>Bluebeam
>Next up, 2nd Coming.
Playbook
Known
Aliens/Jesus in the sky
Russell Brand wants to start a family with Katy Perryafter falling in love with his godchildren, one-year-old twin boys.The comic star’s paternal instincts were kick-started after he was asked to be godfather to his friend’s one-year-old twins, and the boys have taught him about the joy of nurturing and care.
When asked by TV host Ellen DeGeneres if he and his pop star wife are planning a family, Russell replied: “I would like one. I love those little babies in the beginning. They’re so lovely in that bit. Me and Katy are godparents to two twin boys. They’re called Sam and Donovan.
“At first they were boring. They were just essentially little fluid factories, generating fluids – no regard for what I was wearing.
“Now, they are interesting. They smile and look at me and wonder –I’m just observing them like I’m a scientist.”
https://truethresholds.wordpress.com/2012/05/18/for-katy-pery-fans-with-love/
Of course Ricky would say that.
It helps ease his own guilt's.
KNOWINGLY
Not the same Rick
Rick's mentality.
Oh, if I just PRAY, I can keep sinning and it wont matter.
Lets see, who's GOD does Ricky worship?
FFS.
>Your god
Before my transition, I was a WWE star, weighed 280 pounds, and had 6% body fat. It took a lot of trial and error to get the feminine body I always wanted
The transgender journey can be rife with internal questions about body image and external presentation. My own journey regularly sparks questions from others, given my position as a public — and extremely fit — athlete and fitness influencer.
One of the questions I often field is: "Gabbi, how did you lose all the muscle mass?" The answer isn't as straightforward as people may expect but is informed through 30 years in the fitness industry and my personal transition experience.
Every transition journey is unique. If you've known one transgender person, then you've heard about only one transgender person's journey. Mine was a study in evolving strength — inside and out.
When I started to transition, I was determined to get the body I always wanted
I chose to transition in my early 40s and grappled with doing so later in life. My body had been flooded with testosterone for many years. Coupled with my active, fitness-focused lifestyle and position as a WWE professional wrestler, I had built a large amount of muscle onto my frame. At 6-foot-2, I weighed in at 280 pounds and hovered at 6% to 8% body fat year-round. At my peak, I looked like a cross between Ragnar Lothbrok from "Vikings" and The Mountain from "Game of Thrones." This created quite a hurdle for me as I transitioned to female.
A common misconception is that estrogen and other hormone-replacement therapies cause large muscle masses to dissipate. The reality is that hormone therapy helps, but it's not the main factor in releasing a large amount of testosterone-borne muscle.
To lose the massive amount of muscle mass I had, I made myself a guinea pig. I combined my years of expertise in fitness and nutrition and got to work trying different nutrition styles and sustainable approaches to working out. I knew I could never be a person who didn't work out, but through research and data extrapolation, I knew I could find a pathway to the fit, feminine aesthetic I was after.
My research and experiments took two years, but I finally landed on a combination of fitness and nutrition that worked for me.
It was difficult, but I kept going to help other trans people
The 280-pound wrestler and bodybuilder that other people saw was not who I saw when I looked in the mirror. When I began my transition, I wrestled (no pun intended) with how I desired to present myself to the world.
No matter what, I knew there would be some awkward moments during the in-between. I described it as an "ugly-duckling phase" in a viral Instagram post. What kept me going through those in-between phases was the idea of being a lantern on the footpath for other transgender people.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/transition-wwe-star-weighed-280-111701029.html