Gay man from Indonesia opens up about the life-saving power of 'RuPaul's Drag Race'

“I found out about this show when I was [at the] lowest point of my life..."

"RuPaul's Drag Race" Season 10

Source: Getty Images North America

A 21-year-old gay man from Indonesia has penned a moving , revealing the strength he gains from watching RuPaul's Drag Race.

“I’ve been knowing [RuPaul's Drag Race] since season 8, then I [watched] the previous seasons and All Stars,” the Jakarta local wrote, adding that the reality show “is one of [the] things that keeps me alive”.

“I found out about this show when I was [at the] lowest point of my life and this show has been helping me through all that,” he said.
The second-year computer science student explained that he suffers from severe anxiety and is nervous about the challenges he'll face in the future as a gay man in a less-progressive country, saying that "things are getting harder".

"Indonesia isn't a progressive country who can accept the LGBTQ+ community," he wrote, adding that he'd need to work his way into "the middle class" if he hoped to find a place in society.

"I just [wanted] to share with you guys how it feels like being [Drag Race] fan in Indonesia, [I'm] always jealous of people [on] Twitter or Tumblr when they share their inner-queer and have people [in real life] who support them."

"I don't really make friends IRL because I just want to be friends with open minded [people] who can accept my sexuality and I have none so far," he wrote, saying that he'd tried using Grindr with little success.
Despite a growing LGBTIQ+ population, same-sex attracted Indonesians face an uncertain future as law-makers homosexuality as part of an overhaul of the country's criminal code.


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Published 4 May 2018 10:40am
By Samuel Leighton-Dore


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