mesotablar: Aromantic flag as text (Aromantic)
This is my entry for Carnival of Aros January 2022. This month's topic is In-Between Spaces and I was inspired by the prompts: How do your romantic orientation, sexuality, and gender play off of each other? How do these interact with other facets of your identity, such as neurodivergence, disability, race, ethnicity or body size?


Ripple Effects

Dwelling on what could have been is an exercise in pain and futility, but it is also where my mind goes when I think of intersectionality. I think the interaction between my different aspects of identity allowed me to fall into the in-between spaces, so I never fit anywhere (until recently).  

I worked out I was ‘other’ at the time crushes became the topic of choice between girls. For a while answering ‘no one’ was accepted but after a few years the denial became noticeable, and socially unacceptable.

Yet when I found out about asexuality I rejected it. What was described by those few early brave asexuals who put themselves out there didn’t describe my experience. In hindsight I realise my nebulous sexuality and raging aromanticism actually cut me off from a community that could have probably helped me with my sense of place in the world.

Being diagnosed with a chronic condition didn’t help with my sense of belonging, but it did give me an excuse to avoid all questions about myself that I could not answer.

Why don’t you date? illness.

Why don’t you like anyone? Too tired from illness.

Do you have a crush on a celebrity? Too distracted by illness.

Inflating the effect my condition had on my life made it take up more room in my head, gave it more importance and influence than it probably deserved (well, at least after it was controlled, stable, and I stopped having hallucinations).

My self-esteem took many hits in the following years. Taken advantage of and belittled, made to feel broken and purposely provoked. Like the butterfly effect, I have no idea how those things have spiralled to change who I grew into.

And I was grown. I was mid-20s when I discovered a community I felt I belonged to.

If my aromanticism hadn’t been so strong I might have found a place in the talking-about-love asexual community of the time. If my sexuality had been less ‘active’ in my teens (I totally blame hormones) I might have discovered aromanticism earlier.

If I’d found a community for support I believe I would have been able to protect my vulnerable questioning side from the attacks it suffered from peers in those ensuing years. Or at least realised enough to stop putting myself in those situations.

I am probably quieter, less trusting, more of a reader, more self-aware and self-reflective than I might otherwise have been. I’m also now very good at seeing red-flags and microagressions. I am scarred but stronger, my romantic orientation and sexuality were my weaknesses but now they are my strength.    

mesotablar: Aromantic flag as text (Aromantic)
Recently I have gone through emotional changes and this past week I seem to keep finding the same topics popping up again and again, which I choose to take as a sign that I should try to work through some of my feelings. 

I grew up in an environment of conservative and progressive influences, I'm sure many people have but all in our own unique recipe of the two. Since the deaths in my family I have found I am more body confident than I had been in years. I am also feeling much more settled inside myself as a person. For the first time in forever I feel like my internal storm has truly abated and I can see the internal scene and all the accumulated debris. Which lead about the terrible realisation that much of the dissatisfaction was actually external input. Semi-regular flippant comments about hair and weight, dating and boys, physical ability and life goals, that I thought I had ignored actually cut me deeply. Now those thoughts which were not my own are now literally in the grave with the persons who made them.  

I am not a good self-critic. I can only analyse things in hindsight if I am prompted to do so. Basically much of the time I flail and hope I come across other people who give me ideas to make sense of my reactions and life. 

I have discovered I do in fact have quite a lot of internalised misogyny linked to a sense of inferiority related to my disability (Internalised Ableism Alert!). I don't even know if misogyny is really the right word, a more apt term might be Toxic Femininity. I push back against amatonormativity a lot. I feel that expectations of romantic love force themselves on me all the time, but might I be letting them in to torment me? My last post 'Females Love' talked about this. I have internal expectations of what women are, very traditional European ideals. If I write them out specifically I see how silly they are and can rebuke them but there is still this deep vague sense that they are correct. 

