Walking With Individuals
Support, community, and resources for those navigating questions of identity, faith, and freedom.
For years we’ve been told only one story about sexuality and identity, but we’ve lived different realities. Culture preached a simple storyline.
“You were born this way. This is who you are. You can’t change. ”
They added a label to this experience expecting it to explain and simplify our histories, questions, wounds, and ideals. The acceptance of the label locked us in to a life of unhealed trauma, until we began to go beyond what everyone said.
We pursued healing and wholeness and
We pursued healing and wholeness and
Beneath the identities we adopt or are given are human beings shaped by dreams, fears, pains, longings, relationships, and beliefs. We believe that every person, whether questioning, navigating, or supporting someone on that journey, deserves compassion, dignity, and the agency to follow your conscience.
Support, community, and resources for those navigating questions of identity, faith, and freedom.
Training, curriculum, and guidance for pastors, leaders, parents, and loved ones.
Defending the right to speak, seek help, and live according to conscience.
Testified in courts and legislative hearings
Our lived experience brings a human voice to legal and policy conversations that are often abstract or polarized. When lawmakers and judges often only hear one side, it’s important they know there are thousands who have alternative experiences and want options that align with their convictions.
Submitted amicus briefs
With Chiles v Salazar being heard by the Supreme Court - the issue in question is whether or not a youth can talk with his mental health provider about unwanted same-sex attraction and be guided in a way that aligns with his/her biblical convictions. As many of our members received life-saving care as minors that help us in our journey, we knew we had the experience and duty to fight for theses pathways to remain open for others.
Read the Amicus Brief.
Featured by National and International Media
Journalists seek us out because our stories challenge common narratives and add complexity to a simplified conversation. We engage thoughtfully and honestly, aiming to bring clarity rather than controversy.
Trusted by Churches, Leaders, and Organizations
Counter of downloads of course.
Churches and organizations partner with us because we combine conviction with compassion. Our resources are shaped by lived experience and designed to help communities respond with wisdom, care, and integrity.
Grounded in Lived Experience
Every position we hold is shaped by people, not theory. Our advocacy grows out of personal journeys marked by struggle, faith, and hope, keeping our work anchored in humility and reality.
“Lack of healthy connection with my parents and an early exposure to pornography caused me to reject my own masculine identity.”
“Looking back on my childhood sexual trauma, I needed encouragement to refrain from embracing an LGBTQ identity.”
Counseling opened up a new world of self-understanding, emotional healing, and self-discovery. The life-dominating struggle of gender dysphoria and same-sex sexual feelings has faded, and today these are no longer a struggle.
“Looking back on my childhood sexual trauma, I needed encouragement to refrain from embracing an LGBTQ identity.”
“Looking back on my childhood sexual trauma, I needed encouragement to refrain from embracing an LGBTQ identity.”
“Sexual abuse created a web that led me to reject not only men and masculinity but even my own femininity.”
“The rift in the way I identified with other men eventually caused me to reject masculinity—even my own.”
“All the negative experiences I had with men were clear indicators that women weren’t good, further validating my longing to be a boy.”
“As I experienced more emotional healing and grew in confidence as a man, my sexual attraction to men decreased.”
“My dad’s abusive behavior and my early exposure to porn led me to reject any kind of physical connection with women for fear of perpetuating harm.”
“Sexual abuse as an adolescent and exposure to pornography as a teenager birthed unwanted feelings of same-sex attraction.”
“Emotional neglect, verbal abuse, and misogyny within my family greatly impacted how I saw myself and what I believed about women.”
“I ‘came out’ at sixteen and they supported me. They were my only refuge and the strongest people in my life. When life got hard I would envision myself as one of them, a strong woman, in order to dissociate and survive.”
“The socialization and affirmation of my femininity that I should have received as an adolescent was developmentally absent.”
Whether you are navigating these questions personally, walking with someone you love, or leading others through complex conversations, there is a way forward rooted in truth, compassion, and freedom