I call myself a 바카라city person바카라, having lived in megacities all my life. I love what cities have to offer바카라opportunity, vibrancy, diversity, a transitory population that never stands still. But I also love living in cities because it affords me a kind of anonymity that smaller places wouldn바카라t, where I바카라d know everyone and they바카라d know me, where a monoculture would stamp out diversity, and where I바카라d feel too exposed as a queer person. In a city, I can be anyone, I can choose whom to be friends with, I can co-opt myself into communities and drop out when it stops working for me. There is something harshly transactional about a city that makes you believe that you hold the key to your life, and that sense of choice is fundamental to the queer existence.