Bills seek to end ‘conversion therapy’ in Kentucky
FRANKFORT, Ky. — Twice a week for four years when he was in high school, gay student Zach Meiners underwent “conversion therapy,” a practice that attempts to change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.
Once the sessions ended, it took almost 10 years before he started “to heal and learn to love” himself, Meiners said Tuesday during a rally to promote bills that would effectively ban conversion therapy in Kentucky.
“It was ingrained in my head that to be gay meant that I was apart from God and that I could never find acceptance, love or fulfilment unless my identity changed,” said Meiners, now 30. “I was publicly shamed. I was taught to hate who I was.”
Bills aimed at effectively ending the practice have been introduced in the Republican-dominated House and Senate.