
Deleted member 23518
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We all know IT love to use these as a counterexample.
"If this guy can have a wife, why can't you?"
But in the real world, what happens to these men? I present to you Christy Brown.
Apparently this guy ascended in 1969, when he married a woman named Mary Carr.
This woman was an angel! Only someone with a noble heart could see the beautiful soul of this poor man, right?
Wrong.











This is the empathetic gender

"If this guy can have a wife, why can't you?"
But in the real world, what happens to these men? I present to you Christy Brown.

Christy Brown (5 June 1932 – 7 September 1981) was an Irish writer and painter who had cerebral palsy and was able to write or type only with the toes of one foot.
Apparently this guy ascended in 1969, when he married a woman named Mary Carr.
This woman was an angel! Only someone with a noble heart could see the beautiful soul of this poor man, right?
Wrong.
MARY Carr, the woman who married the disabled Dublin writer Christy Brown, best known for 'My Left Foot', was a lesbian, a prostitute and an alcoholic, who may have been responsible for his man-slaughter, according to a new biography of Brown which is to be published next week.
Sean Brown, the writer's brother, says in the book that he knew for a fact that Mary was a prostitute. He says that when he
first met Mary in London in 1968 or 1969 she was the girlfriend of one of his female friends.
"They were living as a couple," Sean says. "Mary made her money by sleeping with people."
Sean believes the marriage was a "bad move" for Christy, for both his health and happiness.
"Christy loved her but it wasn't reciprocated, because she wasn't that kind of person. If she loved him like she said she did, she wouldn't have had affairs with both men and women," Sean says in the book.
Marriage
After the marriage, Mary alienated Christy from his family by moving to Kerry and then to Somerset, Sean says. "She wanted him well away from his family.
I feel she took advantage of him in more ways than one".
The book says: "Mary and Christy would stay together until his death in 1981 and there were those close to Christy who believed that her alcoholism and neglect contributed to his rapid decline, even that she was responsible for manslaughter."
This is the empathetic gender