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OUR FIRST ZINE

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Naked Rage is a new collective of queers making their own space for queer voices. We stand together against transphobia, homophobia, racism, sexism, misogyny, ableism, cissexism, transmisogyny, ageism and prejudice based on ethnicity, nationality, class and language.

Our zines are here to allow fellow LGBTQIA+ people and others to either connect, learn and/or stand in solidarity with the experiences shed by our contributors. 

Our first issue has the topic: 'What queer means to you'
Contents:
1. Nothing Space | Emily Curran
  This Was Going To Be About Linguistics, But You 
Know What, I'm Angry | Amy Triptyline 2.
3. What Being Queer Mean To Me | Shannon 
Revelations of Divine Love | Freya Neighbour 4.
5. What Queer Means To Me | Soyah Milkox
The Truth and the Core | Katie Snowflake 6.
7. What Does 'Queerness' Mean To Me | James 'Boris' Walshe
Finding My Queer | Michelle Waymire 8.
9. Running Out | Casey Tufnell
What Being Queer Means To Me | Lauren Paton 10.
11. On Heterosexual Privilege Amongst Queers | Aga Trzak
Nothing Space

I walk into a queer poetry night.
This is a safe space. 
There is a safe space policy.
There are gender neutral toilets.
But the bar. The bar goes right through to another bar. I can see the other side. It is not a safe space. I am not safe there. But I am not there. I am here. Here and there are blurred. There is an invisible space. A nothing space. A space of confusion: labelled safe, but not. 
My friend introduces me to someone. “Hi, I’m April”, they say. 
“Me too!” I say.
“Haha, all the April’s I meet are lesbians! Now there are three here tonight!”
“Haha” I say.

I feel myself shrink internally. My full, inner-self, previously filling out most of my insides, starts to come away from the inner lining – peeling back, receding, sucking itself back in fear. 
I am not a lesbian.
I say nothing.
“Imposter. Fraud. Faker.”
I hear it from this side of the bar, but I can see it leering at me from the other side too.
Invalidated by constant assumptions. Continuously ground down by external and internal expectations. 
What boxes do I need to tick to fit neatly into a category which I both begrudge and yearn for at the same time? 
I feel the shame of the nothing space.                                                                       Emily Curran







u. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you.
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This Was Going To Be About Linguistics, But You Know What, I'm Angry 
u. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you.
TW// mention of depression and anxiety, emotional manipulation and bad relationships

Being queer has been a journey for me. As cliché as it sounds, it has been very much like a
rollercoaster. I climbed up – the feeling of elation, of finally feeling ‘right’, like everything
had fallen into place – before tumbling down – the fear set in, the shame, the guilt of hiding
it from my family – and then suddenly I was twirling through loop after loop of emotions.
I realised that there was something a little bit different about the way I viewed girls when I
was around fourteen. I’d always admired girls, thought of them as beautiful, smart, lovely
people. I’d had ‘girl crushes’ and always dismissed them as something every girl had, no
matter what sexuality. But as I got older, I realised that there was something a bit more to
girls than just thinking they looked nice. I wanted to kiss girls, hug girls, be with girls the
same way my friends wanted to be with boys.

I struggled with this for a very long time. I was so fine with other queer people and couples –
I stood up for LGBTQIAP+ rights, learned as much as I could about sexualities and gender
identities I didn’t know much about, supported all my friends who were queer – but I just
couldn’t accept it when it came to myself. This negatively impacted my mental health and
by the time I was sixteen, I found myself in a very dark place, my mind full of depression and
anxiety. I couldn’t go a week at school without having at least two panic attacks, my
weekends were spent in bed most afternoons because I couldn’t muster the energy to get
out, and then my nights were crammed full of anxiety-ridden revision. Although these
mental health issues were caused by a huge range of different problems, being unable to
come to terms with my sexuality was one of them.

Whilst at school, I also entered my first term relationship with a male. This was a very
strange relationship – it started off nicely and I really thought he cared for me, but as the
months went on, things started to go downhill. It was fair to say I was emotionally
manipulated throughout this relationship due to my mental health, my way of coping with
negative situations and how my feelings were different to my partners. The relationship
ended after a couple of months and for almost a whole year after, I blamed myself for the
break-up. However, this was where my turning point came in. I began to see people in a
whole other light, particularly girls. It took me a very long time to accept this, as I often
dismissed it as a phase because he’d ‘put me off men’. My friends and I joked that he
‘turned me gay’, and in the strangest way, he somewhat did. Because at this point, a good
five months after the breakup, I realised that although I liked boys, I also liked girls and non-
binary people. I just liked people, no matter what their gender.

I came out to my best school friend in a coffee shop before a Fall Out Boy concert. This was
by far the scariest thing I’d ever done, although looking back, it really shouldn’t have been
as she was bisexual so why would she put me down for it when we had similar sexualities?
This was in 2015 and it took me a good year before I came out to anyone else. I trusted my
best friend because she knew about sexuality, she knew what to say and how to comfort me
whereas I felt clueless about my own. On the 11 th of October 2016 (National Coming Out
Day), I came out over Twitter and told a lot of my friends. This was the biggest step I’d
made, as I’d been so scared they would reject me or be nasty, but everyone really
supported me. I went on my first date with a girl, I started talking about my sexuality to
others a lot more openly and felt comfortable overall with myself. Unfortunately, it’s a little
unsafe to come out to my family at the minute, as I’m unsure how they would react, but one
day I’ll do it! Baby steps.

So, what does queer mean to me? If you’d asked me this a few months ago, I would have
said it meant shame to myself, but pride to others. For me, it meant hiding away in the dark,
pretending to like boys completely, diverting my eyes away from any girl I found attractive.
It meant I would support others but calling myself queer was strange and scary. It was
something I wasn’t ready to face, something that made me nervous.

