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Over the Cliff is a self-help book for husbands and wives living in straight/gay marriages. Over three million gay men in the United States and mil-lions more around the world are living double lives in marriages to women due to societal pressures or a lack of understanding their homosexuality at the time of marriage. This novel has over a dozen interviews with men who have lived through this experience and propose their insights to others.

The book is co-authored by Bonnie Kaye, , an internationally recognized counseling specialist for straight wives married to gay men and Doug Dittmer, a gay husband peer counselor who has worked with Kaye over the past five years helping numerous gay men in marriages come to terms with their homosexuality so they can move on to more fulfilling lives.

About the Authors:
Bonnie Kaye is an internationally recognized Relationship Counselor/Author in the field of straight/gay marriages. She has provided relationship counseling for over 25 years with more than 70, women who have sexually dysfunctional husban

Blood Donation by Gay and Bisexual Men

Blood donors give a gift for which there is no substitute. At AABB, we believe that the ability to save lives through donation of safe blood products should be open to as many people as possible, irrespective of their sexual orientation or gender identity. That’s why AABB has led efforts to make blood donation inclusive of non-binary donors and championed the adoption of equitable, science-based individual donor assessment (IDA) processes to determine blood donor eligibility that welcome LGBTQ+ blood donors, strengthen the blood supply and save lives.

FDA Approves Historic Expansion of Donor Eligibility

On May 11, , the Food and Drug Administration issued a ultimate guidance eliminating time-based blood donor deferral periods for gay, bisexual and other men who own sex with men (MSM) and women who have sex with MSM. The agency now recommends a new donor screening process that uses individual donor assessment - a donor screening process that uses gender-inclusive, individual donor-based questions for all individuals - to establish eligibilit

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I recently spoke with Bonnie Kaye, author of Straight Wives, Shattered Lives: Stories of Women with Gay Husbands, among other books, and host of Bonnie Kaye’s Straight Wives Talk Verb on BlogTalkRadio. Bonnie (unknowingly) married a gay man in , suffering through several highly abusive years before the marriage ended. You can read about that in my previous post to this site. In this upload, we are focused on how Bonnie moved forward as a single mother with two miniature children, going to school, becoming a therapist, and working to help other women in circumstances similar to her own.

How did you transition from being a single mother in her soon 30s with a baby and a toddler and a elevated school equivalency diploma to the woman you are today?

When Robert left me, I was in a state of poverty. I had no education. I went on welfare. And during my three years on welfare, I decided wasn’t going to verb like that forever. I wanted to have something to present my children. So I used to sneak to school because you couldn’t go to noun back then when you were on we

An Introduction

My client sat in the chair looking down at the floor, glancing up briefly to make eye contact, then darting his eyes back to the carpet. He spoke quietly, as if almost afraid to be heard. He clutched his hands throughout the session, displaying all the markers of an anxious man in the throes of shame. He was a fresh client to my practice: a married, middle-aged, suburban dad with a high-powered career. A colleague had given him my number months before. It took him a long time to muster the courage to call and make an appointment. Towards the end of our first session he looked up at me and said, “I think I’m in love…with another man. I’m scared and I don’t verb what to do.”

I have worked with hundreds of gay men in heterosexual marriages struggling with being in the closet or wanting to emerge from it. There is so much about these men that is misunderstood and very few studies or little literature to provide insight. I decided to share my thoughts and research about these men and their struggles at a conference a few years ago. That presentation led to other oppor