728 x 90

Chapter 9: Sexual Orientations and Identity

Chapter 9: Sexual Orientations and Identity

The chapter situates sexual orientation within a broad, relational field, arguing that desire organizes relational life and self-formation while unfolding inside sociocultural norms. It distinguishes sexual identity, gender identity, and orientation; maps major orientations and nonbinary gender identifications; and shows how heteronormativity renders majority experience invisible while demanding self-definition from minorities. A historical overview traces the depathologization of homosexuality and critiques the persistence of “conversion” practices. The text reframes homophobia as a wider homonegativity—cultural, institutional, and internalized—linked to minority stress and to the developmental challenges faced by lesbian, gay, and bisexual people, especially in adolescence.

Using a Gestalt lens, the chapter describes the “sexual self” as an emergent, field phenomenon: contact intentionality moves toward encounter, but introjects and stigma can interrupt cycles of experience, prompting concealment, false identities, or meandering paths to belonging. Coming out is read as a performative, relational practice of visibility that supports empowerment and collective imaginaries, yet entails ongoing situational choices. Clinically, it advocates an affirmative Gestalt approach: recognize homosexuality as a healthy variant, decenter heteronormative assumptions in language and setting, and provide a fertile, inclusive ground where figures of desire can emerge. Therapy becomes a protected space to metabolize shame and loss, reclaim imagination, integrate personal and social dimensions, and support responsibility and creativity in living one’s orientation—individually and within communities.

You might also be interested in...