But asking me now?

Queer means acceptance. Queer means loving yourself and loving those around you. Queer
means being open and honest about who you are. To me, queer means total love. It means
having a support network of friends who love and care for you. It means feeling positive
about attractions and feelings you have towards people you would never have considered in
the past. It means constantly learning. It means being fluid with who you love, not
restricting yourself for fear of judgement.

For me, queer means happiness.
What Being Queer Means To Me written by Shannon 
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Revelations of Divine Love by Freya Neighbour
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What queer means to me. Soyah Milkox

When this topic was first put to me I found it hard to pinpoint an exact answer. “Queerness” is broad, and going with the literal and historical meaning of a person whose sexuality or gender doesn’t conform to the socially accepted status quo simply lacks the nuance and subtlety of their identity that many self defined queer people experience. Being put as “what queer means to me” was a wise decision, and I hope to be able to answer that here, though I am not necessarily able to answer that for anybody reading this.

Before it ever gathered it’s LGBT+ connotations, the term queer meant “strange” and strange is certainly how I felt growing up in a very small, middle class and Tory voting village in South Cambridgeshire. Maybe it was my many odd childhood obsessions, aircraft( I dreamt of being either a pilot or a stewardess) guinea pigs (which I unashamedly still love to this day), unicorns, the middle ages; or maybe it was my violent mood swings and seeming oversensitivity, but somehow I never exactly hit it off with other children my age. I was still keen for a close friend however and there were places where I’d feel like I was almost there in that longed for place of my own little gaggle of cheery chums, such as in the church choir where I sang on sundays, or at Brownies, or the football club where I discovered I wasn’t England material and probably was where my deep seated dislike of
sports began. I’d feel the camaraderie coursing through me as we sang “Lord of the dance”, practiced whittling, or kicked a ball up and down a muddy field and almost feel like I had friends. But then it would stop, we’d go home, or back to school, back to me being left out and everyone else settling into their own little comfy groups. I never felt quite right with any of them. Gender roles were firmly established in my primary school and generally speaking the girls had been taught to be quiet, sensible and organised, had well Co-ordinated scented gel pens, lots of hairclips and hair bobbles, and little sticker books full of sparkly stickers, whilst the boys were able to get away with being louder, get away with making poo and fart jokes, and were most certainly nudged down the route of liking football, and deviation from these left you firmly branded as “gay” or “lesbian” if like me you happened to be afab. I remember, from the age of 8 onwards, developing what I now recognise as crushes, on some of my afab peers, and at the tender age of 10 professed love and a desire to marry, one of the very, very few friends I’d managed to make at that point, a seemingly kind and gentle girl in the year above me. I thought I could trust her but the next day I was approached by gawping masses of children asking me “are you a Lesbian???” and I knew I’d been deceived. It was true though, I liked afab people a lot and didn’t start noticing others for a couple of years yet, when I was in secondary school aged 12 and found myself thinking how pretty the boy who sat next to me in history was. Despite having a crush on a girl I never really felt part of their group. My mother was always keen to do “girly” things with me, such as home spa days, days out shopping in town, trips to national trust properties where we’d have a cream tea, sacred rituals of “womanliness” that my brother and father, and post divorce, my step father were excluded from. Objectively, these activities were fun, but every time my mum, or anyone else for that matter used phrases like “girls night in” or “girly outing” I felt weird inside, like it wasn’t really for me if it was a “ladies beauty day” rather than simply being a “beauty day”. Liking and enjoying so called “feminine” things doesn’t automatically make one female, as I should definitely know.

At this point, aged 12, that weird apex age between childhood and early teens, what I knew about gender, learnt off of my TERF mother, was that fanny=girl/woman and willy=boy/man. I had no idea a person could be trans, let alone non binary, so I just put my feelings down to me just not knowing how to “girl” properly if that makes sense? So, in a way that was going to become pretty habitual for me, I subconsciously pushed it back and tried to focus on other things instead. But, not thinking about gender just made me think about my sexuality instead, and this was something where I had far more self awareness. One of my great uncles is gay, and I had pretty much known that all my life. He and my family didn’t hide this, although it wasn’t talked about much openly, and so I was fully aware that it was possible for someone to not be a heterosexual essentially. However, the only possible sexualities I knew were “gay” and “straight”, and any others were unknown to me. I was fairly certain I was neither and this was a perplexing matter. Thankfully the answer came to me in the form of David Bowie as Ziggy Stardust, and for some reason, as I am unable to remember the rest of the conversation I asked my mum if he was gay or straight whilst listening to Hunky Dory. She replied that he was bi. I asked what that meant. She told me and I went away to think. A few days later, in the car after school, we had a conversation that went as follows:

“mummy?”

“yes?”

