You and I understand ALL that, because we have the foundation. The people I’m talking about (and I never said “all”, I used “many”) do not have the blessings of that foundation. I also don’t believe that everyone who visits here has that kind of foundation. We understand what “disordered” means, and we understand that our inclinations to sin are not our identity. For me that came from lifelong, excellent Catholic education, something that I think we all can agree is not the norm in society. The “secularization” you refer to is a pure example of that.
If you had asked me years ago if my relationship was “fulfilling” I would have given you a definitive YES. I had very few relationships in the life, and they were monogamous and committed. We didn’t cheat on each other, that would have been just as wrong to us as if we were married. Our “gay lifestyle” included going to school, work, grocery shopping, dinner with friends, household chores…exactly the same as the straight couples we knew. We knew people who weren’t monogamous and committed, (both gay and straight) but they weren’t part of our inner circle, because we didn’t approve of that behavior. No matter who you are, that stuff just causes pain.
What led me out of the life wasn’t really about the quality of the relationship, it was a deeper thing, something that’s really hard to put into words. It was that restlessness that Augustine describes, I guess.