KN

Kelley Nele

relationship & sex educator/writer
@readersdigestuk @lgbtqnation @carefreemag @metrouk

Kelley Nele is a Relationship and Sex Educator and writer. She has been coaching individuals for 5 years and edifying people on foundational and advanced topics within the realm of dating, relationships, sex and sexuality via her writing for 2 years. She has successfully written engaging and insightful content for the following publications: Reader’s Digest UK, LGBTQ+ Nation, TransLash and Metro UK. Read more: https://briefly.co.za/experts/kelley-nele/

https://metro.co.uk/author/kelley-nele/
https://www.readersdigest.co.uk/authors/kelley-nele

    Publications

    • LGBTQ Nation
      6 articles
    • Sextras
      3 articles
    • Carefree Mag
      1 article

    Writes Most On

    LGBTQGenderIdentityMentalHealthQueerCommunityInclusionGenderDiversityAllyshipDiscriminationGenderEqualityHumanRightsBullyingBlackIntersexQueerCultureIntersexLGBTQIALavenderLanguageSexualOrientationIntersexRightsCulturalAppropriationSocialJusticeSlangQueerSlangEmpathyPopCultureDiversitySelfesteemIdentityLanguageSocialMediaTrendsQueerPsychologicalWellBeingAntiBullyingTransgenderIntersexAwarenessSocialIssuesBlackQueerCulturalAwareness
    • —Carefree Mag
    • Black intersex people are among the most marginalized. LGBTQ+ people are part of the problem.
      17 Feb—LGBTQ Nation
      Kenya*, a Black intersex person who also identifies as nonbinary, is no stranger to being bullied. They have been called slurs like “monkey” (because of their “African nose”), “she-male”, and “hermaphrodite” (because of their muscular build and excess hair). Some have even gone as far as to call them an abomination. They have endured experiences like this since childhood. Kenya told LGBTQ Nation that growing up, their parents were openly disgusted with them. “One of the things they would make...
    • A cruel game destroyed my self-esteem as a trans kid. We must help the next generation do better.
      13 Nov 2024—LGBTQ Nation
      When I was 13, I had a crush on one of the cutest boys in school. His name was Kyle*, and he was everything most girls liked in a boy at that age: popular, tall, and athletic with a great set of abs. Even though I was popular and athletic myself, I was also a short, semi-chubby boy who didn’t know they were actually a trans girl, so of course, I thought Kyle was out of my league. One day, Kyle approached me and told me he liked me. I was stupefied, to say the least. But more than anything, I...
    • —LGBTQ Nation
    • —LGBTQ Nation