“mummy, I think I’m bi”

My mum looked flustered

“you don’t know that.... you’re only 13..you can’t know that when you’re 13”

The statement, I now recognise, unbeknownst to my mother, was probably the thing that’s harmed me most out of all the things that have been said to me ever, and believe me I’ve been called a lot of things. She never intended it to wound. She genuinely believed that I couldn’t know I was bi at 14, but the effect this had on me subconsciously has profoundly shaped how I was in my teens and even into today. The resulting years of self doubt, lack of self confidence, combined with a very academically pushing family, high achieving secondary school and tendency to compartmentalise and suppress emotions did not lead to an emotionally stable adult me at the end. Of many things, I pretended I wasn’t bi, told everyone I was straight, for a long time, until aged 17 I had begun to accept my sexuality again after, bizarrely, going to church, the last place you’d think someone would come to terms with their non straight sexuality. I don’t want to sound like “one of those christians”(which is a warning that I’m probably about to sound like “one of those christians”), but going to church and focusing on my spirituality, gave me a sense of peace that led me go stop lying to myself about who I really was. If my peers and my family weren’t on my side, at least God was anyway. At this time I was beginning to learn about non binary genders, having by now learnt that binary trans people existed, albeit through my TERFy mother, so perhaps not from the best source. I was too scared to argue but I disagreed with her on many aspects of trans issues. The more I read about non-binary people though, the more I felt that it sounded a lot like me. I felt I couldn’t quite define what my gender was, if it was a gender at all, and settled on “agender” as the best way to describe it. So by this point I was by no means in a good place, I was still utterly miserable most of the time, still prone to outbursts of extreme emotions over the tiniest things, still self harming, but at least I was finally being honest with myself. In the end I told my mother I was bi, and although she accepted this time, I still feel like she doesn’t believe me and that she’s embarrassed by it (or bi it- pardon the pun). I won’t be telling her I’m non-binary for a while, not whilst she stays TERFy anyway, but I have some wonderful friends who I know I can depend on to listen to me rant and rave about my bloody family like a cartoon teenager.

So I guess, what ‘Queer’ means to me personally is acknowledging the truth, about knowing what I am and not attempting to battle it or hide it away in the dark dusty broom cupboard at the back of my head. And you are probably reading this and thinking “well, what kind of an answer is THAT?”
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The Truth and The Core
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What does ‘Queerness’ mean to Me? 
~ The story that got me here ~

By James ‘Boris’ Walshe 




















This is me. 
Hello. 

I am a non-monogamous bisexual queer. My name is James, you will most likely know me as Boris. The story of that name is sadly not that interesting, and not the point of this essay. What I feel is more interesting is my transformation; or more accurately my awakening as a being of fabulousness, queerity and all around general tomfoolery. 
Now, I've never been normal, at one point I had a vendetta against the use of the word; and even now I still find it a poor social indicator for the status quo. 
But just how “not normal” I am didn't become truly apparent to me until I started to look inward; and instead of judging what I saw, I started to unlock some deeply buried and confused emotions.
What follows is a snapshot of what I went through before I realised that I was different, and that that was a great thing to be.

Destruction
 I had a feeling that I wasn’t ever going to be a heterosexual, monogamous person. I was dating a woman who I had been in a relationship with for the best part of a year and a half; and things for me hadn’t been particularly happy or engaging. I distinctly remember a particular date; we went out to Camden on a warm Autumn day, ate street food, bought overpriced and poorly made things, and took the boat ride up the canal. I remember sitting next to her in the boat, listening to what she had to say; her thoughts about the water, the weather, what we were going to do next. I could barely hear her; I was locked in a miserable maelstrom of which I didn’t understand or couldn’t comprehend the source. I remember asking myself: 

“Why are you unhappy? You have a beautiful woman by your side, who loves and cares for you. You have everything to look forward to in your future. Is that not enough?” 

No. 
It wasn’t. 

Shortly after that, I ended the relationship. In a quite frankly unforgivable way. I hurt her so much, and I couldn’t give her a reason. I was flailing in unhappiness and didn’t know what the cause was. 
Because of my anguish, I made several rash decisions for the best part of a year; several sexual partners that I wasn’t able to cater for emotionally, when what I wanted was someone to listen, all I seemed to be able to communicate was “Come and fuck me”. 
It came to a point when I wasn’t able to take care of myself, and I had to move back home, which was a huge knock to my pride. I had struck out, I had gotten out of Surrey, I had done it. 

But I was kidding myself. I needed help. I got help. Not just from my family, but from an incredible group of people that I am lucky enough to call my friends. 

It was the lowest point, sure I was doing well in my job and I looked forward to a decent career. And I certainly wasn’t going to go hungry; I am very much aware of my privilege. But mentally I was lost; no idea what to do or who to love, or even just to be intimate. Which is something I needed. 

And it was at that point that I was introduced to a community of poly/burner/queer/sexy/amazing humans. 
They not only changed my life but more likely than not, saved me. 

Reconstruction 
A part of accepting my identity as a queer male flavoured person has been to unlearn a lot of the lessons that society and previous social interactions & relationships had taught me. 

“Don’t wear your bag like that it looks gay” - Quote from an ex girlfriend of mine.

Particularly when it comes to consent, expressing one’s true feelings about a person and most importantly of all...coming to terms with my attraction to men/male flavoured people. 

I can’t deny that I was curious for most of my life; thinking about what it would be like to kiss a man, any man, would I enjoy it? How could I live with myself? Especially since homophobia (more so at a casual level in everyday interactions I might add) is so inherently ingrained into our society; particularly where I grew up in rural Surrey, where there is essentially no LGBT+ presence in daily life, and me, a curious yet introverted teenager wasn’t going to go and seek it out. What if my parents found out? What if I became a social outcast? So, like any shy, internet dwelling young person, I supressed my desires until they started to manifest themselves in different ways; anger issues, anxiety, depression and a general sense that I wasn’t really happy with the status quo: 
I am male, and you are female. We should spend the rest of our lives together, have children and then decide that after twenty years I can’t stand to be around you because everything feels wrong and I can’t explain why, and then I will not only break your heart but cause hurt and confusion for years to come in all of our immediate family and beyond. 

Sound good? 
No. It didn’t. 

And obviously this is my opinion; there are humans that I love who hold opposing views, and I admire them for the fact that they do. But I suppose that's the most important thing that I've learnt about, and the most important thing that I could tell someone who is curious about their sexuality or relationship models: there are options. 

