FROM METRO STREETS TO APPALACHIAN TRAILS

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Queer Kentucky
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Some of us figure out we’re trans the moment we’re first introduced to the gender binary (“mama or dada” “brother or sister” “boy or girl.”) Others perform countless variations of our assigned gender before realizing that all of them feel equally wrong somehow. Some of us wake up one day knowing, and never look back. Others spend years chipping away at layer after layer of fear, shame, guilt, denial, social and/or familial expectations, before arriving at our “true gender,” or a self-expression that feels right to us. For some it just takes a simple thought experiment (“If I could go back in time and change my assigned gender, would I?” Or: “If no one else had an opinion, how would I identify?”) And for others it takes experimenting with clothing, presentation, pronouns, names, etc. before they figure out what feels right. ⁠
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Every trans person is unique. For me, gender expression was the gateway to understanding gender identity, and it took moving several states away from my family before I felt comfortable taking steps toward a gender expression that felt like home. 🔗 Read the full story with the link in our bio.
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✍️ @spencerjenkss After three years in business serving the LGBTQ+ community and its allies, Old Louisville Coffee Co-Op is seeking to purchase their own space.⁠
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On Monday, the coffee shop, located at 316 West Ormsby, posted a statement on their Instagram announcing that they are in the process of being approved by a cooperative loan fund that provides borrower friendly, non-extractive loans for a worker-owned-co-op. ⁠
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“Today is the final day of our original lease,” the post said. “After taking the time to weigh all of our options, we’ve decided on our course. We’re working towards buying a space of our own. Ideally, maintaining our commitment to the Old Louisville community.” 🔗 Read the full story with the link in bio⁠
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📸 : Old Louisville Coffee Co-Op Website
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✍️ @19thnews Until March 31, the 2025 Trans Rights Readathon will be in full swing. Participants read as many books as they want while raising money for trans-led groups of their choice. Each day, readers are encouraged to support transgender people by writing letters of support, sharing mutual aid fundraisers, signaling to their neighbors and colleagues that they are trans-friendly, or calling their elected representatives to alert them to the importance of trans rights in an increasingly hostile political climate.⁠
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In 2023, the readathon raised over $230,000 for organizations supporting trans people — through 2,669 participants reading across 43 countries. This year, those numbers are expected to grow, since the readathon is longer than it has been for the last two years. On social media, the Trans Rights Readathon account is sharing ample book recommendations to choose from — including dozens of novels written by trans Black, Latinx, and Asian authors, books that feature disabled characters, and books with romantic relationships between trans people. 🔗 Read the full story with the link in our bio.
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✍️ @spencerjenkss The Louisville Pride Foundation has paused its vaccine program which provided preventive care, vaccines, education, and employment for more than a dozen LGBTQ+ community health workers, after the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency cut $149 million in COVID-19 public health funding in Kentucky and Indiana.⁠
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The vaccine program, “Immunity in the Community,” is funded through a reimbursement grant in partnership with the Cabinet for Health and Family Services and the Centers for Disease Control. With a total budget of $250,000, $150,000 has already been spent, and it is unclear if the remaining $100,000 will be received. 🔗 Read the full story with the link in our bio
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✍️ @sarahelizabethladd Gov. Andy Beshear has declared a state of emergency for Kentucky ahead of expected storms and possible tornadoes over the next four days.⁠
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Beshear warned of “severe storms that are intense and long-lived” and a risk of tornadoes, hail, flooding and high winds across Kentucky.⁠
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Under his emergency order, Kentucky Emergency Operations Center, transportation officials and the Kentucky National Guard will be ready to respond if they’re needed.⁠
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“Tornadoes are expected, and I know that’s tough to hear. And we are most concerned about the area of Western Kentucky that has gotten hit far too much, as well as a wider area of Western Kentucky,” Beshear said in a statement. “Remember, these can be strong tornadoes, EF-2 and greater. We’re really concerned about people’s safety, especially in the overnight, because when storms or tornadoes hit while people are asleep, that’s sadly when we’ve lost the most people. So, everybody out there, be really careful.” 🔗 Read the full story with the link in our bio!⁠
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✍️ @itsjoshporter For over a decade, the Lexington Pride Festival was hosted in Downtown Lexington. First at Henry A. Tandy Centennial Park and then at Robert F. Stephens Courthouse Plaza. During this time, the Lexington Pride Festival grew to be the largest festival in Lexington, and outgrew the space and amenities available at downtown gathering spaces. So, in 2023 and 2024, the Lexington Pride Center hosted the Festival inside at the Central Bank Center convention center. For 2025, though, Lexington's Pride Festival is moving back outside! We talked with Jason Schubert, president of Lexington Pride Festival estivalI talked with the Lexington Pride Committee to learn more about what to expect at this new outdoor venue and format of festival. 🔗 Read the full story with the link in our bio.
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