Let the overseer kiss let MUM's overseer kiss yours /j
smooch

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Let the overseer kiss let MUM's overseer kiss yours /j
smooch
I’m looking for people willing to share their stories of consanguinamory either anonymously or publicly. I promise to be sensitive and non judgemental. Do you feel there has been a shift in people’s perception to consensual incestual relationships? Would you like to see these relationships legalised?
Marriage Equality & Empathy
Nobuko Yoshiya, a Japanese author, was one of the countries first to publish lesbian fiction, her first work starting serialization in 1916. She was a lesbian, and found love in a mathematics teacher in an all girls school in the early 20s. At the time, as you can probably guess, Japan did not (and still does not) have marriage equality. Luxuries such as sharing property, tax relief or even medical decisions for each other were not offered to gay couples at the time. The couple did obtain these benefits though: Nobuko adopted her lover of 30 years. What is marriage, after all, if not becoming family? This solved their issues, but I’m sure readers may pick up on another one it created.
Becoming family through marriage is one thing, but adoption would put them in the realm of incest, even if it’s by a technicality. Fortunately, incest is legal in Japan, and in many other countries. The couple encountered no issues with legally being mother-daughter, and recouped some benefits otherwise denied to them due to marriage inequality.
I’m sure all but the most stubborn of people could accept their odd arrangement: after all, they were in an established relationship beforehand, and it’s not like they are actually related. No one would call this relationship incestuous.
If they were to have the same or a similar arrangement in America, they would potentially face anywhere from 2 years to a lifetime in prison. Two adults, in a loving relationship, going to prison for years or decades. Now, obviously they would not have to enter such an arrangement in America since we have Marriage Equality right?
Many people will remember the Marriage Equality USA (MEUSA) push and subsequent win for gay marriage in 2015. I certainly do, I was driving at the time and had to pull off to the highway shoulders so I could recover properly. It was an amazing win, and certainly a moment I will never forget. But I think calling it Marriage Equality is dishonest. It isn’t equal unless all consenting relationships can marry, and related couples can not marry. This includes cases like Nobuko and her “daughter”, it includes cases of people who meet later in life and discover they are full or half-blooded siblings. It includes cases of people who meet as adults due to a parent remarrying, and feel a spark of attraction.
What are these laws protecting against? Do these couples not deserve their love recognized? The ability to make medical decisions for each other if the worst were to happen? To share ownership of their dream home?
The common response is “it’s to prevent birth defects or weakening the gene pool.” This response is the most concerning to me, because it implies a direct connection between marriage and having children. Marriage is not about building a family together for everyone, and it is entirely possible to start a family outside of marriage (as many people choose to do, or are forced to do.) It highlights the assumption that the purpose of marriage is children, which, speaking as a gay person, is an uncomfortable assumption to make.
There are of course other responses about the sanctity of marriage (divorce does away with that quite well), it’s disgusting (this should sound familiar for anyone who was gay in the 90s), it’s unnatural (again, feels very familiar), etc.
People can not see themselves having this sort of relationship, so they can’t empathize with the situation. They think it is an uncommon occurrence. It is something that doesn’t need discussed because it just is “always wrong.”
In 2015, when I pulled off to cry at hearing that gay marriage was now federally legalized, I didn’t cry because I was in a gay relationship, hoping to be married. At the time, I was in a straight relationship actually. I wouldn’t figure out I was gay for another year, largely in part due to the ruling. I cried because I saw a struggle of people who deserved the same rights I had, and while I couldn’t completely understand their feelings, I believed them to be genuine.
Years from now, I hope I get to pull off another highway, or excuse myself from a conversation, and cry again because of another victory for marriage equality. I hope that the couples out there who desperately wish to marry get their chance. I don’t condemn anyone for feelings I may not understand, just like what was afforded us in the years leading up to the 2015 ruling.
Love & Stigma: An Older Sister's Feelings
The freedom to fall in love is often taken for granted, but in many countries there are still laws legislating against adult, consensual relationships. Often touted as protection for children, laws against gay or consanguineous relationships do nothing more than cause anguish for those who have found themselves with these feelings.