You don't have to be monogamous and heterosexual. If there was one thing that I could have told myself when I was younger. It probably would have been that. 

Sexuality and how I express that sexual aspect of my being is at the core of who I am. It isn’t everything that there is about me, or indeed anyone. I refuse to believe that people can be one-dimensional; I simply believe that people are good at hiding aspects of themselves, or choosing the right people to show that side of themselves to. I used to be good at it, but now I’m letting my guard down, I’m opening up. It’s scary to write about this, but it is all part of rebuilding myself, stronger, and more open. And more importantly, being more honest with myself about what my wants and desires are. 

There’s only so long you can lie to yourself.
 
So...the question? 
What does queerness mean to me? 
It’s the everything and nothing of who I am. 
It’s taught me that I don’t have to lie to myself, and that I don’t have to shape my own thoughts and actions to what other people deem to be acceptable. 

It’s that voice of truth that reminds me who I am when I feel lost or confused. 
But it’s also the way that I skip off the escalators of the Jubilee Line after work. 
It’s the way that I mouth along to the lyrics of Feel The Lightning when sitting on the crowded tube. 
But it’s also the moments when I kiss someone, and everything slows down into that beautiful moment of intimacy. 
It’s all of this and more, and it’s taken me a lot of anguish to get here, and I still have so much further to go in my journey into the queer-verse. 

The road ahead is long. 
But it’s a start. 






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Finding My Queer

I spent years hiding
Behind “a crush on Natalie Portman doesn’t count”
And “everyone goes through that phase”
And “I just like to kiss girls sometimes”

Until I started to find myself.

But even then it was
“But your fingernails aren’t even short”
And “you’ve never watched The L Word”
And “you mean it’s your first time with a woman?”

My self assessment shifted.

I was straight
Then heteroflexible
And bisexual
And pansexual
And queer?

Queer? Am I queer?

A houseguest once came to stay with us,
Made some comment, qualified with--
“Sorry, I just assumed you were queer?”

Queer. The word felt comfortable.
An identity I didn’t know I had.
One I’ve never been brave enough to speak out loud.

But am I queer enough to deserve the word?

I scour the internet. I read articles, definitions, blogs, zines, confessions.
Size myself up; catalogue my proclivities.
Heart beats faster as I wrap my brain around the word.
Here a queer, there a queer, everywhere a queer queer.
Queer is in the heart. Queer as folk. Scissor sisters for life.

Now, I nurture a small flame of queerness in my heart.

No longer does my Q stand for Quiet. Questioning. Querulous.
Constructed from a potent cocktail of
“I like what I like.”
And nose pierced, undercut, black hair dye, red lipstick fab.
And a secret desire to bind my chest and wear a real suit
(a proper coat with tails, so dapper)
And slick my hair back.
Then bounce back to femme fatale, smile and wink.

Is queerness bestowed, earned, or inherited?

Doesn’t matter--either way, I’ve found it.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                                         Michelle Waymare
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Running
Out.
You can find this song on the 'Fuck You Kyriarchy' EP here with the lyrics available there also.
u. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you.
What being queer means to me? 

This has always been a really hard term for me to identify as, especially as I was in denial about my own sexuality and faked it with the wrong person for an awfully long time which I feel reflects on me badly. But now, being in acceptance of who I am and who I love is an exhilarating feeling, I can actually display my true feelings for someone instead of awkwardly crushing on them from the side-lines. It really makes a difference from being shit scared of who I was and watching Rose and Rosie videos in my bedroom or the web series, Carmilla.  

Although I am fully aware of who I am and at total peace with that, I know my queerness does not define me as a person. Despite the new relationships I’ve developed or either lost due to coming out when I was 18 and a half, it is not me. Whom I chose to share a bed with at night does not define how I will live my life. For some people it’s a total deal breaker, identifying as queer can make or break that life due to the culture in their life. I’ve been really lucky considering. I have a supportive loving mama, her side don’t treat me any differently at all. My grandmother and her other son and her late husband would never treat me the same again if they knew. Sometimes it feels as though I’m living a double life with hiding my queerness to certain family members but openly gay to my friends and immediate family? 

It’s exhausting. Not being able to talk about a new girl in my life or being openly gay in public in my own hometown in case someone who knows the homophobic members of family sees and then tells. Being asked, “Have you got a lad yet?” every time my gran phones me tugs a little more at my chest each time she asks. I would love nothing more than to be able to tell her about someone new and exciting in my life but I am fully aware the fallout would never be worth it. I have a fear of not only being cut off financially but emotionally too, if I were to marry a girl one day and call someone my wife I know half of my life wouldn’t be there to witness this big step in my life and if you know me, you know I’m shit scared of commitment as it is from fear of being left. 

Despite the drawbacks my life has now come to face I am totally comfortable with being queer due to the positive people in my life. Thanks to someone I had the upmost pleasure of dating recently I felt comfortable enough within myself to come out to my friends before members of my family. Although that relationship has heartbreakingly ended I will forever be grateful for their impact in my life and I will always hold them close to me.

So, what does being queer mean to me? It means facing new consequences I didn’t have to worry about before and potentially losing people I once held so close to me. But, I now know they aren’t worthy of being in my life in the first place if they cannot accept a part of me which doesn’t define me? 
It also means finding new opportunities for love I never would have found before, new friends through coming out on Twitter who I now speak to daily and who have supported me during some of the hardest times of my life. I know if my family were to disown me I would have my second family to fall back on, sometimes I value them more than my relatives themselves. I feel there’s something important and beautiful through being connected through a community where you all have one aspect in common yet you find new similarities within each other. In short queer to me means being accepted and facing loss but knowing the new ties you find through this community can last a lifetime. 

