I can’t stop thinking of Natasha knowing Yelena’s aro/ace and Yelena knowing Nat is queer and poly and each of them trying to get the other to admit it without actually admitting to anything about their own lives
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I can’t stop thinking of Natasha knowing Yelena’s aro/ace and Yelena knowing Nat is queer and poly and each of them trying to get the other to admit it without actually admitting to anything about their own lives
incomprehensiblelentils replied to your post: AMY PLEASE WATCH THE FALLING it’s a really bad...
also that queer YA/kidlit book sounds neat as hell
Okay I have honestly had it from the library for OVER A YEAR- ten renewals, each three weeks long, each, and this is the second time I’ve returned it and taken it back out to start the ten weeks over- because it’s a series of essays that isn’t really great for reading all in one gulp but is perfect for sitting down and being like I WOULD LIKE TO DELVE INTO THIS ONE THEMATIC SPARK TODAY.
(Shocking no one, I also own a bunch of books on queer kidlit. MY INTERESTS ARE NOT SUBTLE.)
No offense or anything but do you mind taking (or at least rethinking) using I in LGBT. Because intersex people aren’t LGBT and I’ve seen a lot of them talking about how uncomfortable it makes them since it’s technically different. I don’t know how to fully explain it but it’s been something I’ve seen around more recently. That’s all, hope you have a good day!
Hey, thanks for telling me this, anon! I thought that LGBTQIA+ was what was currently preferred instead of queer (which has always been my default), but I don’t want to mislabel anyone in the process.
I’ll do my best to use LGBTQA+ in the future (and as always, please let me know if I slip up!). Thank you for being kind enough to call this out.
[Edited- I got additional messages, and this is a complex topic; see more here.]
As it is a mainstream American production, I recognize that there is almost definitely a plausible heterosexual read of the first season of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.
I just, for the life of me, cannot find it.
My fellow ace and/or aro spectrum people of all genders: In like 99.9% of conversations, the “is Bert and Ernie gay?” conversation does not require our input on what it means to us, and it is seriously fucking tacky to jump in like it does.
That 0.1% is when people’s argument is when the argument for them being gay is “romantic/sexual attraction is something that every person experiences,” and in that case, I think it’s reasonable to say “please be careful with your wording, because that’s not true, but I agree with your larger point, and my concern absolutely does not negate the larger problem, which is the inherent homophobia in Sesame Street making official statements about how these characters aren’t gay and assuming that gay characters are inherently sexualized in a way that straight characters having meaningful relationships would not be.”
This really should not be hard.
[Note: this post is not an invitation for discourse.]
I spend a lot of time during Pride month thinking about the overlap between different ways that I could choose to identify myself, and the different ways various communities would respond to me based on which one I choose.
Like, I very much believe in the idea that labels should only be used for as long as they’re useful to oneself, and it’s vitally important to remember that labels are not permanent, but even so, words matter in terms of how we see ourselves, and I think about them a lot.
cis aros and aces that experience same gender attraction can use 'queer', but if they don't, then they honestly probably shouldn't? like, it's not that they don't experience marginalization bc of their orientations, but it's a matter of whether or not this is a slur they can reclaim for themselves, and cis people who don't experience same gender attraction were never the target of this particular slur. that's my view on it anyway.
Okay, but what about aros and aces who don’t experience any attraction? I understand the benefits of defining queer sexuality as presence rather than absence, but that leaves anyone aro/ace completely community-less, which I’m not okay with.
Particularly during childhood/adolescence, lack of hetero desire is seen as proof of queerness, and bullying is often predicated on that. As a result, identity is often built off that; sometimes queerness offers the best hope of community the individual has. We as society often just define attraction as ‘you’ll know it when you experience it’ or tell people who aren’t experiencing traditionally acceptable heterosexual attraction that they’re just late bloomers and thus not mature. All of which are contributing factors in motivating people, especially younger people, to find a label and a community that encapsulates who they are.
I’m really uncomfortable with the idea that a label that kept someone safe should be taken away without explicit presence of attraction, particularly when the the kind of attraction that would mark them as default is absent as well.
Today in My Job Makes Me Do the Most Ridiculous Shit, I am trying to explain to a writer how to more convincingly portray heterosexual romantic attraction.
I could not be more out of my depth.