopping coffee cold turkey can bring on caffeine withdrawal headaches so I expect today to be no better.  But I’m hoping for tomorrow.  Today is just to see what if any affect it has on my throat.    time to fix my hair and walk the dog before I motor across the road.  Cherri o .   keep a stiff upper lip and all that stuff.  (Sorry, nothing the least bit funny coming to mind this morning, you’ll have to entertain yourself today}
    • Heather Shay
      What do you think is the biggest block to LGBTQ+ acceptance?
    • Heather Shay
      Nice Sunday, several new LGBTQ+ friends.
    • Heather Shay
      DON’T ADD JUDGEMENT TO YOUR FEELINGS by Olga Lacroix | Anxiety relief, Happiness, Mindfulness I’m sitting here drinking my favorite coffee, and as I enjoy this moment I cannot wait to share with you the thoughts that are in my head.  Recently, I have talked about how circumstances don’t determine your future. And somewhere along the line, I wanted to explore a little bit more about our thought process. How we discourage ourselves so often from our goals and from the things that we want, because we have beliefs that go against what we want. In this episode, I want to talk about how it’s important for us to learn not to judge our feelings. Aside from being a Life Coach, I’m also a Certified Mindfulness Instructor. And non-judgement is one of the learnings that I enjoy understanding, applying, and teaching. WHY BEING JUDGEMENTAL IS HARMFUL Sometimes it’s so difficult to be non-judgmental, especially if it’s coming from a bad experience or emotions. For example, a client of mine just had a pregnancy loss and a part of her coping mechanism is to hate or be indifferent to people who have babies.  It’s her way of processing the grief and protecting herself from anger and sadness. And recently someone close to her had a baby. She wanted to feel excited for that person but somehow her bad experience was holding her back. Like her, a lot of people cope this way. Some people try to hide their feelings and emotions just because they’ve already judged them as maybe improper or inappropriate emotions. And what happens is, those emotions stay inside them longer, they don’t get to process their emotions, and it becomes more painful. HOW NOT TO BE JUDGEMENTAL When we judge our feelings as bad, our natural response is to avoid it. We go through crazy lengths just to avoid the feeling, but by avoiding it we’re actually growing it. So what do we do? Do not judge the emotion, allow yourself to feel the negative emotions. Don’t mask it, instead embrace it.  DON’T IDENTIFY WITH YOUR EMOTIONS For someone like me who experienced Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD, a common side effect is anxiety. I have learned that the more I try to repel the anxious thoughts, the stronger they feel in my body, and the longer they stay. But when I’m courageous enough, and I say to the feeling, I’m not gonna judge you for existing, you’re just a feeling. I tell myself something neutral. There is anxiety, not I am anxious. Separate yourself from the feeling. The feeling is not you and it’s just temporary. FINDING THE BALANCE Now when the feeling is good and positive, we jump into attachment, wanting that feeling to linger longer and even forever. But according to Buddha, that’s when the suffering begins, when you want to make something last forever, and when you’re not ready to understand and accept the impermanence of emotions. Find the balance in your emotions. Learn to separate yourself from the emotion. Feel the emotions whether they’re good or bad, but don’t dwell in it. It’s an emotion that we need to feel, process, and eventually let go. Through this, we will achieve a healthier mind. STEPS TO FREE YOURSELF FROM JUDGEMENT The first step is awareness. Being aware of the emotion and how you have judged it. This step will allow you to think of the next step to free yourself from judgement. Step two is processing your emotion in neutrality. Go to a quiet place, close your eyes, and meditate. Bring all of your senses, all of your awareness to the feeling. Give it attention and wait for it to dissipate.  The last step is to pay attention to the lesson. Become curious and think about what this emotion is teaching you, what wisdom can you take from it. Be an observer of your emotions. You need to react, you need to fix them, change them, modify them, you just need to notice them. And then you need to open the space, let them be felt. These are moments of growth, these are moments of transformation. And most importantly, these are moments where we allow the emotion to be processed. Reset Your Mindset is opening in January of 2022. A program that helps you with making decisions, set clear boundaries without drama or guilt. Stop the hamster wheel that keeps you in overthinking mode, switching off the mean inner voice and switching on confidence and compassion instead. Reset your mindset and discover your true self. Click here to know more! Bonus: I’m also giving participants lifetime access to Detox The Mind online course. A course that emphasizes on helping you create new neurological connections so that you have a happier mind and healthier habits. See you inside!
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • Heather Shay
    • April Marie
      Welcome to the forums, Felix!! It sounds like you keep yourself very busy and have some wonderful musical talent. My wife enjoys playing the ukulele, too.   There are lots of veterans here - not sure if any were Marines, though.   The forum is filled with lots of information, links and amazing people. Jump in where you feel comfortable.
    • Roach
      I just want to mention, where I live there are tons of cis guys your height or shorter. Among them is my dad and one of my professors (who are well over 17 y/o lol), and I honestly don't think twice about it. Every time I go to the grocery store I see at least 4 different guys around that height too. I don't think your height will be an issue towards passing long-term. (Well, maybe it's different in your region, but just wanted to throw in my 2 cents.)   I can relate to the hands thing though. If I ever hold something in front of the camera to take a photo of it, I feel like I have to crop my hands out so they don't "out" me. (I admit that that's silly.)  
    • Roach
      I noticed something like this too once I socially transitioned. I am so accustomed to people referring to me as a guy and using the right name, that socially I feel fine most of the time. This just makes me more aware of how physically uncomfortable I get sometimes.
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...