![valley boys gay xxx valley boys gay xxx](https://eggporncomics.com/images/postImg/99314/thumb300_3141118.png)
She witnessed her son, Lewis, now twenty years of age, experience homophobic bullying. Lisa McNally is a mother from Cwmbran, South Wales.
![valley boys gay xxx valley boys gay xxx](https://gaymingmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/stardewvalleyalex-1024x611.jpg)
To snickers from the rest of my class, my teacher said, “so all the poofs have gone off to watch show tunes.” I remember a few of my PE classmates disappearing for a class to go on a drama trip. PE teachers would always treat me like a stereotypical ‘gay boy’ that would rather be brushing my hair than learning the rules of football. I remember experiencing comments from teachers. As puberty kicked in and feelings for guys intensified, so did the bullying, as hormones raged in every teenage boy in school, and the idea of a ‘queer’ being anywhere near them repulsed them. Then, through secondary school, I experienced almost daily taunts of ‘gay boy’, ‘faggot’ and ‘bender’. It hurt, but being young I didn’t really know what that meant. I’d rather stand on the railings singing Girls Aloud – mainly Nicola’s lines I was always Nicola – than play football. We’re a country run mostly by Labour, yet my area voted leave, and many conversations I hear are in support of a Tory government and a hard Brexit.Īs I grew up, the rather cliché saying of ‘knowing I was different’ rang true. The town I live in is rather behind the times: we have poverty, we have more empty shops than booming ones, and the people who live here are rather set in their ways. Growing up gay in Wales, I found it incredibly difficult. Just last year, Newbridge Memorial Hall hosted a drag queen event. We have gay clubs that are thriving, venues that host drag queen shows, and the smaller towns are beginning to accept what is normal. This sort of movement is quite a good sign of how Wales has changed over the years. Wales’ track record of LGBT rights is a little bit hazy, but in 2018 The National Assembly for Wales was recognised as the top employer in Wales for LGBT employees. I’m a 23-year-old Welsh boy that struggled with coming to terms with my sexuality. In this tiny Welsh town, it is almost historic. Whilst the future of the flying European flag is uncertain, the rainbow flag is there to stay. Instead, it has become a permanent feature, flying proudly with the Welsh flag and the European Union flag. It’s LGBT history month, but the flag doesn’t just stay up during February. As I drive through the Welsh town of Pontypool I’ve lived in since I was born, with a population of approximately 36,000 people, I’m surprised to see a rainbow flag flying high outside the civic centre in the middle of the town.