DAVID RASMUSSEN

I joined a group of married men who also struggled with homosexuality, and we all encouraged each other and shared our stories. Today I’m happy and peaceful, a better husband and father.
— DAVID RASMUSSEN

Diane and I went to high school together and planned on getting married. I didn’t have same-sex attractions until college, but at college, I discovered pornography and homosexuality. I was acting out, going to parks, bookstores, restrooms, and bathhouses. I didn’t know anything about homosexuality. It wasn’t talked about, and it was a shameful thing. So I hid it. Diane suspected, and before we got married, I had to tell her I had an STD that I had gotten from a man. Miraculously, she still agreed to marry me. We cried and hugged, and the wedding went on. We both went into marriage thinking it would be a cure.

We learned quickly that marriage was not a cure. We were able to be intimate, but I started living a double life and continued acting out. I put on a facade that everything was fine, but inside I was a mess. I experienced a lot of guilt and shame, but I didn’t know I was a sex addict. I felt that what I was doing was wrong, but I didn’t know what to do about it. Eventually, I was committing adultery, which made things even worse.

At one of my lowest points, I was at a bathhouse, and an unattractive older man approached me. He asked me to have sex, offering to pay me $20. I refused, and he asked me to hug him for $20. I gave him a hug and told him to keep his money. But when I got home, I looked in the mirror, and I saw that old man. And I saw my future life: no wife, no children, all alone, having to pay for touch. I started to cry and got on my knees, desperate to change. Finally, I became desperate enough that I pursued change, and I started a relationship with God.

I started building healthy relationships with men for the first time in my life, and I learned a lot about being a man, husband, and father through them. I also shared about my struggle publicly at church, and everyone stood and applauded my courage. I also found out about a program that helps people with unwanted same-sex attractions, and they gave me books on the topic. Most importantly, I joined a group of married men who also struggled with homosexuality, and we all encouraged each other and shared our stories.

It is so nice not to be living the double life I did in my youth. I am authentic and let people see who I really am. I don’t have to carry the secrets and burdens anymore. 

Diane, my wife and best friend, passed away June 17th, 2023. I would not be where I am today without her encouragement and willingness to walk alongside me during the change journey I was on. Despite my mistakes and my struggle, Diane chose to stay with me through it all. She chose to forgive me. We went on the journey of healing together. 

Abram Goff