Saturday, October 20, 2012

Cruz set for first bout after revealing himself as boxing's only openly gay fighter



    In what could bring him one step closer to becoming a world boxing champion, Orlando Cruz prepares to face opponent Jorge Pazos on Friday just days after announcing that he was gay, the first active fighter in the macho sport openly to discuss his sexual orientation.
    Cruz, 31, a featherweight currently ranked fourth by the World Boxing Organization (WBO), likes to mix his training session with bit of salsa dancing as he prepares for his fight in Kissimmee, Florida on October 19. 
    Cruz (18-4, 9KOs), was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, a Caribbean island usually unfriendly to the idea of homosexuality. He said it had been a difficult and long journey to reach the decision to finally come out.
    Brave move: Orlando Cruz is the first active boxer to reveal he is gay
    Brave move: Orlando Cruz is the first active boxer to reveal he is gay
    'It's been a long time since I've been dealing with this - twelve years,' the charismatic boxer said. 
    'I moved to New York four years ago where I underwent psychological therapy with professionals to mentally and physically prepare for this step, so important in my life, and I'm very happy.'
    Once seen as one of the last bastions of homophobia, athletes from a whole of range of sports have announced in recent years they were gay, but no active boxers have come out, until Cruz.
    He said he had been stunned by the amount of support he has received from other professional fighters after initially being filled with anxiety about how people would react.
    But an intense desire to live an authentic life compelled him to make the announcement.
    'The only thing I want is to be respected. I'm an athlete,' he said, exuding confidence moments after his workout to popular salsa tunes.
    Pulls no punches: Puerto Rican featherweight Cruz training in San Juan
    Pulls no punches: Puerto Rican featherweight Cruz training in San Juan
    'I'm a professional and my personal life should not matter to anyone.'
    Cruz said he began boxing at the age of seven after being captivated by the way Muhammad Ali moved in the ring. 
    'Muhammad Ali and I, we're very similar. We have the same motion in the ring,' said Cruz. 'We have the same move, the same show. "This is my ring! It's my show! It's my time!" That's Muhammad Ali. I love him!'
    Domiga Torres Rivera, Cruz's mother, recalled the moment, several years ago, when her son held her hands tight and said 'Mom we need to talk' and had difficulty uttering the words: 'I'm gay.'
    'For a mother, it's very tough to hear that,' she said. 'But it's your own blood and there's no question that you will love them and support them, not shun them. We can't force our children to be who they're not.'
    Big night: Cruz takes on Mexican Jorge Pazos in Florida on Friday night
    Big night: Cruz takes on Mexican Jorge Pazos in Florida on Friday night
    Cruz said he was now ready to move on with his life and focus on the road to the world title. He was ambitious and determined to make it to the top and said his next bout was a key step in that direction.
    'I will do it with ease. I respect my opponent, but he is just a stepping stone to me. I cannot wait to hear the sound of that bell,' said Cruz wiping the sweat off his forehead with his glove and shuffling his feet to salsa during a workout break at his training facility in Kissimmee.
    Mexican fighter Jorge Pazos, (20-4, 13 KO) said he was more focused on his opponent's fighting style than his sexual orientation. 
    'I don't care because that's something personal,' said Pazos. 'I know he's a great boxer in the ring so that's what I'm focused on.'
     

