“friend” is its own deeply important relationship. why is there an insistence on qualifying friendships as “like family” to convey significance
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Sweden

seen from Germany
seen from Ireland
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Türkiye

seen from Maldives
seen from Ireland
seen from United States
seen from Ireland

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from China
“friend” is its own deeply important relationship. why is there an insistence on qualifying friendships as “like family” to convey significance
I'm really concerned by the rise of aphobia and infighting that's rising in the aspec community recently. I think a lot of it has to do with people wanting to ship characters, but they're low-key throwing us repulsed aros and aces under the bus by doing so.
I keep seeing black/green-stripe, non-partnering, and romance/sex-repulsed aspecs get called things like "robotic" and "heartless" and "bad stereotypes" and instead of people calling that stuff out, I just see everyone being like "yeah it's a spectrum!" and totally ignore that they are constantly insulting and dehumanizing an entire part of that spectrum because it's not as interesting to them.
Like, I get it, it's fandom, have fun, do whatever, I guess. But maybe stop calling actual people's experiences such cruel things? Like, fuck you if you say that shit! I'm a real person! Stop calling my actual lived experiences such disgusting things, oh my god!
I am a human being worthy of dignity and respect even though I experience no romantic or sexual attraction and am disgusted by the idea of romance and sex and will never have a romantic or sexual partner. The idea that reflecting myself and my real experiences in a character makes them robotic or heartless or a monster or a stereotype is genuinely aphobic, and I don't care if you're aspec yourself if you're insulting me like that! Aces can be arophobic, aces can even be acephobic, and vice versa.
Internalized aphobia can be a real thing, and aspecs are not immune to societal pressures of amatonormativity, and the constant refusal by everyone to even stop for a second and consider this stuff is so fucked up.
I want to support my romance-favorable and sex-favorable and greyro and greyace peers, but it feels like all I ever see from them recently is insults towards us repulsed people, and it genuinely breaks my heart. We're supposed to be a community! Please, I don't want this infighting! I want to be able to stand hand in hand as we raise awareness about the a-spectrums and fight against the amatonormative ideas that hurt us all!
-sincerely, a very tired repulsed aroace
.
Your aromanticism/asexuality isn’t invalid because you want to feel wanted btw
holy fuck! I saw your latest post and omg I genuinely didn't know that being romance repulsed was a thing! for years now I've been called a hater for not like romance in my media or in real life. So much so that I used to physically have to go into another room whenever something slightly romantic happened on screen. I thought something was wrong with me because it took over a decade for me to be desensitized to romance, it used to fill me with so much disgust i felt nauseous to the point of vomiting. someone in my personal life would always drag me into watching romantic shows or movies (no matter if i was comfortable with it or not) and I've grown to look at it almost scientifically and pick it apart like a bug under a microscope. I'm still called a hater and a couple months ago that person called me a femcel and it really hurt my feelings because I didn't know that they saw me that way. they were the first and only person that I've ever came out to and that moment really made me reevaluate our whole relationship. anyway, thank you for that post, it was an eye opener!
i too never used to know about romance repulsed. i used to think me being grossed out was just an 'ewwww people kissing grosss' thing most kids do despite being in highschool. eventually i did find out about romance repulsion but came to the conclusion that its not me because im not asexual. even after figuring out im aroallo i still thought i was just neutral and didnt care because i basically did this thing where id just zone out during romance scenes or just assumed they just wanted sex. even have this memory of hating slow burn fanfiction because they didnt do the deed quick enough. eventually after getting actual friends i realised 'oh! i actually really dont like it when they talk about romance with me' and realised im way more repulsed then i once thought.
“Would you rather meet your future husband/wife-” OPTION TWO OPTION TWO OPTION TWO
Romance within the Aromantic Community
Pt: Romance within the Aromantic Community /End Pt
Considering it's aromantic week, I want to talk about something I've been noticing more and more as time goes on. And that is how all or nothing the community is becoming.
I feel like most people are aware of the push between "you can still date if you're aro" (often used as an excuse that aro people can still be "normal") vs "stop putting aro characters/people into relationships" (often also used without recognition of complexity). Both are certainly important when used with the nuance, but the increase in just the concepts spreading without genuine conversation of what these phrases are about (aromanticism is a spectrum, and aromantic people don't need amantonormativity to be happy) has been lost. The general narrative for the whole aromantic community, and I am talking about it as it exists as a spectrum here, is that you either have to fall into alloro norms, or be strictly aro without romantic connection.
And as an aro whose "default" is attraction, this makes it extremely isolating. I'm lithromantic, meaning I feel attraction until it's reciprocated, at which point it's lost. Because of this I will never have an alloro experience. I will always have that fear of hurting someone even if I was explicit that any relationship is just for fun. I will always have that experience of feeling broken, like I just can't commit, of forcing myself into relationships just because it's the "right" thing to do, even when it hurts. Sound familiar? A lot of those are some of the most common queer experiences, especially aro experiences in this specific case. However many times I don't feel welcome in the aro community.
