i cannot be normal about amir, he's just like me fr fr
he's just like me!!
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers





seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from T1
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
i cannot be normal about amir, he's just like me fr fr
he's just like me!!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Okay Tumblr, listen up because I need help. This is gonna be a long post, so brace yourself.
So, a publishing house asked me to write them an anthology of a few novellas (books shorter than one hundred pages) due the next may 17th, themed LGBT+ romance. I have a year to write a few of them, and I'd like to start now, not to fall behind. The problem is, since I'm writing an anthology for the international day against homobitransaphobia, I want it to be as inclusive as possible.
I already have two short stories, one about a bisexual man dating a gay man, and one about two lesbian girls. So I have already the L, G and B checked out.
I have started a story about a trans man as well, so I even have a T.
Then I want to write a story about an asexual person dating a sex worker. The problem comes here.
I'd like for them (the asexual person and the sex worker) to be men. Why, do you ask? Because men are always considered hypersexual creatures so having them asexual would be more impactful and because there is not enough rep about sex working men.
But if this were the case, I'd have three mlm stories and only one wlw story, and that would leave a bitter taste in my mouth because queer women are also under represented and I don't want my stories to be mostly about queer men.
So, my options are these:
> Change the trans story and make it about a trans woman (but I feel like we never talk about trans men and I don't really want to change what I've already written, lol, I'm lazy)
> Write the asexual/sex worker story about wlw (and I already stated why I don't like this)
> Leave it as it is and have three mlm stories and one wlw story (and I have already stated why I don't like this)
There is a fourth option which is: write the trans and ace stories as mlm and write another wlw story, but I don't know if I'll be able to write three whole novellas of nearly one hundred pages in a year and I don't know which of the other less common identities I should represent if that was the case.
So, any solutions in sight?
Thanks in advance!
Gonna tag some mutuals for any advice and a signal boost.
@chibi-tsukiko @khaleesiofalicante @thisgirlshouldbestudying @kajaono @my-archerboy @magnus-the-maqnificent @itsybitsybatsyspider @rinadragomir @beclynn-herondale @alexandergideonslightwood @hahahax30
will go to my grave saying that 'good representation' doesn't mean a morally flawless cardboard cutout that does no wrong, but DOES mean that the character is nuanced and complex, even if they are a villain
unravel me - shatter me series
LARGE ASS REMINDER THAT THE BEST FRIEND SQUAD EXISTS AND IS ONE OF THE PERFECT REPRESENTATIONS OF WHAT HAPPENS WHEN U PUT 4 QUEER PEOPLE TOGETHER IN MEDIA THANK YOU FOR COMING TO MY TED TALK

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Ms Marvel is a show for me and and every Pakistani-Muslim out there. U have no idea the absolute joy and exhilaration i felt hearing Urdu/Islamic words being spoken as commonly and casually as English. esp in a Marvel show
I just want to say a big thank you for Doctor Who, for its representation.
So many main or major characters were queer, and at the time I first watched the show, I hadn’t been very educated. But I loved them, just as much as the straight characters, because why not? They were all amazing. And then there was the fandom, writing cute little fics for pairings, or drawing fanart, and I realized that this wasn’t so bad - this was wholesome. And eventually, not only that gay pairings were cute, but that I wanted to be in one. These characters from Doctor Who, no matter their orientation, were people I looked up to (and still do). But I still had a lot of internalized homophobia. But I was on the track to realizing, with help from the Doctor changing genders and me still shipping her with River, that gender didn’t matter so much to love. Whether it was Amy and Rory or Bill and Heather, I enjoyed the pairings because of the relationship quality. Then came Farewell, Sarah Jane, which made me feel very sad, but there was one moment, when Luke said that Sarah Jane had been the one who told Luke he should go after Sanjay, who became his husband. That tells me so much about her, and how supportive she was of her son even though she grew up in a much more hetero-centered time. And with all the love and support and wholesomeness I saw, a lot of it from Doctor Who, I was finally able to start accepting my queer self. So thank you, so, so much.
Cecil's next essay will be about
Vote for the next essay
Moon Knight: City of the Dead is an incoherent mess
The Israeli woman in Diaspora comics
The unhinged racism and antisemitism of Marvel 1602
Racism, tokenism and coding in the "House of M" X-men event crossover
Black Hammer '45 is underrated
GOTH LIT ESSAY! WHERE GOTH LIT ESSAY?!