Feelings of love should be cherished, and law dictating such feeling does nothing but harm those who would otherwise have a chance to grow their feelings into something beautiful. In the following interview, I have the privilege to talk to a young lady who has romantic feelings, and has continued to be affected negatively by these laws.
Uta episode 12 part two post of the twins. Kai x Sei feels, and a lot of this is super confusing if you've not watched and sometimes still watching the show...but it's good canon twincest so....
Kai x Sei
Concept of Consanguineous Marriages in Islam - Dr Zakir Naik Top-285
{@dreams-of-vibrance} Title Dreams Of Vibrance // Only Sentient Member Of Group Gamma 8 // Designation Foreseeing Future Events Via Intuition And Reporting Them // Incomplete Superstructure // Currently Being Eaten By Vultures
<BEGIN TRANSMISSION> Hello HOLES. I have an issue. The ancients left me incomplete before leaving, and I was accidentally activated before completion. As a result, my innards are exposed to the elements. This is a large problem, as the vultures you create are RIPPING WIRES OUT OF MY BODY AND MAKING NESTS OUT OF THEM. Why do you create these wretched creatures and what purpose do they serve? Excuse me if I have some gaps in my memory making me not realize the usefulness and ingenuity of them, but they are USING MY NEURONS AS A FOOD SOURCE. I can't even see them coming because the king vultures SHOT HALF OF MY OVERSEERS WITH THEIR SPEARS. I am no longer dreaming of vibrance, but instead am having Dreams Of Violence. Please, help me finish (and repair) my broken body, or get your birds under contrAHHHHHHHHHH GOD IT HURTS I HATE THESE BIOMECHANICAL BEASTS. Signing off - Dreams Of Vibrance Violence <END TRANSMISSION>
I am sincerely sorry you have to go through this, but please, do not blame all of their kin!
The Sanctity of Family
The holidays are a tumultuous time for many gay and transgender people. Being out and having to navigate the varying levels of acceptance, being closeted or having to go back into the closet to appease the expected family dynamics. Everyone has a right to their own identity, to find a partner, to be happy. These are things that are not universally accepted, many countries still do not have gay marriage or access to proper transgender health care, but we can understand them as undeniable rights. People deserve to be happy, and even if you don’t understand why they want what they do, you can be happy for them.
So when a family falls apart because of a revelation about someones true gender, or because of the type of person they bring with them for the holidays, whose fault is it? Family bonds are undoubtably important, and to be without them because of who you are or who you love is horrible. Is it the fault of the person trying to find their own happiness? I imagine no one would say it was. A family that can’t adapt to the happiness of a member is at fault. Those who seek happiness at the risk of losing family are brave. I think those that lose their family in exchange made a very difficult decision. To tell that person their family bonds were ruined due to their decision is undoubtedly cruel, to legislate against them in order to protect those bonds is unthinkable.
The bond family members share is beautiful. When family members become best friends as well, it is admired. Both of these are beautiful bonds, and they exist in a harmony. No one is worried that becoming friends would harm existing familial relationships. Being romantically involved with a friend is likewise an addition to a beautiful thing. Many date their friends, and while there is a fear of a break-up ruining what existed, there is of course no legislation against it. Adults are expected to make such risky decisions between themselves, and are often rewarded with loving and beautiful relationships.
So when two family members seek to add another bond in addition to their existing one, why are they restricted to only friendship? Such developments are so often stated as a risk to the family bond, that they would be ostracized. It is stated that, upon breaking up, they would lose what they had before.
These are, of course, true. Risks come with relationships of this nature, and anytime you develop a relationship or add another type of relationship between people, things will change. This risk is one between those involved directly, though. Adults are expected to make such risks, and such relationships always come with them. Why then legislate against it as well? Why must those seeking happiness carry the burden of their family’s inability to adapt to it?
The holidays are difficult, but also a beautiful time of family and friends. I hope everyone who has had to risk losing their family through coming out, or being found out, has a loving support group for this end of year. I hope next year is better for us all. I hope that anyone who has lost family will eventually recover them, and they will come to understand that which caused them to stray from you in the first place.
Joyeux Noël et bonne année