There is a big push back that romance is evil, no romo, love loses, common phrases you see for any aro rep. Which to a degree is understandable. When you have something pushed on you so strongly your natural instinct after you stop trying to obey is to reject the idea entirely. To completely detach yourself from the concept. And for many people, who don't experience romance in any sense of it, they don't have a reason to examine this. It works for them. It's just a fun bit. But that doesn't erase the invisibility it increases for the rest of the community.
I am someone who heavily enjoys romance, and who loves more than standard due to disorders. But to call me allo in any sense of the word is just inherently erasive of my experiences. And it's not just me. Some other aro identities who have a more "default" of no attraction (such as demiro) are given more representation, until they start having the attraction. All the conversation is about how that lack of attraction is "abnormal" but there's barely any mention of how that attraction that is had is still "abnormal". How that difference doesn't go away when they "get closer to alloro".
So much of the aromantic community is brought together by an atypical relationship with romance compared to amantonormative standards. But recently that's just been simplified to a lack of attraction. Dismissing how many other ways an atypical relationship with romance exists.
While I cannot speak for the whole spectrum, I do know from many conversations that a lot of others can resonate with the feeling that there is something inherently unique about having romantic attraction while on the aro spectrum. That it's something that can not be easily understood, if at all, by alloromantics. As well as there being many common underlying experiences. A fear or uncertainty of acting on the attraction should the recipient not fully understand the nuance that comes with it. For some a worry of hurting others should they act on the attraction due to knowing it is prone to fading out. A wondering if this is actually attraction, or if we're miscontextualizing our feelings. If this attraction is the one that will last, or if we didn't actually feel attraction before hand.
This doesn't even take into account people whose attraction changes under certain circumstances, but doesn't necessarily ever lose it. A feeling of your attraction not quite belonging to you. That since it's dictated by others you must just be people pleasing. That fear of what will become of it should this person leave your life. Or when you only have attraction to specific things, which might be considered normal if it's a certain gender but is seen as abnormal when it's to something such as fictional characters. That outside perspective of being gross or perverted. Or of just being fixated with fairy tales one can never have. That there is an expectation to "grow up". A fear of ever talking about your attraction should it become a moral discussion. And of course the discussion stops far from here. There are so many ways to experience romantic attraction while still being aromantic. I couldn't even begin to name them all. However I heavily encourage you to name yours, and have discussions around it.
There are so many ways that romantic attraction deviates from amantonormative standards specifically within the aromantic community. Yet we've seemed to lose much of the conversations surrounding this in favour for the much easier understood concept of romance is not needed to be happy. Which again, is not to say that conversation isn't also important, just that it should not be the only one. There should be conversations about how romance doesn't look one way. That there should be no standard. How to support those whose romantic attraction does differentiate from the norm, and how certain romantic relationships are no more valid than others.
In the end, there are a lot of ways that aromanticism looks. And while that concept is understood, the actual way that looks is often forgotten in a push between "looking normal" when having attraction vs being more acceptable for not having any attraction in the least. We as a community desperately need to start understanding an atypical relationship with romance doesn't inherently mean none. And that aro can and does still equal having romantic attraction for many.
Happy Aromantic Week to every aro that feels romantic attraction.
Thetrue aromantic experience is looking for aromantic Playlists and realizing all the songs are about people just being sad because their bad at romance
As an aro person, I'm always baffled by how seriously people take relationships. Like I know people should and that's good but from my point of view, I'm like just ...amused lmao. You cheat on your partner or feel yourself being attracted to someone else and that's the end of the relationship like wow? I wouldn't care lmao. Idk even if I do end up in qpr, the person living with me could go around sleeping with anyone and I'd do the same and we'd still have each other's backs and none of us would "possess" or "claim" each other because I'm not comfortable with that at all.
I understand that relationships work differently for everyone, and I'm just saying that as an aro, I don't understand the possessive claim over your partner in a relationship. Like, I don't get that at all. Because I honestly don't know how anyone would grow as a person while being "owned" or "belonged" to another person. How can you grow in someone else's possession? How can you grow while belonging to someone else, entirely monogamous? I don't understand that and I don't think that can work out for me personally. I need to have a constant network of people to keep me sane and functioning. Just one person would not even come close to helping me grow. I don't know. I'm just spewing.