By,
Lauren 




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I want to give a massive THANK YOU to everyone who has contributed and/or supported this zine and our first ever issue!! Thank you to everyone's patience whilst it was being put together and published.

and remember...


 We're here,  we're queer, we're fabulous, don't mess with us!!

love casey xxx
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On Heterosexual Privilege Amongst Queers

As a bisexual cis woman in a long-term relationship with a man, being queer meant to me that I refrain from using my heterosexual privilege. Being queer now means to me that I have to realise that heterosexual privilege is a myth. It is a toxic deep-seated trope that ostracises bisexual, pansexual, fluid and otherwise not lesbian nor gay queer people from the community of people with marginalised sexual orientations. Having internalised the assumption that bisexuality isn’t a continuous state of identity, but is rather split into phases of either being heterosexual or queer, I have also internalised the idea that as a bisexual person i have hetero-privilege.
 
I spent most of my romantically active life believing that my sexual orientation is determined by the partners I choose to be with. I saw my identity as precisely that: a choice. The first thing you come across learning the ABC of queerness is: It is not a choice. It is not a phase. We are born this way. Yet, when it comes to bisexuals, nobody, including lesbians and gays, has a problem throwing heterosexual hate speech of that kind at us. This is part of the reason why I, like so many other bisexual people, have internalised the idea that hetero-privilege is part of my identity: I have the privilege to choose a man so as to avoid the whole hassle of coming out and the possible discrimination or even abuse that could come with being in a relationship with people of other genders. Being with a man gives me the privilege of not having to explain my sexual orientation to my family and every new person I meet. It gives me the privilege to walk down the street without being harassed. It gives me the privilege to not have other men eroticise my relationship for their own fantasies. It gives me the privilege to have our relationship acknowledged and rewarded by the state and churches. It gives me the privilege to access and feel safe in hetero-dominant spaces, which encompasses most spaces in the world.

We all need to realise one thing though: All of that is not hetero-privilege. It is nothing more than an extension of male privilege. It is the privilege that trickles down to me, because my partner is male and masculine-enough, performing his masculinity correctly, to enjoy all of the above. It is the umbrella of male privilege that I stand under when I am with my male partner, which lets me be perceived as less queer, more normal(ised), basically hetero. So, being bisexual and having hetero-privilege is exactly as contradictory as being gay and enjoying hetero-privilege. Because of the male privilege my partner carries, he has to put in the effort to deconstruct his masculinity and refrain from using his privilege but I also put in extra work to dismantle the heterosexual patterns we are prone to fall into, simply based on how we are perceived and the rules we have learned about this kind of relationship constellation.

There is no multiple choice quiz that admits you to the LGBT+ club, there are no boxes you have to tick to prove that you are queer-enough, and there is no initiation process that you have to go through before becoming a part of the queer community. Yet it often feels like there are unwritten rules that exclude you simply because of who you happen to romantically associate with, the very conception queer activists are fighting against. So, as always it is patriarchy that divides and conquers us. It is patriarchy and the lack of a feminist understanding surrounding the complexity of bisexual identity, that sells male privilege to us as hetero-privilege enjoyed by a non-hetero-group. It is patriarchy that makes us believe, perpetuate and internalise such myths and that weakens our movement and community, which too often is one filled with resentment and division when it should be one flourishing with solidarity and empowerment.

Love and solidarity,
Aga
u. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you. what queer means to you.


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If you're friends with me and have somehow managed to dodge listening to a catb song then congrats...you're one of the few. At this point between my constant gushing over how incredible they are or how i've seen them 6 times this year, each in a different city, it's pretty obvious how important they are not only in my world but in the modern indie rock world as well. Catb have truly taken this year by storm with the release of The Ride.    


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____________________________________________
Welcome back!
  Vol. 1, Number 2
Python Post

  This Month's Feature_
  Sport's Features  
  Teacher Facts  
  The Funny Page  
  Recipes  
  Teacher Wish List  
  And I Quote...  
  Mr. G's World  
No one is free, even the birds are chained to the sky. 
~Bob Dylan


Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night! 
~Clement Clarke Moore
Teacher Dream Team Dominate Dodgeball!!

This year the teachers Dream Team has once again beaten the grade 7, 8, and 9 teams. While each student team lost, they maintained their respective pride with admirable, valiant effort. The grade nines came very close to ousting the champs when one student clipped the teachers numbers down to four. This, combined with the efforts of both the grade 7s and 8s, made the Dream Team nervous, causing Mr. G to call for an expanded training regiment before next year's tournament. Besides a couple of scintillating catches on the part of the teachers, the grade 7s were the only team to catch a teacher-tossed dodge ball, so give them a good hoot! The whole student population hopes that next year one of its teams will overcome the incredible challenge posed by the teachers.
St. Peter's Grade 7 boys volleyball team takes Gold at the Regional tournament! Silver was taken by MacDonald Drive Junior High.
Candy Cane Cookies 

Ingredients 

~1 cup butter 
~1 cup icing sugar 
~1 egg 
~½ tsp vanilla extract 
~½ tsp almond or peppermint extract (peppermint for more seasonal-ness) 
~¼ tsp salt 
~2 ½ cups flour 
~red food colouring 
~green food colouring 

Instructions 

~Cream butter and icing sugar on medium speed until light and fluffy. 
~Beat in egg, both extracts, and salt. 
~Add flour, beating at low speed until combined. 
~Divide dough in half. 
~Colour one half with red food colouring and the other with green. 
~Form dough into disks. 
~Wrap disks in plastic wrap and chill for at least 20 minutes. 
~Line baking sheets with parchment paper. 
~Divide each disk of dough into 6 pieces and roll pieces into 12’’ long logs. 
~Chill for 10 minutes. 
~Twist one log of each colour together and turn down one end to form a candy cane shape. 
~Arrange on prepared baking sheets and chill for 1 hour. 
~Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. 
~Bake for 20-24 minutes. 
~Remove from the oven before cookies start to turn colour. 
~Transfer sheets to wire racks to cool completely. 