Being in Queer spaces has exposed me to many people of different genders and many different journeys those people have made to get there. I have no gender journey, do I? How am I female then? How do I know? up rises the 28 year old monster of memories of comments, expectations and traditions (this monster it seems has always been present lurking beneath the surface and informing my experiences, but it lets itself be seen every so often). I have no role models who are aromantic or disabled in the same way I am, let alone both. Truthfully I was never really interested finding any. One group I am intrinsicly connected to is my bloodline, so they sort of became my 'best fit' role models for certain things, and it certainly makes sense when it comes to health history. But what of the rest of history?

Half of my family migrated to Australia after WWII, and they kept almost nothing of their old home countries, very little sense of culture was passed down. So I, wanting some sort of anchor clasped whatever I could. Much of that is from a time almost unrecognisable, but I absorbed it and in many ways I thought it applicable to me. Deep inside I still think it is applicable to me, but that is just causing me pain, but is it worse to keep pushing against external factors I invite in or to remove all the internalised issues themselves?
Here is a list of some which I abstractly know are not true to my experience but they are specific to my sense of who my family is and in turn who I am. 
(TL;DR I've had this list of stuff subtly reinforced in me for 28 years, now I'm deciding to try to purge it. I'm so screwed) 
  • Love can grow from passion
  • Certainty-of-marriage-partner at first sight/Love at first sight is real
  • a long-term relationship is the most significant relationship you will have outside of children (Sometimes not even children)
  • a partner gives you better social status
  • families arrange suitable suitors 
  • family approval is of the upmost importance
  • you must master the duties of a housewife
  • sacrificing everything for love may improve your future
  • Being submissive is better
  • being slightly masochistic will serve you well because life/love is painful
  • get married as a young virgin 

Doctors

Jul. 15th, 2019 08:42 pm
mesotablar: Echidna on leaves (Default)
Don't worry, this post is not about actually about my (or anyone elses') health but rather my thoughts on my preferences in a doctor.


I know there are lists out there by the dozen about what people want in a perfect life partner or friend but I've never seen a list about what someone wants in a perfect doctor. Maybe it is just not something other people think about? or if they do think about it they won't admit it. Well I am going to be entirely honest. Maybe doing so will get you thinking about it.....

The Details )

The List
  • South African
  • Rabid perfectionist/overachiever
  • Not A-phobic
  • Not a bodybuilder
  • Not someone I went to highschool with because you know who you are and I just could not deal (especially the someone who played in orchestra like you were blissful living that far up the teacher's ass)
  • Not the kids of either of my neighbours because I have serious doubt about your sense of self-preservation and/or your assumed rights with other people. 
So in summary, my list is more of a list of 'don'ts' rather than 'dos'. Sadly the two that make my perfect doctor so hard to find is the accent (though I shouldn't have a problem if I move to South Africa!) and the A-phobia....I'd guess about 1/3 of all my doctors have been blatantly A-phobic, generally in regards to my greysexuality but sometimes against my aromantisicm. 

mesotablar: Apressexual flag as text (Apressexual)
I have heard it said that generally people feel several attractions together. Their attractions are not separable as they flow organically from each other. Apressexuality in its basic definitions is only experiencing sexual attraction after another form of attraction is felt. So you feel some sort of attraction then sexual attraction shows up. Most people probably feel it that way so why do we have a word for something that can probably just be assumed in heteronormativity? Or any sort of normativity…

Not even the person who coined Apres- seems to have done so for sexual attraction, rather they coined it in terms of being Apresplatonic.


When I was questioning I was searching for a label or at least some indication that my experiences were not unique. I stumbled upon Aromantic and it explained so much! but there was a blank spot because ‘Aromantic’ does not cover the basic attraction that had brought me back searching LGBTQIA+ sites again, sexual attraction.

I probably would have been okay just identifying as Aromantic. And for the most part I do. In online spaces however where discussions get technical and nuanced within the a-spectrum communities I tend to use both the Aromantic and Apressexual labels.
Maybe so that people don’t assume I am ace.
Maybe so that people don’t assume I am allosexual.
Maybe to acknowledge that other attractions besides sexual and romantic can be important too.
Maybe to see if I can find others who use the same label so I can hear how they use it.
Maybe, because it means a blend of attraction I am happiest using the label to acknowledge the blend rather than just letting ‘a blend’ be assumed.

