And hell yeah, :::YOU SHOULD SMILE COS YOU DESERVE TO:::
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The gay issues threadThis is getting serious...
#1231
Posted 14 March 2008 - 07:33 PM
And hell yeah, :::YOU SHOULD SMILE COS YOU DESERVE TO:::
#1232
Posted 17 March 2008 - 12:42 AM
anyway after that my father knows about it.. and actually he said he would support me!! i was surprised!! althought not totally but yeah it's really nice to hear that!!!
#1233
Posted 18 March 2008 - 09:04 AM

Signature made by the webmiss of www.celinerific.com
Celine is in 2 words MY ANGEL x x
#1234
Posted 18 March 2008 - 02:54 PM
celinefanonline, on Mar 17 2008, 01:42 AM, said:
anyway after that my father knows about it.. and actually he said he would support me!! i was surprised!! althought not totally but yeah it's really nice to hear that!!!
I think a lot of people would be suprised how well their fathers would take it. I think it took a little time for my father to come around, but now it's totally a non issue in my family.
#1235
Posted 18 March 2008 - 02:58 PM
#1236
Posted 19 March 2008 - 04:32 AM

Signature made by the webmiss of www.celinerific.com
Celine is in 2 words MY ANGEL x x
#1237
Posted 20 March 2008 - 04:49 AM
What do I THINK of gays? I think that if they want to be gay, it's their business. So long as they keep it private, and don't rub it in your face (my ex lived next door to a gay guy once who used to invite him to his orgies even though he knew it wasn't my ex's thing), then it's OK by me.
#1238
Posted 21 March 2008 - 01:14 AM

Signature made by the webmiss of www.celinerific.com
Celine is in 2 words MY ANGEL x x
#1239
Posted 21 March 2008 - 04:35 AM
Sarit31, on Mar 20 2008, 11:49 AM, said:
What do I THINK of gays? I think that if they want to be gay, it's their business. So long as they keep it private, and don't rub it in your face (my ex lived next door to a gay guy once who used to invite him to his orgies even though he knew it wasn't my ex's thing), then it's OK by me.
Please don't think that we CHOOSE to be gay, okay? No one CHOOSES it, you didn't wake up one day and chose to be straight, did you?
#1240
Posted 21 March 2008 - 04:54 AM
Quote
well do you go around telling people Hi I'm blabla, and I'm hetero!
Rick, ik hou van jou voor altijd!
A New Day... has come 28/29 April & 2/3 May 07
Antwerpen 13 et 14 mai,
Paris 24 et 25 mai, Amsterdam 2 juinet Arras 7 juillet Chances Taken!!!How Do You Keep The Music Playing? - Celine Opening Night March 15th, March 16th
#1241
Posted 21 March 2008 - 05:04 AM
(She just found out I'm gay) "Oh really? When did you know?"
"Probably the same morning you woke up and said 'heeey, I'm straight
Hahahaha, she blushed and went soooo quiet
#1242
Posted 21 March 2008 - 05:06 AM
Rick, ik hou van jou voor altijd!
A New Day... has come 28/29 April & 2/3 May 07
Antwerpen 13 et 14 mai,
Paris 24 et 25 mai, Amsterdam 2 juinet Arras 7 juillet Chances Taken!!!How Do You Keep The Music Playing? - Celine Opening Night March 15th, March 16th
#1243
Posted 21 March 2008 - 05:09 AM
Frida, on Mar 21 2008, 07:04 PM, said:
(She just found out I'm gay) "Oh really? When did you know?"
"Probably the same morning you woke up and said 'heeey, I'm straight
Hahahaha, she blushed and went soooo quiet
#1244
Posted 21 March 2008 - 05:14 AM
#1245
Posted 21 March 2008 - 07:23 AM

Signature made by the webmiss of www.celinerific.com
Celine is in 2 words MY ANGEL x x
#1246
Posted 21 March 2008 - 12:08 PM
and if we all showed respect for each other and ourselves ....wouldnt the world be a better place
speaks from the heart and never explains
dont you know that love doesn't think twice
it can come all at once or whisper from a distance
#1247
Posted 21 March 2008 - 12:13 PM
Totally agree
And Frida, that was a kicka$$ reply
#1248
Posted 27 March 2008 - 05:13 AM
bfhb, on Mar 22 2008, 12:08 AM, said:
and if we all showed respect for each other and ourselves ....wouldnt the world be a better place
never gonna happen

Signature made by the webmiss of www.celinerific.com
Celine is in 2 words MY ANGEL x x
#1249
Posted 27 March 2008 - 08:14 AM

