Is It Ok To Tell Someone You Find Them Attractive?

I used to think it was ok to tell people that they are attractive, especially whenever I’d hear someone putting themselves down with negative comments about how they look. But, with a relatively recent incident where the result of me doing just that ended adversely and followed in the line of a few others that ended in similar ways here in the Toledo vicinity in previous years, I have questioned whether it’s ok to keep doing this.

First though, let me explain something. In a world where image is unfortunately everything nowadays, it doesn’t take long to come across someone who has been shunned in society for not looking the way society thinks they should look. I have witnessed many outright judge those who they think are too heavy or too skinny or too nerdy or “too something” that doesn’t quite fit in to some stereotypical societal norm. It’s almost as if the world keeps painting this perfect image of what someone needs to look like and if they don’t look that way, they tend to get overlooked. That’s why I have frequently let people know throughout my entire adult life that I find them attractive whenever I hear they’ve been put down or I hear them putting themselves down, because I truly believe everyone is beautiful. Sadly though, here in the Midwest, the results of me doing that haven’t been all that positive like they were when I lived on the East coast.

You see, here in the Midwest, people seem to be far more reserved, or at least the majority of those I’ve come across thus far. Conservative may be a better word. Regardless, along comes me, an openly gay, passionate and intensely spiritual individual, to an area that on some level often has felt the opposite of my personality. And what I’ve seen because of that has led to results that are on the exact other side of the spectrum from what I’ve been used to for years.

Case in point, I was out to dinner several months ago with a heterosexual individual from my addiction recovery circles who I had only recently been getting to know. During our meal, he was talking about his girlfriend and how amazing she was, how beautiful she looked, and how he didn’t even know what she saw in him. He proceeded to jokingly put himself down a little, calling himself a few of those labels I’m sure others have unfairly judged of him sometime in his past, and I stepped in. I told him I thought he was attractive and that he looked a lot like my own partner. Regrettably, I didn’t hear from him much after that and eventually got unfriended and blocked by him on Facebook. When I finally caught up with him to have a conversation about it, he told me I had made him seriously uncomfortable with my compliment and that he thought I had been hitting on him. Ironically, I hadn’t been, and when I told him that I love my partner and have been monogamous for almost seven years, he still remained uncomfortable and our conversation ended.

Up until five years ago, I was living in much more liberal areas, where complimenting someone like this would have been regularly received with a thank you, even from heterosexual individuals, both male and female. But here in the Midwest, my intentions continue to be misjudged. Yet, looking in the mirror I have to be honest with myself and know that I do still carry some addiction energy within me, where in the past I might have complimented someone in a self-seeking way, to gain something from them. These days though, that’s not the case, as my primary intention really is to uplift someone, but someone may still be feeling that energy within me. Nevertheless, I don’t want people to think I’m hitting on them nor make anyone feel uncomfortable just by saying I think they are attractive. Maybe it’s best I don’t do this behavior anymore? I’m saddened at the thought, as this world has far too many people who feel ugly by societal standards. But in God’s eyes, I truly believe we are all attractive and should be told so regularly, especially in light of how many times people get shunned over the way they look these days.

I wonder if Jesus were alive today, what He’d say to someone who was putting themselves down over the way they look? Would He let them they were attractive? Would He tell them they looked beautiful just the way they are? And would He be judged if He did? I wish I had the answers to those questions.

I’m left wondering if people judge my intentions here because I’m not conservative, because I’m gay, and because I’m so open on every aspect of my life? I’m left wondering if I should keep doing a behavior I never thought was wrong, or stop it altogether. For now, I think the best thing I can do is leave it up to God to provide me greater discernment and I pray I receive that the next time I’m with someone who finds themselves unattractive…

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Grateful Heart Monday

Welcome to another chapter of Grateful Heart Monday, a day where I reflect on a piece of gratitude that I’m truly thankful for, which for today is for finding Angel’s Landing Spiritual Center here in Toledo, Ohio.

How I came to find Angel’s Landing Spiritual Center began with my therapist some time ago. After observing my long struggle here in Toledo in finding and connecting with those who actually have a desire to talk about God, Christ, spirituality, and everything in between, and who also DON’T use the Bible as an absolute, she suggested I don’t give up my search.

My problem was that I’ve faced so much opposition in my life with too many places of worship where my sexuality was negatively viewed as a sin. Add in the fact that my partner has felt for some time that all religion was poison and there wasn’t much of a push by either of us to find any type of spiritual home any time soon. In other words, I didn’t quite feel motivated to take any new action. Yet, thanks to the easy access of the internet on my mobile phone and the ease of Google, I decided one evening out of boredom to search one last time for a spiritual place of worship here in Toledo.

For the life of me, I can’t remember the exact combination of words I searched for in that moment, but the first result that appeared is one I had never come across before, that being Angel’s Landing Spiritual Center. I’ve done many searches in the past here in Toledo, and never once did this place ever come back in any of them. Why it appeared this time around, I don’t know. Maybe I was never ready for it to become a part of my life or maybe my life wasn’t ready to become a part of them any time I had searched prior.

Nevertheless, what convinced me to check them out was what appeared in their mission statement on their website. It read as follows: Angel’s Landing is an independent Spiritual Center. Our journey together is based on the teachings of the “Master Teacher,” Jesus the Christ. We focus on lessons from Scripture as well as the wisdom of many other enlightened teachers who have graced us with their expressions of this Divine Love. There are no “religious” limitations of our exploration, discoveries or enlightened choices. We come together drawn by the Power of God expressing through, and as, each of us. That is why our community is called, “Angel’s Landing Spiritual Center!” For some reason, those words really connected with my Soul and I felt this push from within to stop in one Sunday. So, when I finally decided to go, thankfully, my partner opted to attend as well, a decision I didn’t take lightly.

We really didn’t know what to expect when we first walked through the door at the end of this business plaza on an exceptionally warm and sunny February Sunday morning. I was pleasantly surprised when we were cheerfully greeted as soon as we entered, by a woman with extremely bright and cheerful energy, someone who also told us how accepted and loved our relationship was by her, and someone who made sure to help us feel right at home. It didn’t take long for a number of others in attendance to demonstrate the same warm welcome as well.

I never once felt out of place during the hour-long service, which was definitely one I enjoyed immensely, mainly because it didn’t follow the usual Sunday morning worship format I had come to loathe over the years. You see, I’m not a fan of that all rise, all sit, read this, read that, sing this, sing that, listen to this, listen to that, and well you get my point. Thankfully this service felt very much different. And by the end of it, when all of us drew together in a circle of friendship and sang “Let There Be Peace On Earth” hand in hand, I felt something I haven’t felt in a long, long time, that being a spiritual family. Even better, we got to break bread with them afterward, as they always do a potluck each week once the service is over.

But, the biggest piece of gratitude I have for Angel’s Landing Spiritual Center actually deals with my partner. I have felt quite spiritually disconnected from him in the past year or two and often considered the part that was missing in our relationship was worshipping God together. When he opted to attend the service with me, I honestly figured he’d go and say afterward it wasn’t for him, yet the exact opposite happened. During it, he reached for my hand a number of times, something he’s normally not comfortable with and something I’ve been praying for a long time now. And when the service ended, it was he who said he definitely wanted to come back before I even had a chance to say the same.

So, I have a lot to be grateful for when it comes to Angel’s Landing Spiritual Center in Toledo, Ohio. After being unconditionally loved and embraced there, moved enough to start regularly attending, and feeling a long-standing prayer had finally been answered with my partner and I, I’m very thankful for finding this beautiful place to worship, as it’s now become a wonderful part of both my spiritual journey, as well as my partner’s.

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson