This month we’re talking about the power of community.
Kayla Zilch of 2015 Y squad shares about how being vulnerable about her struggle with pornography with her community led to life-change for many others.
I love statistics.
I love how a set of numbers and a splash of research can make all the difference in the world between decoding the integrity of some guy on an infomercial yelling at you to buy his laundry detergent, and the guy in his mom’s basement writing a report on whether or not the detergent works.
I used to be a volunteer Sex Ed teacher at a local pregnancy help clinic. I remember the indignation I felt when one day, while accumulating enough statistics to hopefully scare middle-schoolers into abstinence, I discovered that although condoms are 99.5% effective when used properly, no comfort should be taken in the overwhelming numerical margin — “If aeroplane flights had a success rate of 99.5%,” my instructor intoned, “One Boeing jet would fall out of the sky every day. Is that a risk you’re willing to take?”
I have no idea why it affected me so strongly at the time, but after that I felt like I couldn’t trust anything I read in magazine advertisements. I also started noticing a lot more pregnant women in the aisles of grocery stores. Pilots flying planes, kids behind the bleachers . . . no one was safe.
Since that time, I’ve spent a lot less time trying to scare adolescents into keeping their hands off one another and a lot more time out in the real world, meeting people and making friends, and, at times, putting my hands on people myself. And through it all, I’ve learned that for every statistic you hear and every percentage that makes its way into print, there are people standing behind each and every number.
I knew that 1 out of every 6 women were sexually assaulted at some point in their lives; but it meant nothing to me until high school, when several of my friends began confiding in me about various incidents of rape, molestation, and sexual blackmail from their bosses.
I knew that 33% of women regularly watched porn, but I didn’t have the courage to admit to myself and the rest of the world that I was one of them until last November, when my now-teammate Tabitha took the mic first and in several brutally honest Facebook paragraphs, bared the one part of her soul she had sworn to carry with her to the grave.
The more you tell a story, the less power it has over you. It’s sort of a verbal exposure therapy, the same way a roll of film fogs over the first time a splice of light falls onto it through the crack in a camera. The more light you let in, the quicker the roll is exposed; it’s the same with our stories, I think.
The very first time I told someone about my struggle with pornography, I felt like I was sitting in an airtight compartment and someone had just pressed a button and sucked all of the oxygen out, or like I had just woken up in one of those nightmares where you show up to the event of your life dressed solely in socks and frilly underwear.
Last night, however, I sat in front of two men I had met only an hour or so prior, and talked to them about my struggle with porn in the same breath in which I talked about my college major.
“Are you honest when you write in your blog?” they asked, and my mind immediately pulled me in the direction of the blog I wrote earlier this year detailing the imprint porn had left on my life. 3,000 people and counting have all sat behind computer screens and read about some of the darkest moments of my heart.
I smiled a small smile and nodded, “Ohhh, yeah.”
If only you knew.
They smiled back.
“So, ah . . . what is the hardest thing you’ve ever written about?”
I looked down at Tabitha, and she looked up at me, and my deodorant instantly evaporated.
Oh my God, I am about to tell two married Serbian men that I used to watch people have sex on the internet.
But in a span of thirty seconds, what could have easily been one of the most awkward trans-lingual conversations of my life so far blossomed into one of the most edifying experiences of personal vulnerability yet.
Tabitha talked, and then I talked — and all the while, something amazing happened. No one got up and left. No one shifted uncomfortably or threw anything at me. No one told me I was gross, or that I was a bad Christian. Instead, they said that they wanted our help.
The men shared with Tabitha and I that they had been trying to initiate conversation about pornography with the local college students in their city, but had begun to receive actual death threats in response to their effort. Maybe, they expressed, two American girls coming forward and sharing their hearts would change the tide of local conversation.
And maybe, by being candid and vulnerable with our stories, we could create an open door for a new ministry here.
Here in Serbia, I’m finally starting to catch a glimpse into the ways in which God is calling me to use my story — not by hiding it away in darkness, and not by covering it up with good deeds. New purpose is unfolding as I refuse to turn away from my past. By continually speaking of the way God redeemed the struggle I fought so hard to overcome, by continuing to shine light onto it and by owning my past, every single day, my past is beginning to lose its power over me.
And that old power, in turn, is morphing into hope.
Have you experienced the power your testimony can bring?
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