Tag Archives: kevin truong

Marcus, Desk Operator, Bratislava, Slovakia

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong


photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong


photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

Marcus, in his own words: “For me being gay expresses mostly the sexuality and gender that you are attracted most to, and who you choose to love. It also means being yourself, to live life how you want without restrictions, to kiss your partner when you feel you want to, hold his hand, and to love passionately.

Well, there were many challenges (in my life) and I believe that all of them has its importance and moves you forward. When I was a teenager I was pretty curious about sexuality and sex itself, so I had met a few guys to have fun with. But the first one I had met, gave me something that others hadn’t, so we had kind of a relationship. He was a person with some past, so he practically showed me the gay scene. I trusted him, and betrayal happened. It was some time that we were not in much contact. I had to do some checkups, and the doctor also needed to test my partner, so I informed him, but the doctor said he was not coming, therefore I gave her his name. The next information that was given to me was that this man was tested for HIV and his results were positive. The worst thing is that he knew and didn’t tell me anything. It was a really hard part of my life for me and my family. Luckily the tests said I was healthy. I still get tested regularly and I also check and ask my partners about their health.

Now I can say that the success is that I’m healthy and alive (haha) J but it is true. Things at home weren’t as good as I would like them to be at that time, so I was dreaming about living on my own live. The first time I left was when I was 17. I had graduated from high school, while I had a little business with jewelry with my boyfriend. That guy that I had met when I was 17 and I realized that I wanted him so much, that I decided I had to get him, so that was the success no. 2 🙂 We were together a lot of beautiful and hard times as well, that kind of relationship gives you the experiences you need. And today I live with my friends in Bratislava, and I have job that I love, perfect people around me, am living a vegan lifestyle, and investing my free time in activism for animals and the environment.

My coming out story is long, it is being done as I go. When it comes to the topic, when somebody asks me about my partner I just respond about him in the masculine gender and thats it, sometimes people get it just as we have the conversation. However it started with my mom, when I was watching, or more like staring at Marilyn Manson’s clip (I think it was this is the new shit) actually I was staring at him because of his extravagancy, but she asked me if I was a bisexual so I just replied yes. She wasn’t excited about it, but I didn’t care 😉 We just had it hard with each other.

The gay community in Bratislava is.. .hmm thats the hard question. It is colorful like a rainbow I would say. Mostly you find here a lot of hookups like everywhere I think. Then there are the best guys that you don’t find because they already have boyfriends or they are just hidden, pretending to be straight. And then normal guys like me that are waiting for the right one, while working on myself.

To my younger myself I would give advice about being self-confident and to look at the things from a higher perspective. Every time. And mostly in hard times. Also to know that everything will always be okay, and if it is not, it is not the end. Everything happens for a reason and has its purpose. Always think with your head, don’t let others think for you! Live like a party monster, don’t dream it, be it!”

Thibaud and Michel, Phnom Penh, Cambodia

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

Thibaud, in his own words: “Pour moi, ĂȘtre gay ne fait aucune diffĂ©rence, je suis juste un amoureux comme les autres mais il se trouve que je suis amoureux d’un homme.

Etre amoureux ou le couple est un challenge de tous les jours, il y a des pĂ©riodes plus ou moins difficiles. J’avais une grande apprĂ©hension a m’affirmer en tant que gay plus jeune car je n’avais personne Ă  prĂ©senter Ă  ma famille et Ă  mes amis, alors je prĂ©fĂ©rais ne pas parler de ma vie privĂ©e aux autres.

Mes parents sont les premiers Ă  qui j’ai avouĂ© mon homosexualitĂ©. J’étais un jeune adulte et venait de rencontrer mon futur mari. Ils ont rĂ©pondu qu’ils Ă©taient contents pour moi et qu’ils m’aimaient, la rĂ©action parfaite. Ensuite, pour mes frĂšres et sƓurs leur rĂ©action n’a pas Ă©tĂ© nĂ©gative non plus. C’était plutĂŽt “Et alors ? On s’en fiche, c’est ta vie ! Et on t’aime ! ». Au fond pour moi la seule difficultĂ© Ă©tait la rĂ©action que je pensais qu’ils auraient pu avoir. Mais je sais que j’ai eu beaucoup de chance, j’ai des copains pour qui “le coming out” a Ă©tĂ© un vĂ©ritable drame et que leurs parents les ont rejetĂ©s. Moi, heureusement, j’ai Ă©chappĂ© Ă  ça parce que j’ai une famille intelligente et aimante.

