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Coming out is not always easy; it requires a lot of courage. It’s difficult for teens to do because they’re often worried about their parents reacting badly. That’s why some young folks opt to wait a while before coming out of the closet.

The worst thing that could happen is if someone outs a gay person before they’re actually ready. This is what happened to a teenager who didn’t arrive out to his parents but got shocked when one of them suddenly asked about his boyfriend/girlfriend and laughed when he insisted he was straight.

More info: Reddit 

17-year-old felt appreciate his parent “outed” him after they kept pressing him to reveal he’s gay and laughed at him when he said he isn’t

Image credits: prostooleh (not the actual photo)

The poster shared that they felt their teen son had been in the closet for 7 months and that he seemed to also have a boyfriend

Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)

Although the teen had never officially come out, the parent decided to ask him one day if he planned to bring his boyfriend on their family trip

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Image credits: u/platefoodaway

The teen seemed to ge
www secret gay ten

It’s so refreshing to observe a show from years past and be thrilled with its handling of gay representation. So often we see LGBTQ+ characters exploited to the max, with sidekicks reduced to flamboyant stereotypes of queer best friends or other mostly offensive roles. We’ve evolved past the Queer Best Friend Trope, we can lead films. Jonathan Bailey is proving that as he’s rumored to be the new (stunning) face of the Jurassic Park series. Even now, with writers' rooms predominantly favoring white and cis nepo babies, there is a spectrum of how people are authentically portrayed on TV and things seem to be moving in better directions.

 

Griffin’s Going Great!

A great traits is Griffin, introduced in season 2. He befriends Amy’s snarky and drain sister, Ashley, becoming her first-ever friend. How sweet! Griffin admits that he learned to fight after being bullied and now knows how to remain up for himself. He’s masculine and ‘straight-passing’, which is such a contrast to how gay characters were presented in 2009 at the time this was airing. Don’t receive me wrong, who doesn’t love Eli from Girls, Andrew Rannells is

Growing up, I was adorable much forced into a religious environment with no escape. Being gay, or even queer, was automatically frowned upon. Thankfully, having divorced parents was a blessing and a curse– as my mom was accepting of me for who I am.

From a young age, I always knew I was same-sex attracted. The stereotypical ‘gay’ mannerisms were all there, as well as the fascination with femininity. For example, I distinctively remember getting an American Girl Doll named Julie, despite me not being a young woman, however I was static to say the least. The love for dolls grew to me eventually collecting Barbie dolls.

Growing up gay was difficult, as I never really had any exposure to any gay role models whatsoever in real life. It was almost as if it was a unbent world, and I was just living in it. Television shows rarely had gay characters, so there wasn’t really any visibility either in the media. The only gay voice that was available at the time was often negative– such as news stories of gay abhor crimes or the Westboro Baptist Church’s latest protest.

The first representation of queer teenagers that I think of would have to be on the Canadian teen

Just a heads up: This episode contains discussions of kid sexual abuse, nonconsensual distribution of youngster sexual abuse materials, grooming and eating disorders due to PTSD. Some may find it upsetting. We encourage you to take protect of yourself. 

Where are the safe spaces for young lgbtq+ teens to join when community is non-existent at school? Why not the internet? Why not a dating app?

Today, we’re highlighting the fact that predators search for minors on dating apps to exploit, coerce, and groom, especially in the same-sex attracted community. These teens are often blackmailed to remain silent and live these secret lives of pain. The systems that are supposed to protect often don’t take these predators seriously or sweep this manipulation under the rug. In the conclude, the survivor is further harmed and silenced.

Lisa welcomes Albert Flores a survivor, advocate, and storyteller passionate about creating safer spaces for vulnerable communities. Albert shares how they joined a online dating app geared toward the LGBTQ collective at 14 in the hopes of connecting with other local gay teens. Unfortunately, he initiate that local grown-up men sought him out instead. He was groomed by multiple men, even

Gay teen group was like a classified society, says author

LGTG in Holloway Thoroughfare in 1984

HOLLOWAY Highway was home to a “very radical” teenage group during the 1970s and 1980s, a author reveals in a new book about LGBT+ history.

Clifford Williams tells how he belonged to the London Gay Teenage Group (LGTG) at a time when hostility was rife.

“The first time I visited LGTG, I must have been 19, it was a big step to take at that time. A lot of immature people who travelled up there walked up and down before knocking on the door. Some people never plucked up the courage to go in,” Dr Williams said.

The LGTG was the first official lgbtq+ youth group in the UK – if not, Dr Williams says, the world – and used to gather at 296 Holloway Road.

He describes how it was establish up and jog by young people themselves in his book Courage To Be, achieving registration as an official youth club catering mainly for homosexual and lesbian fresh people, at a time when queer male sex was still totally illegal for anyone aged under 21.

Finding the group was a life-affirming experience for Dr Williams. “Finding the LGTG was a godsend. It was a like-minded community, like a secret society or a small personal club,” Dr W