Video interview 13 year old gay

If you let little things like that bother you, how are you going to live happy? LS: You say you use the way you dress to express yourself and your emotions, do you try and express your sexuality and things like that through the way you look? LS: You say you don't like to look girly, but do you find when people around you talk about how girls should dress like girls and boys should look like boys, do you find that quite restrictive?

I'm used to it, I take it as a compliment now. Sometimes when I'm down I might dress a bit, you know! My look, I don't know how to describe it, it's kind of crazy. That’s the question being answered in a fascinating conversation between a year-old gay boy and year-old gay man for a new video to mark 50 years since the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales.

Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, do you know what I'm saying? When I put my clothes on, it makes me kind of feel better in a way, it makes me feel good about myself, feeling good and stuff like that. I don't let it get to me, I've gone past that stage where I care about what people think of the way I dress and the way I look, if that makes sense.

JP: Yes definitely, because I'm boyish and stuff like that. Does that bother you? When I wake up in the morning I just dress how I feel. It's obvious they're staring at me because I do look quite different. LS: Do you use the way you dress to express how you're feeling and to express things about you?

It's kind of crazy in my mind. I don't like to be called a 'girl', I just like to be called my name. A year-old gay man and a year-old gay boy have sat down together and talked about growing up as gay males, decades apart. Studs model Jah-Phyah opens up on surviving abuse and understanding others in this candid interview transcript.

We're living in a world where a lot of people look at you and judge you by the way you look so I'm used to it, I don't let it bother me. I do express myself in that way, with my clothes and the way I talk, the way I walk, the way I am, the stuff I do. I just be myself and keep it positive and think that everyone is entitled to their own opinion.

I like art and stuff like that, I like anything that's about fashion, the arts, that's my stuff, that's me. I don't really want to look like anyone else, I just want to be myself. I like to be unique, I don't like to be like other people, I just like to be myself. I don't like to be put in a category where people say, 'she's a Stud, she's gay, she's this, she's that', I just want to be myself.

JP: Yes definitely, I do do that. Marcus was born into an open-minded family and grew up just outside of Los Angeles to two parents who not only accepted but supported his LGBTQ+ status; however his boyfriend Ian was not as. Everyone is allowed to feel how they feel and view life how they view it but me, I just feel how I feel, regardless of what people say about me.

It doesn't really bother me, it doesn't phase me. Everything about me is just boyish. In the video, produced by YouTubers duo Trent & Luke in collaboration with London Pride, the two Brits compare their experiences coming out in two very different times. YouTubers Trent and Luke sat down an openly gay year-old Louis and openly gay year-old Percy to have a chat about the differences 50 years have made on gay culture and acceptance.

How does gay life now compare with gay life more than half a century ago? I'm used to it now. I like to look good and feel good. JP: No, to be honest with you, it doesn't really bother me what people think. JP: Everywhere I go, people always stare at me. My mentality is like a boy, and I feel like I am a boy even though I know I was born a girl.