La vie gay a Phnom Penh est assez facile, les cambodgiens sont bouddhistes et tolĂ©rants. La notion de « gay » n’existe pas au Cambodge. On dĂ©signe seulement dans le bouddhisme les gens qui sont nĂ©s dans « un mauvais corps » et qui veulent en changer, qu’ils soient garçons ou filles. Par ailleurs, les relations sexuelles sont trĂšs libres ici et on peut avoir des relations entre hommes ou femmes sans que cela ne choque grand monde. Par contre l’institution du mariage reste un pilier et on doit se marier. En revanche, dans la plus part des cas, on ne choisit pas son mari ou sa femme, c’est pour ça que les relations extra conjugales sont monnaie courante aussi bien hĂ©tĂ©rosexuel qu’homosexuel.

Un double je n’en ai pas et heureusement pour lui, je me garde de lui donner des conseils si ce n’est crois en toi, tout est possible, il suffit de le vouloir trĂšs fort.”

In English:

“For me, being gay does not make any difference, I’m just a lover like any other but it happens that I’m in love with a man.

Being in love or a couple is a challenge every day, there are more or less difficult times. I had a great apprehension asserting myself as gay when I was younger because I had no one to present to my family and to my friends, so I preferred not to talk about my private life to others.

My parents are the first to whom I confessed my homosexuality. I was a young adult and had just met my future husband. They said they were happy for me and they loved me, the perfect reaction. Then, to my brothers and sisters their reaction was not negative either. It was rather “So what? Who cares, it’s your life! And we love you! “. Basically for me the only difficulty was the reaction that I thought they might have. But I know I’ve been very lucky, I have friends for whom “coming out” was a real tragedy and their parents have rejected them. I, fortunately escaped it because I have an intelligent and loving family.

Gay life in Phnom Penh is easy enough, Cambodians are Buddhists and tolerant. The notion of “gay” does not exist in Cambodia. Only designates in Buddhism people who are born in “the wrong body” and want to change, whether boys or girls. Furthermore, sexual relations are very free here and we can have relationships between men and women without this offending many people.

I refrain from giving advice, but I would say believe in yourself, anything is possible, you only have to want it very hard.”

Michel, in his own words:“C’est de vivre librement et sans complexe ma sexualitĂ© et une certaine excentricitĂ© assumĂ©es.

J’ai eu globalement beaucoup de chance de ne pas subir l’homophobie dans mon entourage immĂ©diat, si ce n’est pour des questions religieuses dont je reviendrai plus loin.

C’est une histoire compliquĂ©e qui a coĂŻncidĂ©e avec mon divorce (j’étais mariĂ© avec une femme et j’ai deux enfants) quand j’avais trente ans. J’ai grandi dans une famille TĂ©moins de JĂ©hovah, une secte chrĂ©tienne apocalyptique qui ne laisse aucune place aux amours de mĂȘme sexe qui sont considĂ©rĂ©s comme une « abomination » dans la Bible
 (« les hommes qui couchent avec des hommes mĂ©ritent la mort »). Avant mon mariage avec mon ex-femme, je n’avais jamais eu de relation avec des hommes. En divorçant, j’ai Ă©galement quittĂ© la secte des TĂ©moins de JĂ©hovah et mes parents ont dĂ©couvert mon homosexualitĂ© Ă  cette pĂ©riode-lĂ  . Ca a Ă©tĂ© un grand choc pour toute la famille mais davantage parce que j’ai quittĂ© la secte que pour mon homosexualitĂ©. J’ai ensuite subi l’ostracisme et l’exclusion de tout mon cercle amical et familial composĂ© uniquement de TĂ©moins de JĂ©hovah et ai beaucoup souffert de cette situation. L’amour familial a permis au fil des ans d’effacer tout ça et j’ai aujourd’hui des relations apaisĂ©es avec mes parents qui m’aiment pour ce que je suis, qui apprĂ©cient mon mari Thibaud et qui sont ravis d’avoir une petite fille d’origine cambodgienne que nous avons adoptĂ© avec Thibaud en 2013.

Il faut diffĂ©rencier la communautĂ© gay expat de celle des cambodgiens et les expats sont les mĂȘmes ici que dans la plupart des pays occidentaux. CotĂ© cambodgien en revanche, il n’existe pas vraiment de « communautĂ© gay » si ce n’est un cercle trĂšs fermĂ©. Rares sont les gays qui s’assument en tant que tels, la plupart vivant leur homosexualitĂ© de façon cachĂ©e. C’est Ă©trange car ils ne subissent aucune pression d’origine religieuse et il existe une grande tolĂ©rance dans ce pays pour les amours de mĂȘme sexe. La pression familiale et sociĂ©tale et le « qu’en dira-t-on » sont nĂ©anmoins suffisamment puissants pour que les gays aient du mal Ă  s’assumer vraiment.

