Trump being in office has brought back all of my loudness, and my anger. I feel like I am the 13 year old trans kid fighting for my right to be alive but now I’m 18? Trans people will not be silenced. Our voices are too important.

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Trump being in office has brought back all of my loudness, and my anger. I feel like I am the 13 year old trans kid fighting for my right to be alive but now I’m 18? Trans people will not be silenced. Our voices are too important.
Calling All Queer Educators + Creators! 🌈
AceVision Magazine is looking for LGBTQIA+ voices to share knowledge, skills, and resources with our community. Whether you teach through words, art, or entrepreneurship, we want you in our next issue!
💌 We’re seeking:
• Queer writers for educational articles, guides, or resource lists
• Creators who can break down important topics in art, design, comics, or infographics
• Queer-owned businesses or services who’d like to promote what they do (ads, spotlights, features)
• Experts in health, wellness, history, activism, or any topic that matters to the queer community
If you’ve got something to teach, share, or showcase, AceVision wants to amplify your work — and pay it forward by connecting you with our audience.
📩 Submit or ask questions to [email protected]
A platform for asexual, aromantic, and queer voices, AceVision Magazine highlights bold creativity, authentic stories, and diverse artistic
Let’s grow knowledge, visibility, and pride — together. 🖤💜🤍💚
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I had such a wonderful time joining the Bisexual Killjoy podcast! We talked about bi+ history, sustaining activism, and what it means to love and care for our community over the long haul.
💜💗💙 Episode 2 of Season 4 — Bi+ Activism and the Long Haul — is out now wherever you get your podcasts.
National Coming Out Day: "Letting In"
click here for video version
Coming out can feel like a burden sometimes.
Choosing who to tell, how to tell them, whether it's safe or not. It's exhausting, and it starts to feel like work or labor…all the uncertainty.
That's why I like the term ‘letting in’ instead of coming out. It sort of flips the script. Coming out, to me, feels like you have to push yourself out into the world and decide whether you're ready to come out to a specific person (or everyone all at once!) and whether they're ready to receive what you have to say.
Letting in, to me, is like deciding who I'm okay with getting to see this vulnerable side of myself, with this part of myself that I might still be exploring or not totally sure about.
It might feel like a distinction without a difference to some people. If you still want to use the term coming out or if you prefer letting in;
or maybe for some people you're talking about coming out to,
and other people you're letting them in to see the vulnerable side of yourself…
…you don't owe disclosure to anyone.
That's what letting in tells me. I have the ownership over my story. I get to curate my truth, my identity, and who sees me for who I really am in my full queer self. So, if coming out feels heavy today, maybe try thinking of it as letting in.
Sugarland's Jennifer Nettles Takes Cues From Broadway On Her New Album Jennifer Nettles would really like he... Read the rest on our site with the url below https://worldwidetweets.com/sugarlands-jennifer-nettles-takes-cues-from-broadway-on-her-new-album/?feed_id=38687&_unique_id=60db8880b9a78 #broadway #CultureArts #Entertainment #JenniferNettles #music #queervoices #Women
Another page of Marry Me a Little - Done! #wip #autobiocomics #marriageequality #queercomics #lgbtq🌈 #queervoices #cartoonist
“This is the outfit I was wearing when I first realised I was genderqueer. I was going to a Twin Peaks themed event with my partner and (naturally) decided to dress as Audrey. Half-way through the film I found myself nestled in the crook of my partner’s arm. As I looked up at them, I realised that the outfit was no longer just fancy-dress, and that I was not the person I had been when I first put it on. Not only that, but I could see in their eyes that they recognised it too. While my look has changed and developed since that night, I will always associate this outfit with that moment of recognition, and the feeling of love, strength, and fulfilment that came with it. It was the outfit that showed me how costume can become reality, and I will always cherish it for that.”
Location: Oxford,England (United Kingdom)
“This was my very first dress, found it at a clothes swap event only for transgender people. I remember the first time I wore it at work, how nervous I was before and how amazing it felt afterwards.”
Location: Oxford, England (United Kingdom)