Empowerment
How to Build Confidence in 30 Days — A Practical Guide That Actually Works
Introduction Confidence isn’t a gift you’re either born with or doomed to live without. It’s a skill — one that can be learned, strengthened, and mastered over time. The difference between the person who walks into a room with ease and the one who quietly slips into the background isn’t fate or luck; it’s the accumulation of habits, mindset shifts, and daily practice.
By Mahveen khan6 months ago in Pride
Boy George Take it Like a Man
In the 90’s Boy George had released his autobiography called “Take it Like A Man”. It’s a really great read and it had a lot of great pictures in it too. The book covers everything his sexuality, his relationship with Jon Moss, the life of a pop star, and all the sex, drugs, and rock n roll that go along with it.
By Rikki La Rouge 6 months ago in Pride
Pedro Zamora A true activist 🇨🇺 🏳️🌈
Is it me or did Pedro Zamora look a lot like Desi Arnaz? Pedro Zamora was a cast member on the MTV Real World San Francisco. He was Gay and Cuban and from Cuba 🇨🇺 originally and from Miami . Pedro had HIV and he was an activist for a cure and awareness. His roommates on the show became his family. He married his boyfriend on the show and he died before the camera. Rest in Peace Pedro Zamora. He was also proudly Cuban. Pedro lives on through his humanitarian efforts and the Real World San Francisco
By Rikki La Rouge 6 months ago in Pride
From Taliban Target to Nobel Laureate: The Unstoppable Journey of Malala Yousafzai
### 🌄 Roots of Rebellion: A Girl Named After a Heroine Born July 12, 1997, in Pakistan’s Swat Valley, Malala Yousafzai entered a world where girls’ births were often met with silence. Yet her father, educator Ziauddin Yousafzai, declared: "I did not clip her wings" . Named after Malalai of Maiwand – an Afghan poet-warrior who inspired battlefield victory – Malala grew up amidst books and progressive ideals at her father’s Khushal Girls School . By age 10, her world darkened. The Taliban seized Swat in 2008, banning music, destroying over 400 girls’ schools, and imposing brutal punishments. "I had nightmares about war," she confessed in her first anonymous BBC Urdu diary entry at age 11, writing under the pseudonym *Gul Makai* ("cornflower") . Her January 2009 entry captured a child’s terror: *"Only 11 out of 27 pupils attended class... My three friends fled after the Taliban’s edict"* .
By Danyal Hashmi6 months ago in Pride









