『Restful Rainbow』のカバーアート

Restful Rainbow

Restful Rainbow

著者: Ducky Media
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LGBTQ+ History bedtime and relaxation stories, aiming to offer comfort, representation, and a touch of magic to listeners drifting off to sleep.Ducky Media 世界 心理学 心理学・心の健康 衛生・健康的な生活
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  • A Quiet Revolution: India's Supreme Court Strikes Down Section 377 (Sept 6, 2018)
    2026/03/13

    Drift off to sleep learning about September 6, 2018, the day India's Supreme Court unanimously struck down Section 377, a 157-year-old colonial law criminalizing same-sex relationships, freeing the largest population ever from such laws in a single moment.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover the remarkable journey to this historic ruling. Section 377 was inserted into the Indian Penal Code in 1860 by British colonial administrators, criminalizing "carnal intercourse against the order of nature", vague language targeting same-sex relationships while India had ancient traditions of gender diversity (hijra communities) and same-sex love (temple carvings at Khajuraho, Kama Sutra acknowledgments). The law survived Indian independence in 1947, remaining a colonial remnant for decades. In 2001, the Naz Foundation challenged it on constitutional grounds. The Delhi High Court struck it down in 2009 in a landmark ruling emphasizing "inclusiveness"—but the Supreme Court reversed this in 2013, devastating the community by calling them a "minuscule minority." Yet the movement grew stronger. Multiple petitions were filed, and in 2018 a five-judge constitutional bench heard the case: Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justices Rohinton Nariman, A.M. Khanwilkar, D.Y. Chandrachud, and Indu Malhotra. Lead petitioners included Navtej Singh Johar (Bharatanatyam dancer), Ritu Dalmia (celebrity chef), and others who courageously put their names forward. On September 6, 2018, the Court ruled unanimously: Section 377 is "irrational, indefensible, and manifestly arbitrary." Justice Chandrachud wrote: "History owes an apology to the members of this community and their families." Justice Malhotra added: "The LGBT community has suffered enough." The 495-page judgment freed 1.3 billion people, India became the largest population ever freed from colonial sodomy laws in a single day. Celebrations erupted across India, people wept, embraced strangers, waved rainbow flags in Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore. A quiet revolution achieved through decades of activism, courageous petitioners, and five judges who chose constitutional equality over popular prejudice.

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep. Includes peaceful imagery of the Supreme Court in New Delhi, rainbow flags against Indian skies, and celebrations spreading across the subcontinent.

    🌙 Perfect for: LGBTQ+ rights history, Indian history, legal victories, Supreme Court rulings, South Asian LGBTQ+, constitutional law, bedtime relaxation

    💜 Subscribe for LGBTQ+ history bedtime stories! Like, share, and comment about which LGBTQ+ legal victory you'd like to hear about next.

    ⚖️ "History owes an apology to the members of this community and their families" Justice D.Y. Chandrachud, Sept 6, 2018

    #Section377 #IndiaSupremeCourt #LGBTQIndia #Sept6 2018 #NavtejJohar #QueerIndia #LegalVictory #SupremeCourtIndia #RainbowIndia #377Verdict #LGBTQRights #IndianHistory #ConstitutionalLaw #QuietRevolution #LoveIsLegal #JusticeChandrachud #ColonialLaw #SouthAsianLGBTQ #DelhiHighCourt

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    1 時間 9 分
  • Catullus and the Poets of Rome: Ancient Bisexual Poetry That Survived 2000 Years
    2026/03/03

    Drift off to sleep learning about Catullus (c. 84-54 BCE) and the Roman poets who wrote openly, beautifully, and unapologetically about desire for both men and women, creating bisexual poetry that has survived for over two millennia.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover the remarkable world of Roman poetry in the Republic's final decades. Born around 84 BCE in Verona to a wealthy family, Gaius Valerius Catullus moved to Rome in his twenties and joined the neoteroi ("new poets"), writing intensely personal verses influenced by Greek models. His poetry celebrates desire for both men and women with equal passion: verses about Juventius's "honey-sweet eyes" and kisses he wished to receive "three hundred thousand times," and passionate poems to "Lesbia" (probably Clodia Metelli, a sophisticated married woman), begging for "a thousand kisses, then a hundred, then another thousand." His most famous couplet "I hate and I love. Why do I do this, perhaps you ask? I don't know, but I feel it happening and I am tormented", captures the complexity of desire itself. Contemporary poets like Calvus (who wrote about both his wife Quintilia and beautiful boys) and the later Tibullus (who composed entire elegies about his love for a young man named Marathus) similarly wrote openly about same-sex desire. In Rome's late Republic, male poets writing about desiring other men was completely normal and culturally acceptable, celebrated as refined, Greek-influenced sophistication. These poems were recited publicly at symposia, copied onto scrolls, and preserved through the fall of the Republic, the rise of Empire, Christian suppression attempts, medieval monasteries, and the Renaissance. Catullus probably died young (around age 30 in the 50s BCE), but his bisexual poetry survived two thousand years because it was too beautiful, too important to Roman literary heritage to suppress. A testament to openly expressed bisexual desire from ancient Rome.

