موسيقى بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم موسيقى موسيقى موسيقى بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم موسيقى اليوم سنقوم بعمل رائحة تحت رابوزة موسيقى موسيقى موسيقى موسيقى موسيقى موسيقى موسيقى مرحبا بكم. بدأت الناس تهيل علي من اول اليوم. ام عروسة يعني عزمت كل حبيبي. عشان يجوا يشاركوني فرحتي. طبعا كل واحدة بتيجي بتقدم الواجب اللي أولا ممكن تكون أول مرة بتديني أو ممكن تكون واحدة تانية بتردي لي واجب أنا عملته معاه في أي مناسبة حلوة مشارة جواز ممكن يكون ولادة نجاح أولادها يعني أي حاجة حلوة فيها بهجة والدفتر الخاص أن أنا مثلا كل ما حد يديني حاجة بسجل وبها بهجة. والدفتر الخاص ان انا مثلا كل ما حد يديني حاجة بسجل. ببقى منتظرة بفارغ الصبر. يحصل لهذا الشخص. مناسبة حلوة. انا ارد له الواجب للدهوني. طبعا مش هو بنفس القدر. ولكن بقيمة اكبر. ان لين حبايب برضو بس عندهم للاسف. ظروف عزة بيشاركون بس بالتليفون وبيعتزروا. الله يخليك يلا يتلمك. جو يا رب إشه الله دايماً فرحانك موسيقى اشتركعة في حاجة معينة نعملها كده ونقبلها بيها عشان كده عادي عملها كالطبع كامل بعد برس نفرح نحولها كده لصباب ده انت عادي عادي تبتع اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيد اكيدوي اللي معك ده مر اه. يعني الاكل ده ناس كتيرة دخلت المطبخ وبيبدلوا بعض. مجموعة تعمل المجموعة دي خرجت المجموعة الجاية التانية دخلت علشان تغرف وتوزع في اطباء الفوم. بعد ما خلاص كاننا المجموعة التانية دخلت علشان تغرف وتوزع في اطباء الفوم. بعد ما خلاص تكن المجموعة التالتة دخلت علشان تخسر المعين. وتنضف المطبخ بعد الايه? بعد الاكل بقى والدهو شديد. موسيقى محدش يقدر يعرفها غير عندنا مجموعة معينة بس هم اللي بيعرفوا يعملوا ريحة دي اولا انا جبت خشب بيجي من اسوان بنتكسره صغير اللي هو البخور الفحم الكتير الاوي بتسويه على النار بعد ما تسويه بتغرزه في الرمل بعد كده بتكبه لها طريقة معينة يعني مسلا عندنا الدفر ده عشان هو بيبقى بيجاب من قايا البحر فيبقى فيه اه ريحة كده مش مش احسن حية. فبنجيب الدفرة ده بنغليه كذا مرة. فهي جات بقى الاخت ليها مخصصة لان هي تعمل الحاجة دي. طحنته في الخلاط. وغربلته. وجابت المحلب. المحلب ده عبارة عن حبيبات كده عاملة زي حبيبات الامح وراك ليها ريحة آآ ت تحفة برضو تحنته في الخلاط وغرب Cô muốn ăn mùi mắm 다음 영상에서 만나요. Hửm Hửm Hửm I'm going to go to bed. Oh. Oh Ohおやすみなさい 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2. 집사1. 집사2랑 같이 놀고 싶어하는 고양이 집사1랑 같이 놀고 싶어하는 고양이 집사2랑 같이 놀고 싶어하는 고양이 집사1랑 같이 놀고 싶어하는 고양이 집사2랑 같이 놀고 싶어하는 고양이 집사2랑 같이 놀고 싶어하는 고양이 집사2랑 같이 놀고 싶어하는 고양이 잘하네 Thank you. अपने प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर प्रदेश पर बात कर रहा हूं यह स्पीकिंग कौन बोल रहा है जिस हमारे पास एक नई म्यूचुअल फंड्स की पॉलिसी आई है वह टाइम नहीं है आप बाद में फोन करना हेलो गुड़ी निकला में स्नेलता जी से बात कर रहा हूं यह जी में यह मूचुअल फंड्स में इन्वेस्टमेंट के रिगार्डिंग इसमें यार कितनी बार बुला आप इसके टाइम पर मत परेशान किया करो ना नहीं सर वह आज ना हमको लंच ब्रेक न�ोड़ा था कि फोन रख सर एट लिस्ट आप सर मुझे पता है आप आपको इंटरेस्ट नहीं है लेकिन बस दो मिनट के लिए मेरी बात सुनीजिए सर प्लीज दो मिनट के लिए आप जब मुझे इंटरेस्ट नहीं है तो मैं आपकी बात क्यों सुनूंगा आप फोन रख लीजिए सर मुझे पता है लेकिन बस थोड़ी से दया खा लीजिये प्लीज सर प्लीज तो काम कर मेरी पे तया खा और प्लीज ये फोन रखते है ना मैम प्लीज एक बार मेरी बात सुन लीजिये बस एक ही बार है ये फ्रॉट फोट का कॉल ना वच्चा करो ऐसा नहीं है मैम ये 100% लीगल है आहा तुम तो यही बोलो के फ्रॉट करने से पहले है ये सर मैं अच्छली आपको बताता हूँ मैं हूँ घदा आपने क्या कहा वो? एज होल आप वही हैं, वही हैं, वही हैं आप खा ले जाओंगे, गड़ो के तरह बार बार आपके पुलिंग नहीं अंसर है, आपको लेकर प्लीज ट्राइ लेटर ये सब क्या है दिलर? क्या है सर? क्या क्या है? एक बात बता सर मैंने रखा क्यों है तुरको यहाँ पे सब क्या है दिलर्ब? क्या है सर? क्या क्या है? एक बात बता सर मैंने रखा क्यों है तुरको यहाँ पे? एसी की थंडी हवा खाने के लिए रखा है? हु? जी सर? जी सर क्या? जी सर क्या? क्यों लिए देता हूँ मैं तुरको यहाँ पे 20,000 रुपे? घर जाके, शादी करने के लिए तोहाग रात मनाने के लिए 20,000 रुपे देता हूँ मैं तुरको? क्यों? नहीं, नहीं सर नहीं, नहीं सके शादी करने के लिए स्वागराज मनाने के लिए 20,000 रुपए देता हूँ मैं तुरको क्यों? नहीं सर क्या हो गई स्वागराज? खिल लिया नहीं हूँ? नहीं सर मैं वो मैं मैं मैं वकरी की तरफ मैं मैं क्या लगा रखा है तुने? क्रिप्या वरवादा पंखी की हाँ? सॉरी सॉरी? ये तेरा सॉरी लेके आएगा भैटा? हाँ, नहीं सर क्या, script तो follow नहीं होती तेरे से, क्यों, याद भी है तेरे को, कूरी रटीनी है, अच्छा, मैं बोलने जाता हूँ, कोई बोलने नहीं रहा है, इसका तो यही मतलब हुआ ना कि काम होता नहीं है देलिश सर से I love you. अजय को अजय को कि अ अजय को अजय को अजय को कि अ यह सही है चुप करा दो मुझे बस वह कहां पर वो लोग चुप करा देते हैं यहां आप मैंने मौन व्रत पर चला जाता हूं बुलना ही नहीं है