Edison’s journey really touched me. From hiding in China to standing proud as a father and fiancé, this is pure inspiration.
I respect his courage, but honestly the video felt a bit too polished, almost like a scripted drama. Real life doesn’t always need that cinematic glow.
As someone who came out decades ago, I see so much of my own past in Edison. The tension between family honor and personal truth is painfully real.
The divorce part felt rushed. I wish the story had gone deeper into the struggles behind it, not just the heartbreak after. That’s where the biggest lessons are.
I admire him but I wonder if sharing everything on social media really helped. Sometimes privacy can protect your peace and dignity more than exposure.
The fatherhood chapter was the strongest part for me. A single gay dad raising a child with love proves that family is about care, not tradition.
The Paris proposal was magical, but I felt the fairytale tone overshadowed the harsher realities LGBTQ+ people still face in Asia. Balance would make it even more powerful.
Edison is more than just a role model, he’s a cultural bridge. His choices challenge both Eastern traditions and Western assumptions about Asian men.
The constant questions at the end distracted me. His story is moving enough without the push for interaction. Sometimes silence lets us feel more deeply.
As a parent, I connected most with his bond with Frederic. The small, everyday moments of fatherhood meant more than any wedding vows.
I think Edison is admirable, but let’s not put him on a pedestal. His flaws, heartbreaks, and resilience together are what make him relatable and real.