Tue. Mar 3rd, 2026
Unexpected Reflections While Watching Someone Else’s Story

It always catches me off guard, the way somebody else’s story can reach out from the screen and just tap me on the shoulder. Like, “Hey, this one’s for you.” I was minding my own business, watching this show for the background noise, and then there’s this moment: a character quietly fixing their collar in the bathroom mirror before heading back out to a party. That pause. The little inhale, the soft scrunch of nerves. I felt it.

There’s something about seeing a Black queer person just… existing, not performing, not making a speech, just being real awkward and soft in a bathroom. I don’t know if it’s joy or relief I felt, maybe both. I remember doing the same thing at my cousin’s wedding, hiding out for a minute, talking myself up. “You belong here. You look good. Breathe.” I thought I was the only one who needed those pep talks in the mirror, but apparently, I’ve got screen siblings.

It’s wild how a tiny gesture can feel like a whole love letter. I saw myself in that hesitation, that little self-check. Not the loud, proud moments—though I love those too—but the quiet ones, where queerness looks like a hand smoothing a shirt, a breath before stepping into the room. Sometimes the most radical thing is just being able to see yourself being soft and a little scared, but still going back out there.

I left the episode with a weird little grin and a lighter heart. I guess I needed that reminder: my softness is real, my awkwardness is not just mine, and somebody else’s story can make my own reflection feel a little more like home.

By Kabal Briar

Kabal Briar is a queer Black storyteller, educator, and creator reshaping what it means to take up space with truth and tenderness. Through poetry, essays, and lived experience, he explores identity, joy, body acceptance, and the many ways we learn to love ourselves out loud. His work blends softness with strength, humor with heart, and personal history with universal feeling. Kabal’s mission is simple: to help people feel seen, valued, and brave enough to live in their own TRUTH.

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