    Monday, January 16, 2012

    Why Gay Parents May Be the Best Parents

    By Stephanie Pappas | LiveScience.com – 10 hrs ago
    POLITICS SLIDESHOWS



    Gay marriage, and especially gay parenting, has been in the cross hairs in recent days.
    On Jan. 6, Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum told a New Hampshire audience that children are better off with a father in prison than being raised in a home with lesbian parents and no father at all. And last Monday (Jan. 9), Pope Benedict called gay marriage a threat "to the future of humanity itself," citing the need for children to have heterosexual homes.
    But research on families headed by gays and lesbians doesn't back up these dire assertions. In fact, in some ways, gay parents may bring talents to the table that straight parents don't.
    Gay parents "tend to be more motivated, more committed than heterosexual parents on average, because they chose to be parents," said Abbie Goldberg, a psychologist at Clark University in Massachusetts who researches gay and lesbian parenting. Gays and lesbians rarely become parents by accident, compared with an almost 50 percent accidental pregnancy rate among heterosexuals, Goldberg said. "That translates to greater commitment on average and more involvement."
    And while research indicates that kids of gay parents show few differences in achievement, mental health, social functioning and other measures, these kids may have the advantage of open-mindedness, tolerance and role models for equitable relationships, according to some research. Not only that, but gays and lesbians are likely to provide homes for difficult-to-place children in the foster system, studies show. (Of course, this isn't to say that heterosexual parents can't bring these same qualities to the parenting table.) [5 Myths About Gay People Debunked]
    Adopting the neediest
    Gay adoption recently caused controversy in Illinois, where Catholic Charities adoption services decided in November to cease offering services because the state refused funding unless the groups agreed not to discriminate against gays and lesbians. Rather than comply, Catholic Charities closed up shop.
    Catholic opposition aside, research suggests that gay and lesbian parents are actually a powerful resource for kids in need of adoption. According to a 2007 report by the Williams Institute and the Urban Institute, 65,000 kids were living with adoptive gay parents between 2000 and 2002, with another 14,000 in foster homes headed by gays and lesbians. (There are currently more than 100,000 kids in foster care in the U.S.)
    An October 2011 report by Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute found that, of gay and lesbian adoptions at more than 300 agencies, 10 percent of the kids placed were older than 6 — typically a very difficult age to adopt out. About 25 percent were older than 3. Sixty percent of gay and lesbian couples adopted across races, which is important given that minority children in the foster system tend to linger. More than half of the kids adopted by gays and lesbians had special needs.
    The report didn't compare the adoption preferences of gay couples directly with those of heterosexual couples, said author David Brodzinsky, research director at the Institute and co-editor of "Adoption By Lesbians and Gay Men: A New Dimension of Family Diversity" (Oxford University Press, 2011). But research suggests that gays and lesbians are more likely than heterosexuals to adopt older, special-needs and minority children, he said. Part of that could be their own preferences, and part could be because of discrimination by adoption agencies that puts more difficult children with what caseworkers see as "less desirable" parents.
    No matter how you slice it, Brodzinsky told LiveScience, gays and lesbians are highly interested in adoption as a group. The 2007 report by the Urban Institute also found that more than half of gay men and 41 percent of lesbians in the U.S. would like to adopt. That adds up to an estimated 2 million gay people who are interested in adoption. It's a huge reservoir of potential parents who could get kids out of the instability of the foster system, Brodzinsky said.
    "When you think about the 114,000 children who are freed for adoption who continue to live in foster care and who are not being readily adopted, the goal is to increase the pool of available, interested and well-trained individuals to parent these children," Brodzinsky said.
    In addition, Brodzinsky said, there's evidence to suggest that gays and lesbians are especially accepting of open adoptions, where the child retains some contact with his or her birth parents. And the statistics bear out that birth parents often have no problem with their kids being raised by same-sex couples, he added.
    "Interestingly, we find that a small percentage, but enough to be noteworthy, [of birth mothers] make a conscious decision to place with gay men, so they can be the only mother in their child's life," Brodzinsky said.
    Good parenting
    Research has shown that the kids of same-sex couples — both adopted and biological kids — fare no worse than the kids of straight couples on mental health, social functioning, school performance and a variety of other life-success measures.
