Identity
Accept who you are, respect where you have been, and expect how to get where you are going.
Pride holds two polar opposite meanings. Pride, defined as unreasonable self-esteem and haughtiness isone of the deadly sins. In contrast, pride is also considered a deep-seated, dignified and noble gift of grace, that offers a feeling of satisfaction associated with time, place and circumstances or people.
By Katherine D. Graham8 months ago in Pride
The Room at the End of the Hall
The house had too many windows. Ezra had counted them once, forty-two, not including the small one in the attic. Light poured in from every side, but somehow, the place still felt shadowed. Maybe it wasn't the house that was dark. Perhaps it was the weight he brought in with him.
By Robert Lacy8 months ago in Pride
The Quiet Half. Runner-Up in Pride Under Pressure Challenge.
If you’re reading this, maybe you’re carrying something quiet too. Maybe it’s a part of yourself you didn’t recognize until much later in life. Maybe you’ve built a whole life, a good life, only to realize there’s a version of you still standing in the doorway, waiting to be let in.
By Kat The Girl8 months ago in Pride
Where OUT Still Means Outcast
She lifted her top without ceremony, without shame. I hadn’t asked her to. I’d only asked why she left the refugee camp—where, despite the heat and dust and overcrowding, she could access food, water, and basic medical care. I thought it was a fair question. I thought, perhaps, she would say she was lonely. That she wanted more freedom. I thought I was being kind.
By Edward Romain8 months ago in Pride
Thoughts on Jonathan Joss's June 1, 2025 Murder
Jonathan Joss's recent murder has been a topic of deep emotional discussion in my household this week. Joss, age 59, best known for his role as John Redcorn in King of the Hill, was an American actor of Native American descent who was murdered by a neighbor on June 1, 2025. Reports say the killing was prompted by homophobic slurs when Jonathan and his husband, Tristan Kern de Gonzales, returned to their recently burned-down home to collect mail.
By Marilyn Glover8 months ago in Pride
My Name Is Still Elias: A Story of Identity, Belonging, and the Courage to Remember. AI-Generated.
I was seventeen when I moved to America. A suitcase full of prayers from my mother, a blue komboloi from my grandfather, and my name — Ηλίας — which no one could pronounce.
By Constandinos Olymbios8 months ago in Pride
Miles in Between
Theo used to think that love would find him by now. In his twenties, he’d watched his friends meet, date, and marry like clockwork. It was as if everyone else was given a map, and he was handed a compass with no North. Now in his mid-thirties, he was tired of pretending that dating apps were exciting. The endless bios, the swipe culture, the way it all made intimacy feel like a transaction — it exhausted him.
By The Kind Quill8 months ago in Pride
LGBTQ+ Books To Add To Your Reading List
01. 100 Boyfriends by Brontez Purnell (2021) Genre: Fiction Page Count: 192 Brontez Purnell is a gay dancer, musician, and writer of several award fiction novels. 100 Boyfriends is a collection of short stories that follow the lives of queer, Black men in the United States. It has been praised for its tenderness, sensuality, wit, and vulnerability in describing the obstacles that the characters face in regards to their race and sexuality.
By choreomania8 months ago in Pride