Tip: You can make the cookies thinner by dividing the disks into more pieces, but roll logs of the same length.
**A SPJH Christmas!**
SPJH can get a little festive around the holidays... 
Ms. Gladney and her elves!
  Coats for Kids!
French Club Christmas gathering!
Ms. Barbeau and Mr. Staple leading our wonderful choir and band during the SPJH Christmas concert. 
Social Action Team and Ms. Clancy mid-Christmas dance.
Social Action Team and the band/choir raised $900 for our Christmas hampers during the cake auction. A big thanks to Ms. Clancy and her elves!
November vibes
The
We are so happy to see you again!
Mr. Baird all lit up!
Mm. Hubley's homeroom showing their Christmas spirit during the door decorating contest.  
Ms. Derible wishes to spend time making memories with family and friends.
Ms. Autexier is wishing for her students to speak more French in 2017.
Ms. O'Rourke is wishing for a good book to read.
Mr. Myers wishes for students to place books back on shelves in their proper place (and a happy 2017 for all)!
Ms. Torraville wishes you all to be confident always.  
Mr. Molloy hopes for a stellar 2017!
Mr. Burton wishes for a better sound system in the class, for pencil crayons, for tonnes of holiday fun and cheer for all!!!
Ms. Janes hopes that students will come to class prepared in 2017. 
Ms. Caines dreams of a snowy Christmas with lots of skiing!
Ms. Kennedy would like all SPJH students to have an enjoyable Christmas!
Mr. Langdon wishes for a Super Grover bobblehead.
Mr. Ryan wishes you a healthy and happy 2017. 
Mr. Thistle wishes that all our students have a safe holiday and return with renewed energy and initiative.
Ms. Blundon Mes voeux: un joyeux noël et une bonne année!
Ms. Lushman is wishing that the kitchen will work in 2017!
Ms. Pardy hopes that everyone will have a more positive attitude in 2017.
Ms. Hubley hopes to hear students speaking more French in 2017.
Ms. Galgay hopes that all staff, students and their families have a joyous Christmas and all the blessing in the New Year.
Ms. Noseworthy would like to make more art in 2017!
Ms. O’Keefe-Swain is wishing everyone a safe and happy holiday and that Santa brings calculators and pencils to all!!
Ms. Pearce wishes for our students to treat each other with kindness and respect, not just at Christmas but all throughout the year! #peace
Mr. Williams AKA Mr. G  wishes for some pencils for my students, some loose leaf for my students, a new chair, a new fancy fountain for the basement, and peace on Earth.
Ms. Walsh wishes for a new snow globe. 
Ms. Barbeau is hoping for a new coffeemaker, the Bruce Springsteen book and a chance to meet the Boss himself!
Mr. Tilley wishes that students be especially kind to each other in 2017. 
Ms. Rhyder hopes that all our wishes come true.

                       And from the rest of us at SPJH, we wish you a happy holiday!
     (It's true! Teachers have wishes too!)
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SPJH teachers raise money for Movember! 
Remembrance Day
Skills NL 
Field trip fun at the GEO centre 
Congratulations to Mallory Button, winner of the Lions Club Poster Contest
Pancake Breakfast! 
Teachers vs. Students Hockey Match!

And the students win!


Mr. Staple has completed every “Super Mario” game of all time!

Ms. Pardy is married to a magician!
Do you have any news you want to share? 
Would you like to join our team? 
Are you a parent with an idea? 
We would love to hear from you! 
The Python Post is a student-run online newspaper written for students by students. 
We look forward to hearing from you!

Please tweet us your ideas on twitter: 

@ThePythonPost




                                             Until next time!


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Live a sustainable thanksgiving


Problem: many wastes are created;people do not recycle stuff
Americans throw away 25% more trash from gifts packing during the Thanksgiving to New Year's holiday period than any other time of year. The extra waste amounts to 25 million tons of garbage, or about 1 million extra tons per week! 
If every family reused just two feet of holiday ribbon, the 38,000 miles of ribbon saved could tie a bow around the entire planet. If every American family wrapped just 3 presents in re-used materials, it would save enough paper to cover 45,000 football fields. The 2.65 billion Christmas cards sold each year in the U.S. could fill a football field 10 stories high. If we each sent one card less, we’d save 50,000 cubic yards of paper. 


Sources: "Buildings & Grounds Maintenance." Frequently Asked Questions: Holiday Waste Prevention | Buildings & Grounds Maintenance. Standford, n.d. Web. 06 Dec. 2016.
Actions we can do to change this situation: 
Gift Ideas -
· pay extra attention to gifts that are labeled as recycable 

Entertaining - 
·Make everything easy for guests for recycle 
· Use plates, glasses and cutlery that can be washed and re-used.

Public Transit - 
· drive as less often as possible during thanksgiving. Use public transportation to go places. We can take bus, train and subway, etc. Public transit could prevent a large amount of gas emissions and save a lot of energy. 

Wrap It Up - 
· For gift wrapping, start with recycles. 
· Use old posters, comics, colorful shopping bags, even old maps. 
· When we recieve, be sure to save the ribbons and bows.