    In a 2010 review of virtually every study on gay parenting, New York University sociologist Judith Stacey and University of Southern California sociologist Tim Biblarz found no differences between children raised in homes with two heterosexual parents and children raised with lesbian parents.
    "There's no doubt whatsoever from the research that children with two lesbian parents are growing up to be just as well-adjusted and successful" as children with a male and a female parent," Stacey told LiveScience.
    There is very little research on the children of gay men, so Stacey and Biblarz couldn't draw conclusions on those families. But Stacey suspects that gay men "will be the best parents on average," she said.
    That's a speculation, she said, but if lesbian parents have to really plan to have a child, it's even harder for gay men. Those who decide to do it are thus likely to be extremely committed, Stacey said. Gay men may also experience fewer parenting conflicts, she added. Most lesbians use donor sperm to have a child, so one mother is biological and the other is not, which could create conflict because one mother may feel closer to the kid.
    "With gay men, you don't have that factor," she said. "Neither of them gets pregnant, neither of them breast-feeds, so you don't have that asymmetry built into the relationship."
    The bottom line, Stacey said, is that people who say children need both a father and a mother in the home are misrepresenting the research, most of which compares children of single parents to children of married couples. Two good parents are better than one good parent, Stacey said, but one good parent is better than two bad parents. And gender seems to make no difference. While you do find broad differences between how men and women parent on average, she said, there is much more diversity within the genders than between them.
    "Two heterosexual parents of the same educational background, class, race and religion are more like each other in the way they parent than one is like all other women and one is like all other men," she said. [6 Gender Myths Busted]
    Nurturing tolerance
    In fact, the only consistent places you find differences between how kids of gay parents and kids of straight parents turn out are in issues of tolerance and open-mindedness, according to Goldberg. In a paper published in 2007 in the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, Goldberg conducted in-depth interviews with 46 adults with at least one gay parent. Twenty-eight of them spontaneously offered that they felt more open-minded and empathetic than people not raised in their situation.
    "These individuals feel like their perspectives on family, on gender, on sexuality have largely been enhanced by growing up with gay parents," Goldberg said.
    One 33-year-old man with a lesbian mother told Goldberg, "I feel I'm a more open, well-rounded person for having been raised in a nontraditional family, and I think those that know me would agree. My mom opened me up to the positive impact of differences in people."
    Children of gay parents also reported feeling less stymied by gender stereotypes than they would have been if raised in straight households. That's likely because gays and lesbians tend to have more egalitarian relationships than straight couples, Goldberg said. They're also less wedded to rigid gender stereotypes themselves.
    "Men and women felt like they were free to pursue a wide range of interests," Goldberg said. "Nobody was telling them, 'Oh, you can't do that, that's a boy thing,' or 'That's a girl thing.'"
    Same-sex acceptance
    If same-sex marriage does disadvantage kids in any way, it has nothing to do with their parent's gender and everything to do with society's reaction toward the families, said Indiana University sociologist Brian Powell, the author of "Counted Out: Same-Sex Relations and Americans' Definitions of Family" (Russell Sage Foundation, 2010).
    "Imagine being a child living in a state with two parents in which, legally, only one parent is allowed to be their parent," Powell told LiveScience. "In that situation, the family is not seen as authentic or real by others. That would be the disadvantage."
    In her research, Goldberg has found that many children of gay and lesbian parents say that more acceptance of gay and lesbian families, not less, would help solve this problem.
    In a study published online Jan. 11, 2012, in the Journal of Marriage and Family, Goldberg interviewed another group of 49 teenagers and young adults with gay parents and found that not one of them rejected the right of gays and lesbians to marry. Most cited legal benefits as well as social acceptance.
    "I was just thinking about this with a couple of friends and just was in tears thinking about how different my childhood might have been had same-sex marriage been legalized 25 years ago," a 23-year-old man raised by a lesbian couple told Goldberg. "The cultural, legal status of same-sex couples impacts the family narratives of same-sex families — how we see ourselves in relation to the larger culture, whether we see ourselves as accepted or outsiders."

