July 25, 2016

Amanda won the UFC belt and dedicated to her girlfriend

Brazilian Amanda Nunes is the first champion of the UFC reportedly LGBT. And that is empowering.
The Bahian Amanda Nunes made history in contention for the title of UFC bantamweight. She became the first Brazilian to win a title in the most important MMA championship of the planet and the first athlete (including men) openly LGBT to win a belt. With only 3m15s struggle she applied a sequence of strokes and an overwhelming rear naked choke and took the title of American Miesha Tate. Shortly after winning the title, "Leone", nickname he earned in the sport, dedicated the title to his girlfriend, the fighter's STRAWWEIGHT Nina Ansaroff "She's everything to me. Help me every day... I'm going to cry. I love her. This is too much. The most important is that I am happy with my life. " In an interview before the beloved victory, Nina said that the love of the two is greater than the gender issue, is simply love. "We are proud of our relationship because we have a very strong bond, not because we are gay. As your partner, feel that reflect each other." she defined. But what does it matter? The reader who fell parachute this BLOG might ask: "Yeah, but you have to see the UFC title with the sexual orientation of fighting?". Maybe she did not fail to gain the title or for being lesbian or being heterosexual.
By social pressure, men and women are motivated to follow the parents careers that would be victorious. Parents one day too passsaram the same frustration. Maybe I'm not at this point with this text being read by someone who dreamed of being a dancer or a reader who dreamed of playing football and gave up because he heard that "This is not for you." "It's a guy thing." "It's something of a fag." By social pressure, athletes live a life in the closet. How many athletes do you know who are openly gay, lesbian or transgender? And you really believe that worldwide only these are the LGBT people in sport? Declare or not their sexuality is not required, it is a right of each that should be respected. Should. The fact is that athletes around the world are pressured by family, business, companies not to talk about it. The Australian Olympic medalist Ian Thorpe said in his biography that plunged into a deep depression can no longer hide his homosexuality. Empowered, Amanda won the UFC belt and dedicated to her girlfriend.






Published by Adrian

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