मुझे कुछ I'm going to make aチーズチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズをチーズを ਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ ਸੇ I'm going to show you the process of making a I'm going to make a कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि कि क्या मजाग कर रहा है कि वह मुझे पता चला था कि आप मुझे फंड बेचते हैं कर दो कर दो आज हुआ है हुआ है करता हूं वह मैंने अभी-अभी मेरे पती का खून करने का सोचा है वो बड़ा गुस्सा करते हैं तो आप मुझे ये mutual funds के बारे में बताएंगे? उनके बाद का भी तो कुछ सोचना पड़ेगा अरे, बोलो हाँ, हाँ, वो,ो वो बढ़िया है मतलब अभी मार्केट टाउन चल रहा है पर आपको कुछ करना नहीं है बस पांसों पांसों इन्वेस्ट करने है हर महीने फिर आपकी संपती आपके लिए यह काम करेगी और इससे आप देश का भी फाइदा कर सकती है देश की इकोनॉमी में आपका योगदान होगा। फिर शुभकाम में देरी कैसी। आज ही से शुरू कर दीजिये। फिर तो फती का खून और हो जाना कही फुर। पैरिस, वैरिस। इतने मजाक्या सेल्समेंट से पहली बार बात कर रही हूँ। और कुछ है क्या बोलने को। हाँ हाँ है। म्यूच्वल फ़ंड निवेश बादार जोखिमों के आदिन है। कृपया रियोजना से जुड़े सभी दस्तावेज द्यान से पढ़े। वोखिमों के आदिन है कृपया रियोजना से जुड़े सभी दस्तावेज ध्यान से पढ़े मैं हूँ तो तयार छुआ स्कीम माटे अपने पती से नहीं पूछना चाहेंगी गुस्सा करना आता नहीं है तो करने की कोशिश क्यों करता है वह थे सोचा माचो देखूंगा पापा की तरह पर अब सॉरी ना मैं ऐसे नहीं मानने वाली मुझे पहले दस उठक बैठक करके बताई है Terima kasih. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Kau akan membuatnya seperti ini. Thank you. Terima kasih telah menonton! Thank you. My name is Robert Poteanu. I come from Romania and I've been living in Austria for six years. I'm a photographer and video maker. I've always liked to try the feeling and the look of earrings on myself. Experimenting with earrings, I started already as a kid, so to speak, because I was always interested and fascinated by jewelry and all this world of presenting more feminine or feminine clothing and all of that. So that's when I tried on clip-on earrings, you know, in complete secrecy as a kid, which was like super interesting somehow how it changed the feeling of oneself. It wasn't even about perception from other people because nobody else would see this. It made me feel like I was doing something that wasn't supposed to happen. Hi, I'm Patti. I'm a queer non-binary artist. Our relationship with my earrings are very intimate and also stable. I have my ear, my right ear, that always is stable. I can see the pictures of myself from very, very early stages, I don't know, maybe even 10 years ago. And you'll see exactly this set. And they became such a huge part of me that I think I would feel naked without, and I will not recognize myself without them. I'm Palestinian. I just identify as a person and I don't mind any pronouns. When I was 23, when I started experimenting with actually me existing as a person without a hijab in the public domain, I was very like pious and religious and like, I did not like to have any makeup and I would wear things that really like make me look neutral. That's it. I don't want to exist as a female, which like you see me only as that, like publicly. And I really did not want to have that. So like, it's been around only four years that I have consciously like dealt with earrings or started to choose them and wear them or actually stand in front of a shop and look at them and buy. And this is the first letter of my name. Sine. Salma. I just had to wear gold earrings until the age of 15 and it was the same one just with different colors and it was like a marker of femininity but it was not really me. And then at the age of 15 I met friends who were wearing different earrings and I was like wow that's a possibility. And I just started buying my own earrings in bulk. I was a bit judged for it by my family like you have gold earrings why would you wear all this rubbish. But then it was just kind of a very very very subtle way of rebellion. I'm Lily, my pronouns are she, her. I'm cis, so I don't really have this dimension of needing to break with certain stereotypes, but I still like to express myself in the way that I am. myself in the way that I am. So wearing earrings as a cis woman isn't really something very revolutionary, but I still like to choose them in a way that screams very loudly and I think that might have a relation to my sexuality and or specifically my asexuality and my romanticism because it's an orientation and an identity that's usually very