Issue 1 Vol. 1

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Iintravenous magazine
IV
In this issue
ABIGAIL MORROW.....................CLEARING MY MINEFIELD: 
                                                            Food & Fear in the Allergy World

inTRAVENOUS mAGAZINE
intravenous magazine                 Vol.1 Issue 1
Feature Story
Clearing My Minefield
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Food & Fear in the Allergy World
By Abigail Morrow
     I am three years old, and waiting in the lobby of the hospital for a doctor’s appointment. The memory is hazy and dreamlike, with swirls of white at the edges, but I clearly remember sitting at one of those play tables for children, with the colored beads that run along wires and make that excellent whirring sound and then clink clink clink as they hit the bottom with a little boy I will call Jacob. Jacob is also here for an appointment, and his mother is sitting behind the play table, watching her son pushing Thomas the Tank along the wooden track that runs around the edge of the table, and slamming the caboose and steam engine against each other. My father is standing less than six feet away from me at the check-in desk, just outside the little square of chairs that section off the play table from the rest of the waiting area, his back turned. I slide the beads along the red wire, and then the blue. Jacob leaves the trains to help me push all the beads to one side of the table. His mother beckons him to her, and hands him a red packet of something.
"Like all good three-year-olds, I promptly put it in my mouth, and bite down."
     “Abigail!” I look up. The green pebble-candy is hard to chew, so I am smacking my jaw to get it stuck from my back teeth where it has lodged itself. It tastes sweet and sour at the same time. My father stares momentarily in horror, drops the clipboard he has been holding, and vaults over the waiting room chairs. The next thing I know, his cupped hand is being held to my mouth. 
     “Are you eating something? What did you eat? WHAT DID YOU EAT?” he demands.
      “Nothing!” I shout, still chewing. 
     “Spit it out. Right. Now. Spit it out.” 
     “DADDY, no!” I wail, biting down hard. My father’s hand is prying my jaw open, attempting to forcibly remove whatever I am trying to ingest. By this time, the situation has caught the attention of the desk staff, some nurses, and Jacob and his mother. He finally manages to scrape the remaining candy off my back molar, and holds the offending object to the light. 
     It’s a green Skittle. 
     My father angrily rubs his temple, the veins pulsing at the top. 
     “Abigail, where did you get this?” he asks, and I point to Jacob, who at this point has resumed playing with his trains. My father turns to Jacob’s mother, full papa-bear mode activated. 
     “Did you give this to her?” he demands, gesturing wildly with the half-chewed Skittle.
      “We just wanted to share with her and—”
      “You can’t give this out to just anybody! My daughter has food allergies. This could kill her.”
     “Be sure to share one with your friend,” she tells Jacob. Jacob’s chubby palm hands me something green and shaped like a pebble. Like all good three-year-olds, I promptly put it in my mouth, and bite down.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
     The green Skittle story is not one that is fondly recalled in my family, especially for my father, who sees it as some kind of failure in the line of parental duty—one of those near-misses where something awful could have happened, but thankfully never came to fruition. My mother holds it as testament to the fact that danger, for the food-allergic child, is always lurking, even in the fat fingers of a three-year-old playing with trains. To Jacob’s innocent mother, I was a cute toddler with a sweet tooth, and the Skittle was simply a friendly gesture meant to teach sharing to her young son. To my father, who had spent the past two and a half years after the birth of his first child in emergency rooms, doctors’ clinics, and surgical waiting rooms, the Skittle was a potential hand-grenade.




 
     Fear is something I instilled in my parents early on, from the first time I developed hives and couldn’t keep food down, to age two-and-a-half where my poor eating habits had developed into an eating disorder that would eventually require a semi-permanent feeding tube. I was born with anaphylactic food allergies to a host of widely-eaten ingredients in the Western world, making my childhood a perilous minefield of making sure a cashew or walnut was not out there somewhere, trying to do me in. My situation is not unique, and children are being born at an alarmingly increased rate with allergies to eight major foods in the United States. I am the first wave in a great tide of children just like me, and the advances that are made to accommodate me will ultimately make the paths of those behind me much easier. Being such a pioneer should make me feel noble, but instead I am incredibly envious of the ease and flexibility with which those future children will live their lives. 
     My mother has a saying: food allergies only affect what you can eat. This is a sentiment echoed by almost every upbeat, overprotective allerparent I have ever encountered, and technically, she is correct: it is only my immune system preventing me from digesting milk protein correctly. Unfortunately, food is such a large part of the human experience and biological life that avoiding it is impossible—allergies are simply going to affect more than what is served at the dinner table. This has become increasingly apparent to me since moving out of my Saf-T-Zone home, where nary a peanut is allowed over the threshold. 
     My allergies, and whether I could be accommodated at the dining hall and subsequently be allowed to reside in the dorms, was a major deciding factor during my college search—while my peers were comparing financial aid packages and researching the best programs for their fields of study, I was tracking down the numbers of university nutritionists and dining hall staff in a desperate attempt to answer Can I eat here? with a definitive answer. 
     On a more daily basis, my allergies can limit me from going to restaurants during their lunch rush, when I know my requests for clean gloves and clean knives may result in a “technically” safe bagel with an accidental smear of cream cheese along the side, or any number of innocent and potentially fatal mistakes that can occur when servers are in the weeds. The dating scene, which can be rough at best, is further complicated by first-date hurried explanations of hey, I just met you, but should I go into anaphylactic shock at this dinner tonight please inject my thigh with this medication and then call 911.
     My allergies often make the decision of whether to go on school trips or participate in clubs where the amount of work that will go into making sure I can eat or bring along my own food adds hours to an already packed schedule. Uncertainty is the biggest obstacle: if I can’t guarantee that I will be able to get food for myself in a study abroad program, the risk of having a reaction in a foreign country with little command of the language is simply too high. The kicker is that, with the right answers, and a little more assistance, most of these obstacles could be easily overcome, and simply recognizing my allergies as a real, and often restrictive condition with some potentially catastrophic side effects would make a huge difference in what I can push myself to achieve. 
     In fact, my allergies may ultimately decide for me on whether to have children—the idea of creating some super-allergic offspring with someone who carries similar allergy-carrying genes to mine frightens me greatly, as I recognize how restricted those children may be when leading their lives.
     “The world might even have a cure for food allergies by the time you are ready to have kids,” my boyfriend gently reminds me, but I have lived too long with dairy-free frozen treats that actually contain trace amounts of milk to give the world much say in choosing how to handle my condition, much less those of any future children. 
     Fear and caution are not unique to the food allergy world, but they are enormously pervasive. Food allergy parents are often portrayed as bordering on paranoia, and this stereotype is not wrong. In a world where tempura paint, Play-Doh, or a stray dirty spoon could all mean a trip to the emergency room for little Sophia or Daniel, it is no wonder that many parents are forced to instill this same sense of over abiding cautiousness in their food allergic little ones. Yet this paints the world in very dark colors, and teaches fear and avoidance as synonyms. It is true that peanuts should be avoided in the diet, but they should never be feared, as they are not intentionally going out of their way to harm anyone. 
     The very vocabulary of both the medical diagnosis and the food allergy community reinforce this feeling of fearfulness. The word “safe” is unavoidable. I grew up with “safe” meals and “safe” cupcakes, “safe restaurants” and making sure I was “safe” carrying epinephrine autoinjector, inhaler, and antihistamine at all times—to the park, to dance class, to prom. An emphasis on safety promotes a lack of risk-taking, which is good if your kindergartner is unsure if there are tree nuts in those brownies, but has negative consequences for your teenager who has become tired by being made to carry a clunky EpiPen during gym class and may opt to simply leave it at home. 


