We were floored this week by the posts we came across on WordPress.com. This community is full of different voices: bold, opinionated, and honest. You take risks and put yourselves out there. You offer perspectives on issues that matter to you. You use your blogs and websites as platforms to share your insights and musings with others.
If you're looking for reading material, here are four recent posts to consider:
I have been Muslim for about two and a half years now. About 6 months after that, I began dressing more modestly, wearing long sleeves, looser fitting clothes, etc. I knew then that I would eventually want to/ need to wear a hijab, but wasn't ready for that.
The writer at Meditations of a Muslimah explores life as an American Muslimah. In this post, she describes how she's thought about wearing hijab for a long time, but has always come up with excuses: it could be a distraction at work, where she deals with clients in social work, as well as in her community. "Living in the 'Bible Belt,' people can be pretty judgmental here," she writes, "though they won't always admit it or blatantly say it to your face." Writing with both eloquence and honesty, she concludes that these are all just excuses -- "excuses for not doing what I'm supposed to do."
As such, I'm not sure I would go as far as to say that gay celebrities have a social or moral duty to be open about their sexuality. But I am prepared to argue that by refusing to acknowledge that they are gay -- or that once, not that long ago, they were scared to admit it in public -- they're perpetuating an inhibiting and heteronormative status quo.
It's film awards season, and last Sunday Hollywood rolled out the red carpet at the Golden Globes ceremony. In a personal and emotional acceptance speech for the Cecil B. DeMille Award, actress Jodie Foster talked about a whole life lived in the public eye -- and the value of privacy. Josef Church-Woods, a writer at LGBTICONS, appreciates Foster's speech: "We need all the positive, gay role models we can get, flying the flag for 'modern families' and the notion that love is love, regardless of sexuality." But he goes on to explain how important it is for public personas to speak up -- and to see that talking freely about sexual orientation doesn't imply an invasion of privacy.
Social agents constantly feed the young with sugar-coated phrases. You may have heard them before; they appear on posters sold in stores that target teachers. "You are special," "The world is your oyster," "You are unique," etc. Everyone is being told they are special. Everyone is unique.
Michelle, the university student behind The Grumpy Giraffe, tackles social issues, particularly in education, and we enjoyed reading her take on individualism, entitlement, and today's youth. She is critical of educators who "feed pretty phrases" to students, making them believe they're innately special, and urges them to provide specific, behavior-targeted feedback instead of meaningless phrases that set up students to fail.
Two months into our new life in Munich, two months after burying our son in another country, and my parents have not contacted us yet.
From the very beginning, we were locked in to Melissa's personal, sad, but beautiful piece at Melissa Writes of Passage about grief and dealing with the death of a son. Intimate and painful, she tells a story that has to be told, with honesty and carefully crafted dialogue. She also writes about how things are not said: parents and friends who keep their distance -- who give her breathing space -- when the opposite is needed and craved. "If we think it's better we all pretend nothing happened, and that we as friends are safer staying far away, we are also terribly mistaken."
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