invisible so I like to be very visible and because there's also a certain misconception or sort of normative idea that if you don't have a sexuality if you're not romantically or sexually available that you shouldn't be visible at all that anytime you're visible you are advertising yourself kind of in a very freudian, everything you express is to attract a partner, so expressing myself and being visible without wanting to attract a partner is kind of the revolutionary sense in the way that I present myself. My name is Mira. My pronouns are they, them. I grew up assigned female at birth and grew up raised as a girl. And so earrings was something that all my friends had and classmates had and my parents wouldn't let me get them. And that felt really like, you're telling me, you're putting me in this box of femininity, of being a woman or a girl or whatever, but at the same time, you're not letting me get this like one like feminine thing I really wanted. So finally when I turned 12 I got my first ones, and from then I just wanted more and more. That kind of morphed into I can express my queerness and my gender identity this way. Earrings in my culture and in Western cultures are usually associated with femininity and I think why I chose this certain pattern of earrings it was also to go beyond this concept I was never aware what kind of connection in my earrings have with gender expression but now when I come to think of it, it's about a gender non-conforming way of wearing earrings. Because girls in a broader sense are usually wearing two pair of same earrings without any going this way or other way. And maybe for me, since I, from the childhood, I already felt that I was a non-binary person, but my gender expression was not fully allowed to thrive. I was forced to dress as a child, even though I didn't want to. I just recently, actually a year ago, came out as a non-binary person. Thinking about it, I think it was exactly to be against something that was expected of me as a woman, like they saw me as a woman, as a girl. And for me it is an act of rebellion. Being completely honest, I don't really identify as Being completely honest, I don't really identify as being on the trans spectrum or on the non-binary trans spectrum. I basically just identify as male. So I don't think earrings help to reinforce that. Quite the contrary, what I would like to express through wearing earrings, and generally the way I dress is basically a different way of being masculine which should also be accepted and be okay in society. So wearing earrings basically in a way reinforces my masculinity in the sense that I take ownership of it and say look this is how I present my masculinity by wearing earrings and by dressing differently. There was also a part, like a kind of a time where I had a really counter-rebellious phase towards earrings and wearing earrings. I felt like, ah, through that stage earrings really did not fit me anymore. I really hated them for a while because I felt like they truly oppressed me. I felt like I was in drag every time I wore them, even though I was not. When I had the luxury of having the time to think about earrings, that's like a very luxurious thing to think about, you know, because like in Palestine, that was part of the system, like you'll get that as a young female, like born whatever person, and that's it, you wear it, you don't think about it. It is quite a euphoric thing to express my sexuality and my romantic orientation in the color scheme I do that a lot anyway because I also like green and purple a lot so sometimes people will notice sometimes it's a little more subtle of course it is a certain privilege to not need to declare yourself in order to be perceived the right way. But I can still make a choice of whether I show myself in a vulnerable way or not. When I came to Vienna, I was like, I'm not wearing earrings whatsoever. I want my ears to be free. I want them to be how they are, just how they fucking are. I noticed because for the longest time of my life, I had to perform this compulsory femininity that really I did not feel attached to whatsoever. Of course, sometimes I do feel like I'm the femme fatale of the world and that, you know, I perform that femininity on my own terms, however. I do not feel like I want to follow a template a template that glorifies wearing jewelry specifically earrings as a marker of celebrated femininity that's the