The bottom line is I don’t like separating out my attractions. I don’t experience them as separate. They are all steps on the same path, and the path is paved with Aromantic stones. That said, I can identify them as different when they occur (using hindsight and lots of thinking comparisons) and isolate them to discreet incidents (because they aren’t constant, or even common).


When it happens:
I guess it comes close to those descriptions of love at first sight (which totally isn’t ‘love’ by the way). I see or hear the person for the first time and it is there. Generally sensual attraction, things to do with the senses; looking, touching, hearing or tasting (….let’s just ignore smelling).

I become hyper focused on them to the point where the rest of the world fades out. I get fixated on the part of them that attracts me. It is like an irresistible lure BUT there is no guarantee that sexual attraction will show up HOWEVER I have only ever felt sexual attraction to someone in the wake of these other feelings (while my Aromantic-ness goes into overdrive which makes me more sensitive to things I perceive as romantic) Though in the moment everything just feels like one big ‘more’.
I don’t think they are suddenly great people.
I don’t suddenly trust them.
I don’t even need to know their names.
I don’t think about them when they’re not around.
I can’t be friends with these people. I find them much too distracting.
(Have you seen the movie Upstream Color? For me, these people are disfigured by being made of the sun)

Thankfully the attractions are rare, less than an annual event, so I don’t get distracted like this all the time. Though their rarity might be why I haven’t developed a defence against them or coping mechanisms for when they happen. I just get sucked along by the experience. When I need it to stop I have to remove myself from their presence. Luckily I can use the initial feelings of mindless fascination as a warning, so if the situation or person is unsuitable, inappropriate or more than mildly disgusting I can get myself away before the attraction has a chance to progress (thought there is always the chance that it will not end up including sexual attraction, which is more of a once every 5 years event). Though of course there have been a few situations where I couldn’t escape and was stuck around someone who affected me.

I am not Asexual because I can and have experienced sexual attraction, but my experiences don’t line up with what most Allosexual allies say. I can use the Greysexual label quite happily, but then some people want specifics about how/why/when (which are legitimate enquiries when people need help in their own questioning process) and to describe my experience I end up basically writing out an expanded definition for Apressexual. The label exists so why not use it when I feel it matches my experiences so well?

It is a micro-label. A micro label that seems to consist of a population of ONE, me (drop me a line if you use Apressexual too! or if you are questioning it!). Having a label allows me to be vague about my experiences. Sure, I may have to explain the label or how I relate to it but I find that much more comfortable than continually typing out very personal experiences that may or may not help anyone anyway.

I found an accurate word so that is what I am going to use.
(until someone works out an easy way to blend romantic and sexual orientation language)
mesotablar: Apressexual flag as text (Apressexual)
I was just adding interests to my profile and all of them were hotlinked except one: apressexual. I know it is not a common orientation label, that is mostly why I use grey-A, because generally I am only willing to give people the definition rather than explain very personal experiences to strangers. Sure, if you are really interested I'm sure my 'What could I be?' posts on AVEN are still around which explain my experience in some detail surrounded by too-much-information and trigger warnings.

Also trying to divide up my attractions in the little boxes people want me to do to 'justify' my choice of label is super painful, and also really rude. Those people were bullies, but I wasn't informed enough at the time about the concepts in the a-spec community spaces to think there was another way.

But the point I want to focus on for this post is, am I really the only one?
Surely not! I say. There is a word and a flag and a flag made out of the word! So someone must have made the word for a reason, and there must have been demand for a flag....right? right?! or was this word I identify as coined as some literary exercise in theoreticals and the flag created because someone wanted to pretend they were doing something useful when they got bored and decided to play on MS Paint?
I know what I will do, I will use the mighty search engines to find the others! )
mesotablar: Aromantic flag as text (Aromantic)
I very recently got into a discussion regarding the Split Attraction Model (SAM)
(Here if you are interested in seeing it)
Sure, I had used SAM to help me work out my orientation labels but does that mean I still use SAM? what does non-SAM even mean? I got more confused and hoped no one would ask me whether I use SAM or non-SAM. Well, someone asked. I think I tied myself up in words trying to answer so I am going to try and sort things out with pictures!
Click for pretty pictures )

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