    Monday, January 9, 2012

    Penis sizes worldwide: Yeah, there's a map for that

    from www.globalpost.com


    China and India: Find out who wins the ultimate pissing contest.
    Penis size statue 2011 03 23
    A Roman statue of Venus and Mars is displayed at Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's office on Nov. 18, 2010 after being restored. Mars got a new penis and Venus a new hand under orders from the Italian leader. (Andreas Solaro/AFP/Getty Images)

    Well, finally. Thank you targetmap.com, a website with customized data maps, for a long overdue look at penis sizes around the world.

    (Hat tip to the Shanghaiist blog for first pointing it out to us).

    But before you get all excited, let me just tell you that Asia does not fare exceedingly well.

    According to this interactive map, all of the world's least well-endowed countries are located there, with South Korea bringing up the rear at 3.8 inches.

    India and Thailand and Cambodia go head to head (to head), each coming in at a solid 4 inches.

    China's little soldiers, ranking 4.3 inches on average, are a good match for the average Japanese Capt. Winkie (also 4.3).

    But the real weenies seem to be in the Congo (7.1 inches), with Ecuador not far behind (6.9 inches).

    And in case you're still unsure of which country you'd like to visit next, get a load of this:

    Another map that attempts to correlate penis size with IQ — two things that, in the case of China and Africa, appear to be inversely correlated. Titillating.

    .

    Thursday, September 8, 2011

    He’s an MMA fighter and gay



    mmac.jpgA 5,000-word profile in the New York Times Magazine takes a hard look at the underground fight club Felony Fights and the mixed martial arts world through the eyes of Shad Smith, a professional fighter with a long criminal resume. He’s also gay, a piece of his personality that writer Paul Wachter explores but does so in a matter-of-fact way that should serve as an example to sports writers who face gay jocks on their beats.

    I asked Smith why he spent so much of his youth looking for trouble. I expected some sort of clichéd, though possibly true, explanation — a difficult childhood or a Napoleon complex. What I didn’t expect him to say was, “You know, bro, the sexual-preference thing.”

    Smith is gay, and I know of no other professional fighter who is openly so. “I was always scared that my mom and dad would find out and wouldn’t like me, and my brothers wouldn’t like me,” he said. “I was petrified, because I didn’t want anyone to find out. And I would try to be the toughest person around. That way, no one would suspect, no one would ever say it, no one would think it.” …

    Smith’s boyfriend, Jesse Empey, also joined us. Younger than Smith, Empey has an angular face and dark features and looks a little like Keanu Reeves. He’s a makeup artist and used to live in New York, and he met Smith through a mutual friend.

    The profile also captures the brutal nature of mixed martial arts:

    Smith tackles his opponent, and when he establishes a full mount, his opponent’s father quickly intervenes and stops the fight before Smith’s punches can do further damage.

    “But keep watching,” Smith told me. The camera is fixed on Smith as he unwinds the wrapping from his right hand. The camera zooms in, and there’s a long patch of white running along one of his fingers. “That’s where my bone came out,” Smith said, smiling. “It hurt like hell, but I kept fighting.”

    In some regards, Smith is similar to Rod Llaneza, an Atlanta kickboxer who is also gay, though he came out after leaving the sport. But his experiences in the physically-demanding sport are just as captivating as those told by Smith. –Matt Hennie

    Wednesday, November 3, 2010

    Ricky Martin opens up about long hidden life story

    MANILA, Philippines — Controversial Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin is coming out anew, this time with a full account of his life as a celebrity, as a father to two sons, and as a whole new individual documented in his own autobiography entitled “Me”.

    "Yo" (Me) provides glimpses of Martin's childhood, describes his musical start as a member of "Menudo" in the 1980s, his crossover to English in the later 1990's and his emergence as a pop icon, his publisher said.

    Published both in English and in Spanish, it also talks about 38-year-old Martin's decision to father twins by a surrogate mother and his philanthropic work as a UNICEF ambassador and through the Ricky Martin Foundation.

    "I hope you enjoy it," Martin tweeted Monday.

    "I've had to tie loose ends that I never put together and work hard recalling memories I had already erased from my mind. It wasn't easy, but once I got going I realized the incredible scarring process that had begun, which I now want to share."

    Martin said that he was overwhelmed by the emotional relief he experienced following his revelation last March about his sexuality, claiming that his sons — Valentino and Matteo — played a huge part in his pronouncement.

    “When I realised, okay, I just pressed send, whoo, I was alone,' the 38-year-old told Oprah Winfrey recently, as cited by Daniela Elser of MonstersAndCritics.com. “I was in my studio alone for a minute. My assistant walked in and I just started crying like a little baby. I started crying.”