interesting thing like for different people who identify as a different gender like as women they, they have already this standard that they have to live up to. And for them, taking this standard and deconstructing it is like the rebellious thing to do. And for people identifying as men, just starting to wear them at all is the rebellious thing. They have different standards to live up to and to play with. For many people, especially presenting female at birth people, they don't get to choose this because they already get their ears pierced by their parents when they're very young. But then for some other people, especially male presenting people who are toying with the idea of wearing earrings or getting their ears pierced, it's such a conscious decision and also kind of an internal struggle. Like, should I do it? Should I not do it? And it's almost a rite of passage when you eventually decide to do it and actually do it. I thought this is part of my resistance that I don't support these, you know, industries that don't have any meaning and are like luxury. And we're talking about a very big industry, not only about earrings, I mean, accessories in general and makeup. Like they do have meaning, of course, philosophically and all of this artistic, you know. But all of this is luxurious when it comes to your life, to your basic needs and basic. And that's how we think in Palestine. I think it's a nice way to express things. But at the same time, when I go back in where I was thinking before and what they meant, almost nothing to me. Yeah. I like expressing something through them in that context is really like, what the fuck? It's like you either talk and no one listens to you so like expressing with what sorry that's crazy where i come from it's a very small post-industrial conservative super conservative town so there if you if you dare to be like for example in high school i had like longer hair like this, almost this length, right? Just no ponytails, like teenagers do in high school. And I remember I was walking home one day and a gang of hooligans started throwing stones at me and shouting at me that I shouldn't be there anymore. Because what am I doing there? Because I have my longer longer hair which is like this long which was totally unacceptable so you can imagine if this is the amount of judgment you get just for having long hair imagine dressing differently or wearing earrings or whatever. Since being comfortable with my gender identity I really love to mix up there was a while when I was really denying all the feminine parts of myself. Now since I came out, since I'm very comfortable with this fluidity, I also choose the earrings that are very fluid. For example, again, this part of me is very genderless or goes in the spectrum of what I would expect in a masculine. There is no shiny objects, there is just silver, very minimalistic earrings. Whereas this ear, I love this two parts of me, that can experiment with very shiny like stones which I also actually see male passing people wear. Earrings for me they're genderless but for society of course they're not and the way I buy stuff I look in male section and female section of jewelry and oh boy the male section has the most boring and the most, I don't know, very strict and hardcore. So nobody will think that you are a queer person. God forbid, right? I remember when I was, I think, 14 or something, I saw a boy with an earring for the first time. And I went up to him and I said, that looks really sick. Like your earring looks great. It's really cool. What made you decide to get it on the left side? And he was like, cause I'm not a fag. And I said like, what? Like, what the fuck? Like, What the fuck? What does that even mean? And apparently, getting it on your left side means you're straight, and getting it on your right side means you're queer. And he wanted to make it very clear to everyone that he is not queer. So he's become much more accepted, even as a man, to express this masculinity through wearing a specific kind of earring that's the thing because it's very interesting you could have the same person like say you take a very masculine burly man with a beard and whatever and that person wears like a thick titanium steel whatever earring and then it's like super tough right and if you give the same person like a very fine golden whatever one with a chandelier earring, then you say, oh, queer. It's interesting