
Saying the Quiet Part Out Loud: Five Voices That Still Echo
Some words don’t just speak — they see us. This piece explores five powerful quotes from queer and queer-adjacent writers who say the quiet part out loud — about loneliness, identity, pain and quiet resilience — and why their honesty still matters today.

Getting Comfortable Being Uncomfortable
Getting comfortable being uncomfortable isn’t about chasing discomfort for the sake of it—it’s about learning to value clarity over approval, purpose over performance, and choosing a quieter kind of growth. In this honest reflection, Brodie shares what sobriety, solitude, and slower success have taught him about building Get Out—and why the hard path might just be the right one.

Reclaiming Solitude: How Being Alone Helped Me Find Connection Again
We often confuse solitude with loneliness — and run from both. But in a noisy, hyperconnected world, learning to sit in silence might just be the key to feeling truly seen. This piece explores how stepping back from distraction, performance, and constant connection helped me rediscover a deeper sense of self — and, unexpectedly, build more meaningful relationships.

The 'Ick' Factor: What It Says About Us (and Whether We Can Overcome It)
We’ve all felt it—that sudden, gut-level repulsion that turns attraction into absolute no-go territory. But is the ick really about the other person, or does it say more about us? Maybe it’s not just a dealbreaker but a mirror, reflecting our own fears, expectations, and discomfort with intimacy. What if we could move past it?