![]() ![]() ![]() Was that done recently? AE: I think I got it last summer, or within the last year. JM: And you have "dead thing" tattooed on your chest. And so I think it's important to be able to talk about it because it affects so much of our lived experience. And it's present in a way that other people might not think about.either at the hands of other people or death by suicide. ![]() I think this is the experience for a lot of queer people, that death really is a constant companion, with us specifically. AE: I think when you give people the space to talk about it, then you can see what unfolds within that space. JM: Death is something we want to talk more about but don't know how. And I think for me, it's been important to draw that distinction. If you died in a painful way, if you suffered before you died, if the people around again are suffering. But what we often have a strong reaction to is suffering. Because if you're the dead person, you're just dead, you don't have feelings about it. ![]()
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