#1250
Posted 27 March 2008 - 08:35 AM
Rick, ik hou van jou voor altijd!
A New Day... has come 28/29 April & 2/3 May 07
Antwerpen 13 et 14 mai,
Paris 24 et 25 mai, Amsterdam 2 juinet Arras 7 juillet Chances Taken!!!How Do You Keep The Music Playing? - Celine Opening Night March 15th, March 16th
#1251
Posted 27 March 2008 - 09:32 AM
#1252
Posted 27 March 2008 - 09:56 AM
Rick, ik hou van jou voor altijd!
A New Day... has come 28/29 April & 2/3 May 07
Antwerpen 13 et 14 mai,
Paris 24 et 25 mai, Amsterdam 2 juinet Arras 7 juillet Chances Taken!!!How Do You Keep The Music Playing? - Celine Opening Night March 15th, March 16th
#1253
Posted 27 March 2008 - 12:38 PM
speaks from the heart and never explains
dont you know that love doesn't think twice
it can come all at once or whisper from a distance
#1254
Posted 31 March 2008 - 03:28 PM
Quote
I'm Here, President Ahmadinajad
I'm one of those people Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says don't exist. I'm a 25-year-old Iranian, and I'm gay.
I live in Tehran with my parents and younger brother and am studying to be a computer software engineer. I've known that I was different from my brother and other boys for as long as I can remember.
I was born in 1982, two years after the start of the Iran-Iraq War, and when I was growing up, most boys loved to play with toy guns, pretending to be soldiers in the war. I liked painting, and playing with dolls. My brother preferred to play with the other boys, so most of the time I was lonely.
I was 16 when I first realized that I was sexually attracted to some of the boys in my high school classes. I had no idea what I could do with that feeling. All I knew about homosexuals were the jokes and negative stories that people told about them. I thought a homosexual was someone who sexually abused children -- until I saw the word "homosexual" for the first time in an English encyclopedia, and found a definition of myself.
After that, I started searching the Internet for information about homosexuality. Eventually I came across two Iranian Web sites where I could communicate with other gays. I was 17. At first, I didn't want to give anyone my e-mail address because I was afraid that I could be abused or that my parents might find out, or that people on the site could be government spies. But I finally decided to exchange e-mails with one person, and after some correspondence, we spoke on the phone. I'll never forget the first time I heard the voice of another gay man. We arranged to meet at the home of a friend of his, and the three of us talked for hours. I felt so comfortable with them. The next day I learned that the friend was interested in me. His name was Omid, and we became boyfriends.
I also became interested in the gay social movement that started in 2000. Around that time, Iranian society became more open under President Mohammad Khatami's reformist government. The Internet became common, and everybody started talking about issues they couldn't even have thought about before.
Until then, the gay world had been underground and secret. Under the Islamic Republic, gays could face the death penalty; they could also lose their jobs and family support. Meetings and parties took place only in the most trusted private homes. Heterosexuals were almost never seen at these gatherings. Even fellow gays were only slowly accepted. It could take years for a homosexual to become known and trusted. Most older gays were married and even had children, and their family and friends had no idea of their sexuality.
There was a handful of gathering places for outcast homosexuals in Tehran, people who couldn't hide their sexuality and had lost their jobs, or people whose families had disowned them, and who had turned to selling sex for money. Those places were always being attacked by the paramilitaries.
My generation was the first to start the coming-out process. I decided to come out when I was 20. I thought that if I just talked to my parents about it, they would accept my reasoning. I was totally wrong. Their reaction was horrible. They started to restrict me -- I couldn't use the phone or invite any of my friends over, and they cut back on financial support. Part of their reaction was religious; part was their concern that I couldn't survive as a homosexual in Iran. They were also ashamed to tell the rest of our family and wanted to see me married to a woman.
We argued constantly; they insisted that I wasn't gay, that I only thought I was. It took me years to calm them down, but over time, they lost any hope of changing me, and they started to change themselves. Now they accept that I'm gay, but they're not happy about it.
Meanwhile, the gay community has worked to educate people via Web sites and dialogue with our friends and families. But we've found that the most effective way of changing people's minds is coming out. When people see us as reasonable humans, their negative views of homosexuality are shattered. I can honestly say there's been a change in the way Iranians view us now. Gay life in Iran isn't as underground as it used to be. We have gay parties with heterosexual guests -- and even our parents! We have places where we can congregate -- in coffee shops, special park areas and even certain offices. Many more homosexuals are willing to come out these days. Activists estimate that .5 percent of the Iranian population is homosexual, bisexual or transsexual.
But we weren't surprised by Ahmadinejad's comments about gays at Columbia University. What else could he say? We stone homosexuals in Iran because that's what God wants? It was a joke, but he gave the only answer he could.
I wish our president could learn to respect gays instead of denying us. But I'm not holding my breath. In the meantime, my only response to his remarks is this: Whatever he says, Ahmadinejad can't change the fact that we exist.
Amir is an activist in Tehran whose name is being withheld for his safety.
Rick, ik hou van jou voor altijd!
A New Day... has come 28/29 April & 2/3 May 07
Antwerpen 13 et 14 mai,
Paris 24 et 25 mai, Amsterdam 2 juinet Arras 7 juillet Chances Taken!!!How Do You Keep The Music Playing? - Celine Opening Night March 15th, March 16th
#1255
Posted 29 December 2008 - 09:49 AM
most of them got lots of boyfriends and goodlooking guys...and i even tried to have one
in some point i hate them sometimes coz they were so over acting but still i love them...i love gays than lesbian..no offense to them,but i prefer gays
i have a close bestfriend whose gay and he always told me about his lovelife...
well...gay rules
#1256
Posted 30 December 2008 - 10:36 AM
#1257
Posted 31 December 2008 - 02:46 PM
#1258
Posted 31 December 2008 - 02:59 PM
I have no problem with gay people, they are human beings just like everyone else and I think people should have more respect for them. I'm straight btw.
There doesn't seem to be many straight people on this forum! I was quite surprised how many gay people there were when I joined...
Edited by ShuttleDiscovery, 31 December 2008 - 03:01 PM.
#1259
Posted 31 December 2008 - 03:07 PM
#1260
Posted 01 January 2009 - 01:48 PM
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