    “It was too painful. But I guess the most important thing is my children. When I was holding them in my arms I was like, 'Am I gonna teach them how to lie?' Whoa, that is my blessing right there. Then, when I was holding my children I said, 'Okay, it's time to tell the world.''

    Martin has sold more than 60 million albums worldwide over a two decade solo career since he crossed that has netted him five Grammy awards.

    He records and performs mostly in Spanish, but has a huge crossover following in English thanks largely to his 1999 smash hit "Livin' La Vida Loca" and his chart-topping "She Bangs" the following year. (With reports from AFP)

    Saturday, June 26, 2010

    Breaking the mold, tough soldier salutes gay son’s show

    By Edson C. Tandoc Jr.
    Philippine Daily Inquirer
    First Posted 01:21:00 06/27/2010

    IT’S AN OLD STORY: THE FATHER, A DEDIcated soldier, discovers that his son is gay. He is enraged. He feels humiliated. What would his colleagues in the military say?

    But M/Sgt. Leonilo Pedrosa, a unit sergeant major at the Air Force General Hospital and the father of stand-up comic Neil Pedrosa, is made of different stuff.

    Pedrosa, 51, once brought his superior and fellow soldiers to a comedy bar to watch Neil’s show. He buys Neil’s whitening pills. He drives Neil to provincial gigs.

    Neil, 25, is well-known for his talent in mimicking the voices of certain local and international singers and actors. And he is as proud of his father—one of this year’s Ten Outstanding Philippine Soldiers (TOPS)—as the latter is of him.

    Pedrosa admitted that accepting his son’s homosexuality was not an easy process, especially because he had lived practically all his life in an institution where manhood is the norm.

    “I asked myself: ‘Should I get angry? Should I accept it?’” he recalled.

    Pedrosa is the eldest in a brood of four sons. His father, M/Sgt. Leonardo Pedrosa, and his brother, S/Sgt. Leandro Pedrosa, also served in the Air Force.

    He had wanted to be a civilian pilot, but getting into the military was a practical decision: His father was then about to retire from the service, and the family lived in a compound near Villamor Air Base that was strictly for Air Force personnel.

    His father retired in 1978. By then it was too late for Pedrosa to pursue his other dream of entering the Philippine Military Academy and becoming a commissioned officer.

    Thus, he enrolled in a two-year aeronautics course and became an enlisted airman in 1981.

    Pedrosa learned to love his job even if he was later assigned to the Air Force General Hospital where he initially worked as a messenger and ambulance driver.

    He was eventually promoted to head of all the enlisted personnel assigned at the hospital, where he met the love of his life—Julieta, a civilian nurse, who became his wife.

    No confrontation

    Neil is the eldest of the couple’s three children.

    The father soon noticed that his son seemed feminine and had many gay friends in high school. He never asked, but he knew.

    “I didn’t know if I could confront him about it,” Pedrosa said. “I also didn’t know if he would answer me.”

    Neil said he had never admitted anything to his father, especially because he acted “normally” when the latter was around.

    He said his father was disappointed when he started to work in comedy bars: “I felt that he did not really want me to perform.”

    But Pedrosa did not get in his son’s way, having decided that he should let his children follow their dreams.

    It is a decision that he does not regret.

    Neil earned well, and his talent soon got noticed. He now appears in an afternoon television series.

    And Pedrosa’s actions indicate how proud he is of his son.

    He shows his colleagues in the military Neil’s latest videos on YouTube. He volunteers to invite Neil to perform in certain events of the Air Force.

    And it was he who kept his son company at the hospital when the latter decided to go for a nose lift.

    His kids’ friend

    By his account, Pedrosa was a strict father who ordered his children to line up, as in military formation, when he scolded them.

    But he later realized how harsh he had been and tried to be friends with his children, recalling how, when they were young, he and his brothers rarely saw their own father who was usually assigned to far provinces.

    Despite the distance, however, he grew up proud of his father and often told bullying playmates that the latter carried a big gun.

    Now that he has three children of his own, Pedrosa makes it a point to spend more time with them.

