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Programme announced for Brighton Bear Weekend

Organisers of Brighton Bear Weekend announce full programme of events taking place from Thursday, June 14 to Sunday, June 17, 2018.

Events planned over the weekend include a welcome party at Bar Revenge, pub quiz at Camelford Arms, club nights at Envy, Subline and Latest Bar, a Bear breakfast at Camelford Arms, Bear-a-oke at Bar Broadway, the very popular Bear-B-Que in Dorset Gardens, and Ca-bear-et at Charles Street Tap all featuring popular local performers, international DJ’s and sparkling Drag Queens.

To see the complete programme of events, click here: where you can buy a wristband which gives you drink deals, reduced entry to events, store discounts and the opportunity to buy an exclusive Bobo Bear designed T-shirt.

Graham Munday
Graham Munday

Brighton Bear Weekend is run completely by volunteers and proudly supports The Rainbow Fund a local grant giving body who give grants to local LGBT/HIV groups who deliver effective front line services to LGBT+ people in the city.

Graham Munday, chair of Brighton Bear Weekend, said: “Last year’s Brighton Bear Weekend was a huge success and it is great to bring back everybody’s favourite events. We will also be adding more events this year while introducing new venues and remixing others. We always want to keep it fun, furry and fresh.”

Sundaes to star at Golden Handbag Awards

Following their appearances on All Together Now, the BBC singing contest with a twist, The Sundaes, the ‘biggest’ girl group in the land, will appear at the Golden Handbag Show on Sunday, July 1.

This unique, larger than life act combines stunning vocals and sensational choreography with superb comedy timing, not to mention flamboyant costumes!

They are big, they are camp, they are the perfect choice for Brighton’s Gay Oscars, The Golden Handbag Awards.

The sassy girls with the big voices and even bigger presence will make their Golden debut at this years Handbags singing disco classics such as I’m Every Woman, It’s Raining Men and No More Tears (Enough is Enough), from their Diva Las Vegas Collection.

The Golden Handbag Awards, Brighton’s annual extravaganza of everything fabulous and gay, will take place in the glamorous surrounding of the Oxford Suite Ballroom at the Brighton Metropole Hilton Hotel on Sunday, July 1 starting at 7.30pm

Lola Lasagne
Lola Lasagne

The awards will be hosted by Lola Lasagne and the full line-up of artists appearing will be announced in May Gscene.

The Golden Handbag  Awards gives everyone the opportunity to acknowledge all that is positive about the LGBT+ scene and voluntary sector in Brighton and Hove.

Who’s your favourite top? Where’s your favourite bottom? What’s your favourite bar and which is your favourite voluntary sector organisation?

The winners of these much sort after awards will be announced in spectacular Hollywood fashion by an impressive list of showbiz personalities and local dignitaries.

Voting in the Golden Handbag Awards 2018 goes live at midnight on Tuesday, May 15 after the Golden Quiz, to find out who has the brainiest supporters in Gay Brighton at Charles Street Tap.

Voting this year will once again take place online at www.gscene.com

There is still chance to nominate someone you think should receive a special Community or Life Time Achievement Award. Email your nominations to info@gscene.com by May 1.

VIP tables at the Brighton Hilton Metropole seating 12, costing £240 will be available from April 2 by emailing info@gscene.com or telephoning 01273 749 947.

Unreserved single tickets costing £20 each will go on-sale at Prowler, 112 St James Street, Brighton from Friday, April 6.

Bear-Patrol raise almost £2,350 for LGBT mental health charity

Bear-Patrol, the social networking community group raise £2,349.28 for the counselling service at MindOut, the LGBTQ mental health service.

The sponsorship money was raised by four members of Bear-Patrol, Kieran Fitsall, Peter Stevens, Mark Alexander and Graham Baker who ran in the the Brighton Half Marathon in February.

Bear-Patrol also provided 26 volunteers to man one of the water stations during the race.

The Brighton Half Marathon is one of the longest established and most popular road races in the country and is organised by the Sussex Beacon, the HIV charity.

