I created LGBH because I needed it to exist.
The Path of Unity — A Founder's Insight
The Path of Unity — A Founder's Insight
A personal journey toward clarity, inclusion, and peace.
As someone who has experienced both a bisexual orientation and a gender transition, I know firsthand how confusing it can be when these two realities are treated as one. They are not the same. They never were. And yet, for decades, they have been bundled together under a single acronym, as if loving someone and being someone were the same question.
I don't say this to criticize the LGBT+ movement. I have lived within it. I have found support, community, and courage in it. But I also felt, over time, that something was missing: a space for clarity. A place where orientation could be discussed on its own terms, without being overshadowed by debates about identity, pronouns, or political agendas.
LGBH was born in Geneva, Switzerland, a city known for diplomacy, dialogue, and human rights. That's not a coincidence. This movement is built on the same principles: listen before you speak, include before you exclude, unite before you divide.
The "H" in LGBH is perhaps the most important letter. It says: you belong here too. It says that a straight person is not an outsider to this conversation. It says that orientation is a shared human experience, not a club with membership requirements.
Some will disagree with this approach. Some will see it as unnecessary, or even threatening. I understand that. Change, even peaceful change, can feel uncomfortable. But I believe that more clarity leads to more understanding, and more understanding leads to more respect.
LGBH is not a reaction against anything. It is a proposition. A hand extended. A door left open.
If you've read this far, you're already part of it.
Published by Natachatte, Geneva, Switzerland