how this small piece of jewelry can change the perception of a person completely. When I meet people from my own background, and I would say specifically Arab men, Arab middle-aged men, again, who are very masculine, very straight, very normative in all senses of the term. I feel like if I have to interact with them in a specific setting, even if it's just me entering a shop to buy, I don't know, chips or something. I do feminize myself. And one of those processes includes me putting on something that is very visibly female, not intrusive, very visibly compliant, very visibly non-threatening. And so earrings come in handy, you know? Come in very handy because they're like, ah, female. Sometimes when I want to experience less judgment and at least to feel more confident in repelling people's judgment, I will dress down a bit so I wouldn't wear the fanciest, or I wouldn't wear a dress or a skirt, but I would just wear, you know, shorts and a fancy t-shirt. Of course, I noticed people looking at me weirdly or judging or laughing or whatever. So then, yeah, I guess I can take from that that people think about me that I'm a weirdo or that I'm queer or that I'm gay or whatever. On the one side it makes me feel more comfortable that's how I feel more comfortable dressing just like that and on the other side it's also a conscious decision to go out and show society or show people that another way is possible. Some queer people have this inner homophobia that they cannot allow themselves to be to experiment the way other queer people can for example you can be gay but don't be too gay not to be too much out there not to drive too much tension because your sexuality, our sexuality is already something that is debated. So a lot of queer people try to blend in, not to receive additional hate towards them. I have a friend who didn't wear colorful socks because he thought it was too gay. What's strange is that because I was assigned female at birth and I love dressing feminine, it's often like, where's the non-binary in that? Or where's, like, I have to be androgynous, like I owe androgyny, or I have to be masculine to show. And I really think that if somehow I was assigned male at birth and I dressed the exact same way, it would be way more obvious. Being queer should never be an obligation to conform to standards of queerness either. It just means to exist in the way that you are and you are most happy. For me, that means expressing myself loudly. But if for other people it means not to do that, that is also all right because being queer is not a job, so you don't have to do it in a specific way or achieve a certain goal. You know, earrings can mean a lot to some people, but also nothing. When I came here to Vienna, many extremely feminine people that I saw do not wear earrings at all. And very masculine people did wear earrings. I felt like the earrings do not necessarily entail femininity or do not necessarily entail anything, really. And it took me a long while to understand that it's not earrings. It's what people did. And it's how they reacted to wearing earrings or the like they're all. Being visibly queer is in itself like a huge unsafety. And I cannot afford that because I know I can't reflect where I come from. Earrings are something to think about. It's still like a fight that is really minimal, like that is really not like it's not a basic like it's like, of course, it's basic to like to can't like to be able to just wear whatever you want. Right. But like being queer, like and defending this representation of queerness, not my priority. But then other people could could do that and can afford to do that. Because if I choose that, I don't think I can afford it. The question of visibility is really an important one for me. It influences a lot of the things that I do. It's about wearing colorful earrings in specific colors or even with flags on them. But it influences what I do in my job as a writer that I want to create the visibility that I didn't have where I feel like people like me are incredibly invisible not only because we're overlooked a lot of the time but also because the way we exist and the way our queerness exists is not something very visible. You can see a same-sex couple walking down the street holding hands. You can see trans people breaking gender norms, but you can't really see people who aren't in a relationship for what they are and how they are that way. So