OPINION: Transitioning with Sugar: www.ilovetheinternet.trans

Ms Sugar Swan explains what the internet means to her.

I love the internet. It has saved my life. Quite literally. Without the internet, I would be dead.
I remember being in my early teens when we got a PC at home. I was one of the first of my friends to have one and therefore was suddenly very popular, much to the disapproval of my mother and younger sibling who were unable to spend hours speaking to their friends on the phone (we were yet to get mobile phones for another few years).

Once the night fell and I was alone and I could use the computer without friends or family seeing what I was doing I first found people who understood me. I found what we now collectively call Queers. I found chat forums for just about everything I was interested in from someone to suck my c**k, sex workers openly plying their trade, polyamorous people looking for like-minded folk, and it was here amongst the dark side of the internet that I found other trans people for the first time in my life, real trans people who I was able to talk to.

I made online friends with trans women in the US and I was able to speak to them about how I was feeling as a teenage girl being forced into a male role as puberty was changing me physically in ways in which I hated.

Many, many times I tried to speak of my gender identity to both my family and my school teachers. The result of this was me being put under child psychiatry and fed Prozac, and I soon realised that the more I insisted I was a girl, the worse my life was made in the education system and at home. This led me to suppress my feelings and I stayed in the closet for another 20 years on the back of how I was treated then.

The women I met in those chat rooms in the early 1990s did so much for me, they reassured me that I was not mad and that things would get better for me eventually, and they were right, eventually, they did. Without them, I would have most likely been the victim of teenage suicide believing that I was mentally ill as I was told by the system.

Fast forward 20 years and I finally came out and without the internet, which was now an integral part of our lives, I would have struggled in transition much more than I did. When I finally came out I was at a crossroads in my life where I had only two options, transition, or end my life. I am so glad I chose to transition.

This time around, it was so much easier to find my community online and I didn’t have to sneak downstairs in the middle of the night to talk to trans women on a shared PC, I could do it straight from the palm of my hand on my mobile phone. I joined online groups, where I could connect with my trans elders who were happy to offer advice and experience (something I now do for the new generations of trans people dipping their toe into the world of coming out).

I was able to find the information I needed to get myself onto hormones as the wait to be seen by a Gender Identity Clinic (GIC) of up to two years in the UK was not something I could cope with. I was able to arm myself with all the tools I needed to transition in the way in which I wanted to. I was able to do my research on hair transplantation, facial feminisation, breast augmentation and genital reconstruction surgeons so that I was able to get the best possible results for me.

Without the internet I wouldn’t be where I am today. I would never have found one of the best hair restoration surgeons, which saw me go to Latvia for surgery this time last year. I would never have found some world leading surgeons working in the field of feminisation and pioneering techniques in genital reconstruction which saw me spend a month in India last September.

Without the internet I wouldn’t be as educated as I am in Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) and the use of cross-sex hormones in trans women. I wouldn’t have obtained the base breast tissue required for successful aesthetic breast augmentation or the hips and butt that I’ve grown through fat redistribution. I wouldn’t have the soft skin or the female pheromones that I do. All of this, whilst of course, the result of many, many hours of reading, is thanks to the internet.

The UK GIC guidelines for HRT in trans women are woefully behind the times and it both saddens and angers me that I see so many of my sisters come to the forums for advice around their HRT and their GIC has them on a regime that isn’t strong enough to trigger female puberty. We have to take our medical care into our own hands with a good network of understanding GPs who are happy to monitor our bloods for us and regularly test our liver and kidney functions, and thanks to the internet we are able to find private gender practitioners and the means to obtain our own hormones.

My own transition aside, the internet has meant that I’ve been able to reach and help a wide selection of people, both cis and trans, through my activism and work as an advocate. The popularity of social media has meant that I’m able to educate people as often as I have the ability, not to mention this Gscene magazine column along with my other freelance work.

Of course, for every positive there has to be a negative and transitioning so publicly and writing about it so frankly and honestly puts me in direct target of hate mail, but the love and support I receive and the messages from trans people who my work has helped far outweighs any amount of negativity.

May the Gods and Goddesses bless the internet!

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