i wish gay men supported lesbians as much as we support them
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Saiki and teruhashi need to shake hands and realize they could have ultimate power if they worked together
They could be the worlds best, best friends
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Robin, in a high voice, holding barbie: hey ken! I was thinking about going back to school and starting a career!
Eddie, in a deep voice, holding ken: nonsense, barbie. you’re staying home and having my kids
Steve: what the fuck are you guys doing?
Robin and Eddie, in sync: playing Systemic Oppression
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I love how the vincian and lesbian flag match. So many times have our communities been pinned against each other, but we match. We love the same, and our love is beautiful. I think we have this unspoken understanding about each other. They’re heads, and we’re tails. We’re two sides of the same coin. I love the lesbian community. I love my siblings and my sisters. Our solidarity is amazing. I love being one, being a family.
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adam and amanda are boyloser and girlfailure bffs. in my opinion.
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(My Opinion!!) Pen and Pencil are gay and Lesbian solidarity 🗣🗣🗣
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seeing people on my dash post about men... like i support you. go have fun with that. but also how cone you get a boyfriend and yet im hopelessly in love with two straight girls
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I got matching Sonia & Raihan keychains with my bff at comic con😈
both from @/sweet_sisters_cosplay (instagram)
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Hi there, I'm sure you've received similar messages before, but I just want to say thank you for sharing your stories and experiences and photos with the internet. I'm a younger gay guy (I'm 20) and only recently came out to my friends and family. I grew up in a conservative Christian family in a place that didn't really accept gay people, and got the message as soon as I knew what being gay was that there was something wrong about it. When I figured out that I wasn't straight, I never thought I'd be able to be happy or live a normal life, especially after my first experiences being with men as a teenager were so awful. I tried to be straight after that but it just never worked out. Now I'm open about myself and so much happier. I've taken back control of my life and started to go after what I really want. People like you give me hope for my own future, that I can live a happy life and be at peace with who I am. I know there are plenty of younger gay folks on the internet doing awesome things, too, but people who have more life experience show me that I can have a full life for myself, that there are people out there like me who have made it. So, thank you.
Hi and I am glad you reached out. A gay man was my first out friend when I was still unsure about coming out. I wasn't even sure I could come out. EVER. I was 19 and he was 18 and we are life long best friends.
It was gay movies, books and bars that were my first careful steps into being a lesbian. Those things taught me about same sex attraction and how lovely embracing my sexuality could be. I was terrified of making lesbian friends because my fear of "guilt by association" was a very real fear. My gay friends let me "tag along" to bars and prides even though most knew I was one of the crowd.
Gay men face a different set of obstacles than lesbians. I honor and understand that while we share many things we also must have each others back by acknowledging the world dumps different expectations and myths on us.
I am so glad you are using your energy to love yourself and improve your life. You deserve whatever passions and life goals make you happy and successful.
Being a gay man is your sexual orientation and beyond that you get to choose your life’s path. You get to have whatever personality, job, hobby and wardrobe that brings you happiness. The world wants so badly to attach many things to gay men. It’s so wonderful to hear you deciding for yourself.
Shawn and I. Circa 1992 right before I came out.
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By Melinda Butterfield
As the Conga Against Homophobia and Transphobia in Havana stepped off, families, neighbors, and coworkers gathered on sidewalks and leaned out of windows to watch and cheer on the marchers. Some brought signs and banners of support. Parents hoisted children on their shoulders to watch. No hate groups were jeering or protesting from the sidelines – only solidarity and joy.
The day’s most popular chant was “Socialismo sí, homofobia/transfobia, no!” – yes to socialism, no to homophobia and transphobia. Other chants celebrated the Families Code and denounced the U.S. blockade that causes grave harm to Cuba’s queer community and all Cuban people.
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