it's a lot about telling stories and telling about myself where I feel a very strong need to create the visibility. It definitely makes you feel more vulnerable when you're explicitly dressing like super feminine, right? Because you know you're going out there to challenge people's opinions and you have to be ready for a fight mentally. So I'm not trying to push others out of my way in order to make my space and to have my ideas told. I'm just taking the space that I'm taking anyways, but in a different way. And if that challenges people and takes space in their mental perception of me or in their whatever in their thought process and they're like super stressed out by this or attacked by this then actually it's their problem that they're being so uh so affected by this because for me i'm physically taking the same space and and also socially like i'm not shouting i'm not going out on the street and shouting hey look at me i wearing a dress, I just do exactly the same thing that I would be doing wearing a pair of pants and a t-shirt, right? If it were acceptable, people just wouldn't be so afraid or riled up when seeing a person acting or presenting this differently because it would be acceptable and it wouldn't be any different, right? Thank you. Dear Robin, The moment we first met, I had no idea how much you'd mean to me. There was something about you, something intangible. It caught my eye. And I think something about me must have caught yours too. If it wasn't for that history project, I wonder how different things would have been. I can't believe we have to do this. It's so boring. I know, especially after school hours, are you kidding me? She really gives us any time in class to actually finish anything. I mean, can it at least be something interesting for once? Exactly. Yo, look at the nose on this guy. Give me your hand on this guy. I am so sorry I was the first person you were paired with at this school. Oh believe me, I've had worse. And anyways, I'm glad it was you. I didn't say it then, but I'm glad it was you too. After that, every conversation felt like it could go on forever. You were my safe haven. I never laughed so much. and felt like it could go on forever. You were my safe haven. I never laughed so much, never felt so comfortable around someone, never felt so loved. Mia, can I tell you about something? Yeah. There's this teacher I have and- The sound of your voice, every tiny expression, the way your eyes reflected the setting sun I Got lost in it I didn't know if what I felt was the same as what you felt Are you even listening to me right now? No, no, it's just I Wonder what would have happened if I had asked you. Right then, right there. But I didn't. But the moment washed away. Next thing I knew, your attention was no longer mine. Every word you said to him was a dagger. Are you okay? Yeah. Every word you said to him was a dagger. I felt so stupid thinking that maybe, just maybe, you felt the same way about me. But I was wrong. Hey, do you want a spray? Yeah, sure. I was right there, yet you still chose him over me. I could hate you. Then your hand lingered on mine, just for a second. That same warmth, care, love, washed over me again. Happy birthday to you. Everyone in that room was singing to me, but I only wanted to look at you. Happy birthday to you. And so I made a wish. I guess what I'm trying to say is I think I've fallen for you. A little bit. Or a lot. Kjell Kronholm Keksepusten Teksting av Nicolai Winther Thank you. ¡Vamos! Entradas na casa do encerrado Se non trata de Cristo ou de Constituto Era esencial Es-tu-per-al-mal Quisiste saber tu porvenir E cheiras canas que tocaba morir Era esencial Lyset er en avionik lukas. Grazie a tutti. Nettopi Konec. Hej! Vidíte, že je tady nějaká přešleň? Jo, jo, jo. Kansai International Airport Kjell-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Neko-Kichi, I'm sorry. Nettopp The Kansai International Airport See you late! Good! Thank you. Kjell Krona Thank you.. Lyset er i på veien. I'm going to go get some food. You put the power in the voice of the sheep You're a spy to take me to the super-fuckin' Last hour of my life You can call me coach And I'll be back for you Titulky vytvořil JohnyX. The water is so clear that I can't see the water. The I'm going to make a I'm going to make a ¡Gracias! ¡Más! Quisiste saber tu porvenir, te llegaste a tanto como a morir Era esencial ¡Eso! ¡Mirar! ¡Más! you