They met their gays

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How can being lgbtq+ be wrong if you've always felt attracted to the same sex, you're a devoted Christian, and it wasn't something you chose?

I've always struggled to understand this... I have a 19 year old son that I recently found out was gay. When I found out about the pain and self condemnation he was putting himself through for years, it killed me inside! He has very much struggled with this actual world himself and feels ashamed. He is a conservative, dedicated Christian. So the fact that he didn't choose this and can't facilitate but feel the way he does... How can him being attracted to other men be wrong? I perform understand that some may choose to be with the same sex but he didn't decide this, in evidence he's been praying about it and fighting it but since he can remember he's always felt the similar. So if his feeling are coming from a truthful place, and he finds love with another man, how can that be wrong? Isn't God Love? Thank you for taking the time to peruse and answer my question.

Clarify •Share•Report• Asked July 06 2017 • Anonymous

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Coming Out in the 80s: A Watch Back at LGBTQ Life

As a GenXer, we often stare back on the 80s culture with this loving nostalgia, the rose colored glasses syndrome. We have this plan of how amazing it was because we remember rocking out to our favorite songs with our friends on the bus journey home, heading to the mall (if you were fortunate enough to reside near one), weekend movies, and the enormity that was 80s cartoons.Those memories well up in our mind and often gloss over that it was also a decade of struggle and turmoil. 

When the 1980s started, LGBTQ rights was not a phrase that was tossed around, hell you would be hard pressed to even hear homosexuality talked about in more than hush whispers filled with disgust and disdain. We were in the trenches, fighting for the rights we had no clue we would get but prayed for daily. Unite me today as we set the way back marching to 1980 and discuss Coming out in the 80s: A Look Advocate at LGBTQ Life.

  1. The invisible masses
  2. Life and media representation
    1. AIDS epidemic
    2. Social stigma and discrimination
    3. Representation in media
  3. LGBTQ and the socio-political scene
    1. Political Backlash
    2. Legal Landscape
    3. Beginnings of Progress
  4. Comin

    hi, i wanted to initiate that I never  expect my self  looking for this specific theme.  but I see that  maybe can help you and me.

    I have a similar situation with my association. My boyfriends gay companion is inLove with him and he doesn’t comprehend that.  there is so many things that create me realize that.

    1 they see each other once a week to refreshment in a bar, when they do and acquire drunk, my boyfriends male lover friend starts complementing him  in front of me , like his handsome, touching his arm ( in a way that makes me uncomfortable), looking him with this in love eyes. start making inappropriate joke

    2 he had a picture of a naked guy that looks like my boyfriend and even he shows the pictures to everybody. and he start saying  DOESNT HE LOOK LIKE HIM???

    3  he told my crush that he heard that i was dating one of his friends  a couple of times( guy that I don’t even know). obviously lies.. don’t know what was exactly his intention.

    4 he invited my boyfriend first  to an island  and a week after he mentioned and then he invited me .. ( last minute) obiously my partner didn’t go.

    5  he always pays for everything, dinner, uber,  all the refreshment in the bar ( mos

    Last updated on September 10th, 2024 at 03:09 pm

    There’s a conversation around new dates that many of us are familiar with: we start seeing someone modern and go on a not many good or even great dates. We’re thinking about whether this could be something serious, so we begin laying out the situation for our closest friends and loved ones. We illustrate our impressions so far, the signals this person is giving off, and how we’re translating them, and offer everything up for our friends to weigh in on whether this person is a good fit or not. They might question their compatibility, why they’re single, how recently they got out of their last relationship, and their astrological sign — and they might also ask this question: “Do you think they could be the one?”

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    Unfortunately, you can’t have proof of “the one” — and that’s a excellent thing

    There’s an idea that percolates throughout various parts of our culture — it takes the form of “love at first sight,” the idea that when you meet the right person you’ll R