I believe that most if not all of us have lived and will live many, many lives. Sometimes, those lives end up things we recognize- in my case an angel, Chara from Undertale, Ezio and James Kidd from Assassin's Creed. It makes as much sense as anything else. Hence, I'm willing to call myself kin.
I'm trying to get back into some sense of spirituality which has wavered since I moved away from the woods. This might end up being about that journey too.
I'm 27. I go by Cal. He/him pronouns please.
If you see a post of yours on here and want it off, tell me and I will remove it without fuss. I don't want to upset anyone.
Still pretty sure no one follows anymore. And if they do, they arne’t active. But, if you are here, please know I’m on process of moving this blog. It’ll be a side-blog now @notanrp-kin. I’m gonna delete this whole blog when I’m done moving it. Soo..... if you are here, adn want to keep folowing my dumb ass, go there.
I wasn't sure what to search for, so if you've answered this or something like it I do apologise. I want to tell my best friend about my kintype. Because they're my best friend. But I don't know how they even feel about kin and I don't want to lose my best friend over what, for me, falls closest to the realm of spiritual identity. Then knowing isn't worth losing them. If you have any advice I'd welcome it. Thank you for this blog. It's great. All my best
Step one: tell them about otherkinity as something you found on the internet. Keep it to facts, make it sound like ‘this is a neat thing I found, isn’t it interesting?’
Step two: watch their reaction very carefully. If they seem interested and want to know more, tell them more. Don’t mention yourself just yet.
Step three: wait and get them used to the idea. If they don’t like the idea, and don’t seem happy to listen, don’t tell them, that probably won’t end well.
Step four: if they’re cool with it, you can tell them. If they’re not, then don’t tell them, and you found out what they think without having to.