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Sexuality is such a hot-button issue these days. "Are toi gay? Are toi straight?" But what do these questions really mean? How can anyone really answer these questions to the best of their ability, especially when we have people who are well into their fifties and sixties and still haven't figured it out?

I believe it was Alyssa in Chasing Amy who a dit it best: "I came to this on my terms. I didn't just heed what I was taught, toi know? Men and women should be together, it's the natural way - that kind of thing. I'm not with toi because of what family, society, life tried to instill in me from jour one. The way the world is - how seldom toi meet that one person who gets you... it's so rare. My parents didn't really have it. There was no example set for me in the world of male/female relationships. And to cut oneself off from finding that person - to immediately half your options par eliminating the possibility of finding that one person within your own gender... that just seemed stupid. So I didn't. And par leaving my options open, I was branded 'gay', which to me was no big deal - labels are labels, toi know? They define what toi do, not who toi are, I guess. But then toi come along. toi - the one least likely; I mean, toi were a guy."

So my conseil to toi is this: When some nosy, label-oriented person demands that toi tell them your sexuality-- a very personal revelation, even if toi decide to classify yourself as "straight"-- tell them that toi are interested in falling in l’amour with a person. Why? Because it's the truth.

Alyssa (or Kevin Smith) is right when she says that it's about finding that one person, regardless of gender, that toi feel the most comfortable with, and who toi care the most about. It has been a dit many times that the LGBT community isn't about gender, it's about love and that is the truest phrase that could ever be a dit on the subject.

I have been accused myself of lumping too many things under labels in this spot and elsewhere, and I own up to it. I even made a link where I asked toi to identify your sexuality. Why? Because we feel comfortable with labels. Coming out and declaring "I'm gay!" is both a terrifying and liberating experience, because it means that we are something, and it's easier to be something clear than to be something obscure. We are comfortable with labels because they give us our identity while simultaneously dividing us from the rest of the world. And now, I'm not just talking about gay, straight, bi-- I'm talking democrat, republican, black, white, Asian, Arab, American, French, British, Canadian, girl, boy, teen, adult-- Anything that toi choose to identify yourself as. It's good to be something, but don't forget the label that fits toi like a glove-- Human.

"Love is l’amour is love," a dit Paulo in link par Octavio Solis. It is beyond labels. It is beyond comprehension, and it is beyond the laws of physics.

It just is.

So break the societal mold: Fall in l’amour with a person.
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Riley on marketing to kids. "Some girls like superheroes, some girls like princesses, some boys like superheroes, some boys like princesses, so why do the girls have to buy rose stuff and the boys buy different color stuff?"
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