Queerness. Spirituality. I’d been trying to live out both of those things, and I’d been told it was impossible. Then I invented a word that showed me just how seamlessly queerness & spirituality could fit together.
Trained as a journalist, it seemed natural for me to interview other people about this topic I once found perplexing. And so I traveled to 17 cities listening to as many people as I could: How do you live in this ‘impossible’ intersection?
Those interviews left me with more questions than answers, because they covered the range and depth of spiritual experience: from transformative moments of prayer and presence, to psychological devastation. My training in journalism never taught me to carry stories like that.
My questions led me to Harvard Divinity School and into chaplaincy, the role of being present to humans and their stories — the stories of the past, and the stories that are unfolding now. I am now a board certified chaplain, and I have worked with cancer patients, in palliative care, and with LGBTQ older adults and teens. As far as I know, I am the first person in the U.S. to complete a chaplaincy residency focused on LGBTQ spiritual care.
I work now in a range of roles where I combine curiosity, spiritual care, and attention to marginalization and suffering:
I provide spiritual care as a chaplain.
I facilitate group conversations and discernment.
I teach and present.
I research spiritual care.
I write about the intersections of queerness, spirituality, trauma, and survival.
I also preach regularly at own Episcopal church and elsewhere, and am preparing to be ordained as an Episcopal priest.
I envision a world nourished by the spiritual genius of LGBTQ+ people: Our wisdom is transformative.
Does this work resonate with you, too? I look to support and partner around:
spiritual support of LGBTQ+ people
scholarship on queer and trans religious lives
true repentance by religious communities
and stories that accurately portray the depth of queer religious experience.