Crying gay

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The Afghan-American novelist Khaled Hosseini (author of The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns), tweeted about his daughter coming out as transgender.

“I’ve never been prouder of her.,” he wrote. “She has taught our family so much about bravery and truth.”

Over at Instagram he noted: 

“Most of all, I am inspired by Haris’ fearlessness, her courage to divide with the society her true self. She has taught me and our family so much about bravery, about truth. About what it means to live authentically. I know this process was painful for her, fraught with grief and anxiety. She is sober to the cruelty trans people are subjected to daily. But she is strong and undaunted.“

In another tweet he added:

“I love my daughter. She is beautiful, wise, brilliant. I will be by her side every step of the way. Our family stands behind her.“

4 Reasons Why This Video Made so Many Gay Men Cry

If you didn’t catch the ‘It’s time’ video below at the end of 2011, you were probably in the minority.

The video produced by Australian Marriage Equality went viral after its launch and now has over 16 million views on YouTube.

You can check out the video below…

This video deeply touched the hearts of many gay men. I heard many of my clients and members of our queer groups say how moving they found the 2-minute video that brought many of them to tears.

This got me thinking, what is it about this video that is so powerful that it made so many queer men cry?

On reflection, it touches gay men on many levels, but these are the ones that stand out to me:

#1 It taps into the longings that gay men have to be in deep and associated relationships

As human beings, we are wired for connection with others. This is an innate wish and an important part of good mental health in any individual. But for gay men, I think this longing is even stronger.

As gay men, many of us have experienced loneliness, shame and sometimes trauma through the process of growing up straight in a gay nature. It is almost unavoidabl

The Young Gay Man’s Instruction to Crying All the Time

Cry only a brief when, after two hot-and-heavy months, he says he doesn’t want to spend time you anymore. Cry harder when he says he still wants to be friends, you’re amazing, you’re a great kisser. Hold him so tightly before he leaves that you can’t tell if the heartbeat you feel is yours or his or maybe somehow both, as if you’ve conjoined and are stuck together forever. Try to take Celine Dion’s advice: “I finished crying in the instant that you left.” Break down, envious of how Celine could be so cold.

Spend the next heat-wave week in bed roiling in a stew of your own thoughts and juices. Comb through everything you said, did, and consideration while dating him, and keep a running list of all the things you said, did, and thought wrong. Only go away the bed to depart to work. Wear your biggest sunglasses on the train so that when you cry people only see themselves reflected in your mirrored lenses.

On the one-week anniversary of your breakup, go on a terrifically bad date. Sweat through your shirt as you wait for him. He should show up no less than forty minutes late. He should possess a disheveled observe that makes you wonder not if he showered tod

Hold on. There's many points of contention with your complaint here.

1. You're upset that there's a 99/1 ratio?

2. Why would you assume that the only reason to dislike the episode is what you pointed out?

3. People come across to have a myriad of additional problems with that episode, and the way you depict it is an almost satirical exaggeration of the very uncommon "that felt like filler" complaint I actually see.


I myself thought the episode was worst because the construct up, execution and aftermath was frankly put, shit. As far as passionate scenes go, it doesn't even register.

You know tensei kizoku? The episode in which ars's dad dies, or the one where rossell is recruited? Those actually managed to make me feel a knot in my throat and wet my eyes a bit, so the difficulty is clearly not my (lack of) sensibility, or that I'm an deed thirsty shounen manga consumer.

In SAO, the scene in which kirito goes to the hospital room to finally meet asuna is ironically the most similar scene to solo leveling episode 9 that I know of, almost identical in so many ways, and even then the former was finer made in terms of build up, execution and a