In modern society, the use of conversion therapy as a treatment for being queer is considered archaic and barbaric. Itβs a primitive practice that was rightfully put to rest.
While medical professionals practicing underΒ the American Psychiatric Association donβt use it as a reparative program, many religious fanatics believe they can “correct” queer behavior through extreme options like conversion therapy.
Alex Cooper, a 21-year-old lesbian women living in Utah, endured eight months of physical and mental abuse in order to “correct” her queer tendencies.
Related:Β Apparently, There Are No Gay Mormons in the Church
After discovering Cooperβs queerness when she was 15, her parents enlisted the help of fellow Mormons Tiana and Johnny Siale. As part of their treatment, the Sialeβs forced Cooper to carry a backpack filled with heavy stones so she would “feel the burden she was carrying by choosing to be gay.”
In an interview with KUTV, Cooper said the Siales told her, βYour family doesnβt want you. God has no place for people like you in His plan.” Their hateful words were just the beginning of the abuse. After attemptingΒ suicide and tryingΒ to escape several times, her punishments intensified. In one instance, she was physically assaulted by her male captor.Β CooperΒ writes, βI came to my feet in front of him β¦ He made a fist and punched me in the gut, knocking the wind out of me. I doubled over and choked for breath.β
Cooper recalls many of the experiences in her memoir,Β Saving Alex, which recounts the events leading up to her escape after which she won the right to “live under the law’s protection as an openly gay teenager.”
Released on March 16, her book is garnering massive media attention and is described as “illuminating.β It uncovers the truth about the acts of religious extremists whom attempt to “heal” LGBT people.
You can orderΒ a copy of Cooper’s book here.