     It’s a Thursday, and I am explaining to my mother about my newest project: combating the omnipresent fear of food for allergic individuals on campus. 
     “Just remember, dear, food allergies don’t define you,” she says (it is the party line for a camp I once attended for food allergy kids), a supposedly empowering phrase with as much grounding in reality as “You can be anything you want when you grow up.” 
     “No, wait, Mom—they do, actually, they do. Food allergies do define me, and that’s okay, because it’s a part of my identity. It’s who I am when I wake up in the morning and who I am when I go to sleep at night, and they might make my life more difficult, but…I suppose I just have to deal. And it is alright if they dictate some of my decisions, but they can’t dictate all of them.” I can hear my mother sighing on the other end of the phone—there are many opinions on how to handle a child with food allergies, and my mother has done her best to make sure I fit in the best I could when growing up at home. But for my parents, and many others, the fight for safety for their children and a pervasive feeling of fear will always accompany their view of food allergies. 
     The difference? It does not mean that it must accompany mine.
"Fear is something I instilled in my parents early on."
______________________________________________________________________________________________
~IV~


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Spanish Fly Pro

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One of the Best Ways to Boost Stamina
As men get older, they start to lose their stamina. Many of them have taken up desk jobs or started to live more sedentary lives. That’s when they notice their stamina doesn’t last as long. They particularly notice it when they play sports or when they engage in sexual intercourse. They no longer feel like they can go for hours and like their energy is boundless. Part of this comes from age, but it doesn’t have to affect you so severely. The primary reason why they had so much energy before was because their metabolism probably worked far better in their younger years. That goes in time, and leaves men with little energy to spare many days.
jumpstart that metabolic process again. Men have to give their muscles more energy to work with, and they can do that by exercising more. This tells the body to start using energy and burning calories and it gets the body used to being in an active state. If you can’t go very long working hard, playing hard or making love, then you have lost your stamina and your body probably just isn’t used to exerting itself for long periods of time. You can get your body back in that groove by getting better immunity function medicines like spanish fly pro which is also a libido booster for women and also for men which boosts your sex drive.Check out Spanish fly Love and how to use this working out regularly. You don’t have to exert yourself every day, but you will increase your lung capacity and your heart’s strength by exerting yourself on a regular basis, thus boosting your stamina.


Koh Samui

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How to Find the Best Villa for Your Vacation
Not all villas are the same, and with hundreds to choose from, we have lots of options for travelers to Koh Samui. No matterwhat kind of villa you are looking for, there are at least a few optionsthat will fit the description you have in mind. 

But how do you determine what the best villa is for you? You probably want to start with the price, if you are on any kind of budget. Most people do their travelling with at least some sort of budget in mind. So, figure out a price in your head that you are comfortable with paying and then narrow down your selection of villas based on that. Also make sure you know how large you want the villa to be. 

That’s often goingto depend on how big your group is. If you are just travelling with a few people, then a standard-sized villa shouldbe fine. However, if you have alarger group, such as your extended family, then you may want a larger villa with several bedrooms or even multiple villas. If you pick multiple villas, then you probably want to make sure they are close to one another.
Not all koh samui real estate villas come with the same functionality. If you want yours to have all the modern conveniences you can’t live without, then just ask the rental agent and specifically request what you have to have. The agent will work with you to find the perfect villa for your needs.


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Jackets for Owls 
HOUGHMAN HERALD
December 2016 Edition 


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Check Out Some of the 
2016 Pumpkin Patch Submissions 
THANK YOU TO ALL OUR PARTICIPANTS! WE ARE LOOKING FORWARD TO SEEING NEXT YEAR'S SUBMISSIONS.