Ne pas faire semblant, ne pas tricher, ĂȘtre honnĂȘte avec soi-mĂȘme et s’assumer pour ĂȘtre heureux quelles que soient les consĂ©quences immĂ©diates. Ça permet de gagner du temps, la vie est courte.”

In English:

“(Being gay)is to live freely and without making more complicated my sexuality and a certain eccentricity assumption.

I was overall very lucky not to suffer homophobia in my immediate surroundings, if not for religious issues which I will return to later.

It’s a complicated story that coincided with my divorce (I was married to a woman and have two children) when I was thirty. I grew up in a family of Jehovah’s Witnesses, a Christian apocalyptic sect that leaves no room for same-sex love affairs that are considered an “abomination” in the Bible … ( “men who sleep with men deserve to die” ). Before I married my ex-wife, I had never had a relationship with men.

Divorcing, I also left the sect of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and my parents discovered my homosexuality at that time. It was a big shock for the family but more because I left the sect than my homosexuality. I then suffered ostracism and exclusion of all my friends, family consisting only of Jehovah’s Witnesses and have suffered a lot from this. The family love has over the years to erased it all and I now have peaceful relations with my parents who love me for what I am, who appreciate my husband Thibaud and are delighted to have a daughter of Cambodian origin that we have adopted with Thibaud in 2013.

We must differentiate the gay community of expat to that of Cambodian and expats are the same here as in most Western countries. In the Cambodian side however, there is no real “gay community” if it is a closed circle. Few gays who assume as such, most living their homosexuality in a hidden way. It’s strange because they do not undergo any pressure of religious origin and there is a great tolerance in this country for same-sex love. Family and societal pressure and the “what will people say” are still powerful enough that gays have struggled to take really.

(Advice to my younger self) do not pretend, do not cheat, be honest with yourself and be happy to take whatever immediate consequences. It saves time, life is short.”

Ariel, Photographer, Buenos Aires, Argentina

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

photo by Kevin Truong

Ariel, in his own words: “Ser gay para mĂ­ es ser quien soy, ahora y en todo lugar. Es parte de mi identidad, no lo podrĂ­a aislar para analizarlo, simplemente, asĂ­ como ser fotĂłgrafo es ser quien soy, ser gay es otra parte mĂĄs de mĂ­.

Irme de la casa de mi familia fue el primero de los retos que tuve años atrĂĄs, al salir de la adolescencia
 el mĂĄs reciente y significativo ha sido tomar la decisiĂłn de dedicarme a mi pasiĂłn 100%: la fotografĂ­a.

Fue divertido y aliviador: habĂ­a cerrado mi cuenta de facebook porque me habĂ­a “cansado” de las redes sociales, allĂĄ por 2010
 y algunos meses despuĂ©s, luego de ir a la marcha del orgullo, lleguĂ© a mi casa abrĂ­ la cuenta de facebook y “gritĂ©â€ a los cuatro vientos: sĂ­, soy gay!

En mi familia nunca fue un problema el decirlo, pero sí mi madre pensó que era algo que podía cambiar al principio
 por suerte ese pensamiento suyo cambió y hoy me acepta por como soy sin problema.

La comunidad gay es muy abierta aquí en Buenos Aires
 creo que tiene peso a nivel social, que es escuchada, pero que todavía necesita seguir el proceso para que la sociedad acepte sin diferencias a los que somos distintos a ciertos patrones de modelos de individuos que por décadas se han inculcado.

(Advice I’d give my younger self) Try not to think too much. Follow your dreams ALWAYS, and never let anyone tell you what you can or cannot do!”

In English:

“Being gay for me is who I am now and everywhere. It is part of my identity, I could not isolate it for analysis, just as being a photographer is who I am, being gay is another part of me.

Leaving my family’s house was the first challenge I had years ago, coming out during adolescence … the most recent and significant was the decision to devote 100% of my passion: photography.

(My coming out) was fun and soothing: I had closed my Facebook account because I had “tired” of social networks, back in 2010 … and a few months later, after going to the pride march, I got home and I opened the Facebook account and “I yelled” from the rooftops: yes, I’m gay!

My family was never a problem, but my mother thought it was something that could change at first … thankfully that thought his changed and she now accepts me as I am without problem.

The gay community is very open here in Buenos Aires …I think it has a voice at the social level, which is heard but you still need for society to accept the differences that exist to certain patterns of models.

(Advice I’d give my younger self) Try not to think too much. ALWAYS Follow your dreams, and never let anyone tell you what you can or can not do!”