Tag, You’re (Here)

knowhomo:

KNOWhomo Quick Tag Links

The following links may be helpful for exploring and jumping to KNOWhomo links faster. They are now also located on the side bar (information on your right).

#gay

#lesbian

#bisexual

#trans*/transgender

#genderqueer

#pansexual

#history

#movies (often fiction)

#documentary/documentaries

#book(s)

#art

#comics

#political cartoons

#bully/bullies/bullying

#Moderator Notes/Contests/Favorite Tumblr Blogs

TAGS:   lgbtq.   transgender.   gay.   trans*.   lesbian.   bisexual.   pan.   pansexual.   history.   movies.   movie.   queer.   genderqueer.   comics.   political cartoons.   art.   bully.   bullies.   moderator notes.   documentary.   reference.

knowhomo:

LGBTQ* Documentaries You Should Know (Part 2)

  1. Chris & Don
  2. The Brandon Teena Story
  3. The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye 
  4. Fabulous: A Story of Queer Cinema
  5. Gendernauts: A Journey Through Shifting Identities 
  6. Out of the Past: A Struggle for Gay and Lesbian Rights in America
  7. For the Bible Tells Me So
  8. Lesbian Sex & Sexuality
  9. Trembling Before God
  10. Our House: Kids of Gay and Lesbian Parents
closetproblems:

White text on a rainbow background: Number 306, you feel like a coward for not coming out

closetproblems:

White text on a rainbow background: Number 306, you feel like a coward for not coming out

TAGS:   lesbian.   gay.   bisexual.   transgender.   genderqueer.   pasexual.   asexual.   queer.   GSM.   lgbt.   lgbtq.   closet problems.
So, uhmmm.

dtbep:

Is there any other MarvelxCato fic, besides this?

I need it for reasons. And science. DON’T forget the science.

Please?

I apology in advance for the tag overuse, I NEED THIS LIKE AIR.

?

Casually bringing this back.

(via dtbep)

So, uhmmm.

dtbep:

Is there any other MarvelxCato fic, besides this?

I need it for reasons. And science. DON’T forget the science.

Please?

I apology in advance for the tag overuse, I NEED THIS LIKE AIR.

?

So, uhmmm.

Is there any other MarvelxCato fic, besides this?

I need it for reasons. And science. DON’T forget the science.

Please?

I apology in advance for the tag overuse, I NEED THIS LIKE AIR.

?

closetproblems:

White text on a rainbow background: Number 218, falling for the first person you came out to

G-FUCKING-POY

closetproblems:

White text on a rainbow background: Number 218, falling for the first person you came out to

G-FUCKING-POY

TAGS:   lesbian.   gay.   bisexual.   transgender.   pansexual.   asexual.   genderqueer.   queer.   GSM.   lgbt.   lgbtq.   closet problems.   GPOY OF ALL GPOYS.

comingoutjournal:

Renault Twingo Ad Features Gay Wedding

Renault’s at it again.

The French automaker may have sparked controversy with a steamy girl-on-girl commercial that was eventually yanked from Italian airwaves, but that hasn’t stopped them from addressing lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) issues once again in its latest clip for the Twingo, which features a surprise wedding between two men. “Times have changed,” the tagline reads. “Twingo, too.”

closetedcollege:

@guysonthemind

My sister is married and has a child. However, she’s a gossiping bigot. Her husband’s brother is gay. I don’t even know his name but by overhearing my sister and my mom’s conversation, they call him the “gay uncle” as if that is all he is, as if he is not human enough to have a name. I fear that’s whats going to happen to me. If I come out, do I get to keep my name? Or will they also call me another “gay uncle”. Will my nephew call me that? No. I’m no less of a human than they are. The tears I cry. The sweat I produce. The blood I pump. I identify partly as a homosexual, and fully as a homo sapiens.

I also freaking fear this, i love all my nieces and nephews, cousins, uncles and aunts, but once i come out, i’m terrified to being known just as “the gay uncle”, “the gay cousin”, “the gay nephew”, like the text says, i identify partly as a homosexual, but i’m not only that, i’m way more than that.

(Source: mycollegecloset)

TAGS:   gay.   homosexual.   lgbt.   closeted.

knowhomo:

LGBTQ* Stories of Understanding from a Peer

For gay teens who have considered suicide

November 16, 2010

By Sean Simonson

I have considered suicide. Yes, I have considered taking my own life. Unlike six other boys recently in the news, I never took the steps to follow through on my dark thoughts, but, unfortunately, I can understand what drove them to. Because I know what it’s like to be a gay teenager.

Imagine going through adolescence: hormones raging, body changing, and relationships that go a little deeper than friendship developing. Now, add on being gay.

Don’t believe being different is difficult? Try going through a day in the life of a gay teen.

Every day you hear someone use your sexuality — a part of you that, no matter how desperately you try, you cannot change — as a negative adjective. That hurts.

You fear looking the wrong way in the locker room and offending someone. Politicians are allowed to debate your right to marry the person you love or your right to be protected from hate crimes under the law. Your faith preaches your exclusion — or damnation. And no one does anything to stop it.

Recently, the Archbishop used money donated by an anonymous source to denounce same-sex marriage. That’s right: a major religious leader used non-Church money from a questionable source to publicly condemn your right to express your love in a public and binding manner.

A public school district nearby — after a wake of suicides by kids much like yourself — cannot bring itself to put your protection from bullying into its policies. Members of the district fear your kind and how you might brainwash their children into thinking that your behavior is appropriate or to join your kind.

A political party makes its position denying your right to marry one of its main voting points. And your nation voted this party in office.

You cannot legally give blood to save a life, nor risk your life to defend your country unless you hide your identity and deny who you are.

Oh yeah, and the words “queer,” “homo,” and “faggot” that people throw around all the time? Yeah, those might as well be personal attacks.

This is daily life for me. And I can understand why, if you are gay like me, you might consider ending it all. But I hope you don’t.

Why? Because without you, who is going to make it better for everyone else? Without you, no one is going to stand up against the injustice. I need you to help me make this world a better place for both of us and everyone else like us.

And all of you who don’t have to undergo this horror daily, it’s up to you to help. Don’t stand by and let hatred go on. Don’t sit back and watch your friends be discriminated against. Reach out and help those who might need it.

Together, maybe we can make the world an easier place to live for gay and straight teens alike. Because no one else is going to do it for us.

——

(via comingoutjournal)