I'm going to preface this with the fact I am cis, but I live in a community of many LGBT kids and know all of their experiences.
One of them is Alex (ftm), and he is still unable to come out. His mother is very conservative, but she reluctantly lets him get his hair cut short and wear baggy clothes.
Another one is Andrew (ftm), and I have no idea how his parents reacted. But they let him go on Testesortone and call him Andrew. So I'm assuming well.
Next, there's Caitlyn (mtf), who's mom took it really well. She smiled and went to buy her daughter some new clothes and makeup. Caitlyn's never been happier then when she wears high heels and lipstick.
Finally, I know Elena (mtf). I knew her before she knew she was transgender. She wore eyeliner sometimes, and got bullied pretty bad for it. Everyone just thought she was edgy or bisexual. Now, a year later, she has the best contour I've ever seen and expensive wigs and dresses. I'm assuming her mother accepts her.
I've never really spoken to them about coming out to their family, but I've experienced coming out to my family as bisexual. I was outted originally to my mother by an ex-friend, but I told my dad. It was a casual thing. I had been commenting about girls casually like, "oh, she's cute" and my parents knew I was a huge supporter of the LGBT community, so when we were talking about the future and I mentioned that I might marry a woman, they weren't surprised. My mom's never outright said it, but she thinks I'm confused, experimenting, and that bisexuality doesn't exist. It's a scary thing. Once you come out, the closet locks shut.
I hope this maybe helped, even if I didn't really answer the question. Keep writing your story. Ask trans people for advice, keep doing that. I wish you the best.
The line repeated in Hamilton's musings is "on the other side."
We can arrive at this answer because:
- “The World Was Wide Enough” is the song sung by Hamilton and Burr during the duel scene where Hamilton is killed.
- At this point in the story, Hamilton is reflective and thoughtful, he doesn't see triumph in the legacy he left, he feels tired and sad for his son's death.
When he starts thinking about his life and everything he has witnessed, he starts repeating the line "on the other side," as he starts thinking about the important people in his life who have died and are no longer on the material side of the world.
The repetition of that line demonstrates Hamilton's desire to go to the other side and find the people he misses.
More information:
brainly.com/question/1326022?referrer=searchResults
A. Pointing out to readers a paradox of intentions.
Answer:
A rumble
Explanation:
I watched the movie and read the book
Answer:
Read below
Explanation:
This is something we can't really answer, because we don't know your experience learning spelling words. There isn't one specific answer for this problem, it's determined by the person answering it.