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep. Includes peaceful imagery of marble villas overlooking the Italian coast, torchlit evening symposia, and styli scratching passionate verses onto wax tablets.

    🌙 Perfect for: Bisexual history, ancient Rome, Roman poetry, classical literature, LGBTQ+ representation, Latin literature, bedtime relaxation

    💜 Subscribe for LGBTQ+ history bedtime stories! Like, share, and comment about which ancient LGBTQ+ figure you'd like to hear about next.

    📜 Related Ancient LGBTQ+ History:

    1. Sappho: The Tenth Muse of Lesbos
    2. Alexander the Great and Hephaestion
    3. Emperor Hadrian and Antinous
    4. The Sacred Band of Thebes

    💬 "Give me a thousand kisses, then a hundred, then another thousand" — Catullus

    #Catullus #BisexualHistory #AncientRome #RomanPoetry #LGBTQHistory #LatinLiterature #Neoteroi #Lesbia #Juventius #BisexualPoet #ClassicalLiterature #84BCE #RomanRepublic #BiRepresentation #AncientLGBTQ #LatinPoetry #Symposia #QueerHistory #BisexualVisibility

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    46 分
  • The Colonel Who Rode with Zapata: Amelio Robles, Trans Mexican Revolutionary
    2026/02/28

    Drift off to sleep learning about Amelio Robles Ávila (1889-1984), a transgender man who became a colonel in Zapata's revolutionary army and lived openly as a man for 71 years, from age 24 until his death at 95.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover the remarkable life of Mexico's first openly transgender soldier. Born in 1889 in Xochipala, Guerrero and assigned female at birth as Amelia, Amelio gravitated toward "masculine" pursuits from a young age, horse riding, cattle roping, marksmanship, becoming one of the region's finest riders and shooters. When the Mexican Revolution began in 1910, Amelio joined the Zapatista forces in 1911/1912, and by 1913 began living openly as a man, demanding to be called Amelio and threatening with his pistol anyone who used his birth name or feminine titles. Rising to the rank of colonel (coronel), he commanded between 315 to 1,000 men, participated in 70 battles under commanders like Jesús H. Salgado and Heliodoro Castillo, and described being a guerrilla fighter as giving him "the sensation of being completely free." After Zapata's assassination in 1919, Amelio joined Álvaro Obregón's forces, then settled in Guerrero where he married Ángela Torres and adopted daughter Regula. Thanks to revolutionary comrades who became powerful officials, Amelio received legal recognition as male: a medical certificate in 1948 made no mention of his assigned sex, an apocryphal birth certificate listing him as male appeared in his military file, and he joined organizations that didn't allow women. In 1970, the Mexican Secretary of National Defense officially recognized him as a veterano (male veteran), not veterana, making him the first transgender soldier in Mexican military history. He received the Revolutionary Merit award (1973/1974) and was honored by three presidents. A rare transgender success story from over a century ago. Amelio lived 71 years (from age 24 to 95) as himself, openly, successfully, with official recognition and military honors.

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep. Includes peaceful imagery of horses galloping across mountain landscapes, revolutionary campfires under starlit skies, and the recognition ceremony in 1970.

    🌙 Perfect for: Transgender history, Mexican Revolution, Latin American LGBTQ+ history, military history, biographical stories, bedtime relaxation

    💜 Subscribe for LGBTQ+ history bedtime stories! Like, share, and comment about which transgender historical figure you'd like to hear about next.

    #AmelioRobles #TransgenderHistory #MexicanRevolution #Zapatista #TransMan #EmilianoZapata #Guerrero #TransMilitary #MexicanHistory #LGBTQHistory #TransVeteran #LatinxLGBTQ #1889 #RevolutionaryHistory #ColonelRobles #TransSuccess #20thCentury #Veterano

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    47 分
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