    “I am not a perfect father,” he said. “But I try my best to be a responsible father.”

    The lessons he has learned as a father also help in his work, Pedrosa said. Thus, he treats his subordinates as his children and considers the Air Force hospital his “second family,” he said.

    Loves helping people

    The TOPS search is an annual undertaking of the Metrobank Foundation and the Rotary Club of Makati.

    Outstanding soldiers, including two enlisted personnel and one commissioned officer from each of the Armed Forces of the Philippines’ three major services (the Army, Navy and Air Force) are chosen and honored. One winner is selected from the AFP Technical Services Units.

    In giving Pedrosa the award, the Metrobank Foundation recognized the innovations he introduced at the Air Force hospital, such as improving the record system for patients and introducing a color-coded sign system.

    But Neil believes that dedication to public service was what made his father, who also helps in air evacuation operations, win the award.

    “He loves helping people,” Neil said. “I wish he can continue helping others because I know this makes him happy.”

    The other TOPS awardees are Army Col. Melquiades Feliciano, M/Sgt. Ruben Lucero, M/Sgt. Hercules Regis, Navy Col. Nathaniel Casem, T/Sgt. Marcelo Batingan, Sgt. Vicente Sustiverio Jr., Air Force Col. Arnold Mancita, T/Sgt. Rogelio Alarcon Jr. and Maj. Vicente Magaro.

    They each received a trophy and a cash prize of P250,000 during the awarding ceremony in March.

    Sunday, June 20, 2010

    Final Goodbye

    I hope that this goodbye is final. I had already bidden him goodbye, after our second meeting that culminated in love-making at a hotel along Recto Avenue.

    He wouldn't make a good partner, as his recent actions would prove. We had agreed to meet yesterday evening, yet he went to Las Piñas for a cousin's despedida party. No problem with that. But did he inform me that he wouldn't be able to show up for our date? No, he didn't. I was just a text away. Lying in bed with him while he was busy pounding the keypad of his mobile phone, I sarcastically remarked, "Marunong ka palang magtext!" He didn't respond.

    I had to call him several times, within 30 minutes or so of each other, to remind him about our meeting. The first time I called him (around 8:30 pm), he said he'd leave the party around 10 pm. When I called back around 9:45 pm, he said he was already waiting for a bus ride. Around 10:45 pm, I called him to ask for his whereabouts. He replied that he was already on the way. At 11:45 pm, I called him again (I was already in the vicinity of his house) and he said he hadn't left and asked where I was going to wait for him. I said, "Isetann Recto."
    At 12:15 I began a series of 4 calls from the PLDT Payphone at the Mini-Stop located at the corner of Quezon Boulevard and Recto Avenue that didn't get a reply from him. I went to this place for a recharge of my cellphone battery. When my cellphone was charged enough to hold a call, I dialed him and he responded, with an obvious irritation in his voice. "Where are you? I am leaving now for home for it's late and I have to leave early tomorrow for work." I got frantic, trying to appease him, the tone of my voice begging him to stay. I didn't wait this long just to be abandoned. Luckily, he waited for me.

    We finally were able to get to our favorite motel. And he played the hard-to-get game again. Not allowing me to kiss him on his face, and showing annoyance at every attempt I made to kiss him. I did remember that he initiated a lip-to-lip kiss last time we were in the hotel. I also haven't forgotten that he promised to do a BJ on me on our second meeting. This was now our 3rd meeting and he still had'nt made good on his promise, not to mention that he conveniently forgot to pay me the P200 he borrowed from me last time.
    I've gotten tired of the game he's playing and disengaged, assuming a fetal position and closing my eyes to indicate I was going to sleep. I never attempted to touch him after that.
    When a hotel attendant came to our room for the wake up call, I paid for a 2-hour extension, informing Marlon that he could go ahead and I would stay behind. I didn't know what came to him, but he decided to stay with me, telling me that he'd call in sick or words to that effect.
    I hope not to see him again in the near future. He's not been very good to me and I know deep in my soul that he wouldn't make a good partner.