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1.
Someone in my form was obviously gay from the outset. He acted gay, but not in the nice, charming, charismatic way. He was just loud and queer and was the kind of person I always want to slap; someone it's hard to have respect for. He always denied being gay - and then he came out a couple of years after we left school, and those who'd known him at school just laughed.
2.
Someone else - also in my form. This guy was a little effeminate, but I never thought of him as being gay. He was just a little effeminate, which I've never had a problem with, and nobody else did either except they thought he was weird. He was really really intelligent and nice, and good to talk to and be around. Eventually he came out in year 11, to an overwhelming "so what."
3.
A couple of years above me at school was another guy; effeminiate, charming, funny, and so obviously gay that it wasn't even worth asking or trying to work it out. He never even needed to "come out," he was born out. He was popular, really popular - everyone loved him to bits, and when his year left school the whole place seemed darker and less light-hearted (though that could have also been because I started my GCSEs at that point ).
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My friend might be getting extra time and i hate it.Last reply 5 days ago
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Is this pathetic or genuinely something to be upset aboutLast reply 5 days ago
My friend might be getting extra time and i hate it.Last reply 5 days ago
Just found out about UCL stat test but can't afford to sit itLast reply 2 weeks ago
Dad keeps criticising my university degree choiceLast reply 2 weeks ago
Is this pathetic or genuinely something to be upset about