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: Echidna on leaves (Default)
Most people learn how to walk once in their life. Most people, though I don't know how common it is, have to learn to walk several times in their lives. I myself have had to learn several times. Some times it was easier than others because of the conditions I had to overcome, and thinking about it I have to point out that 'learning to walk' is not always the baby's first steps which generally pops into everyone's mind.

There are three* different conditions of learning to walk:
1. Blank Slate. The brain has to learn balance, movement and control. Eg. Baby's first steps, brain injuries
2. New Equipment. Something alters the walk which has to be altered or completely relearnt. Eg. Wearing heels, prosthetics, being pregnant
3. Uncrippling. Something has happened over time which has lead to unnatural movement, then the condition is relieved and you have to learn to move again. Eg. Knee/hip replacement, Muscle wasting, arthritis

Arguably muscle wasting could be classified as Blank Slate....depending on how walking is recovered. 

I Blank Slated as a baby, with wedge shoes and stilettos I have New Equiptmented twice (and it feels every time I put heels on I have to do a refresher course) and then there is the Uncrippling...well I have done that in a major way at least twice and in a minor way at least twice more. 

So that is the framework of thinking that I use. Which led me to my medicated thought, I was in pain and watching a heavily pregnant woman waddle which made me think of the time I got around walking on the balls of my feet because my knees were so bent I could not get my heels down and keep my balance. Because I have had to learn to walk so many ways, and arguably women in general have to learn to walk many more times in their lives than men, would it give us a benefit if we had to learn to walk again? Learning to adjust walking patterns surely must strengthen an internal dictionary of walking information. New adjusted balance, new rhythms, new movements, repeated learning of control. 

We have to learn new or adjusted skills through focus, but once humans get the hang of something it is generally relegated to background levels of the brain so that it can just 'happen' and we can use our brains to focus on other things, information on this is not hard to find, just think of all the parents who have to teach their kids to drive and suddenly feel lost. Each type of learning to walk has its own difficulties, but my own experiences with Uncrippling was the worst because it is so hard not to fall back on bad habits because they hurt less or get you there faster. Though with that I have a much safer balance now than ever before simply because I had to spend so long focusing on it. If I had to learn to walk again I would hope that some of that information is stuck in my brain and I would unconsciously retain some patterns. So all those people who trained themselves to stride in stilettos, have waddled under the weight of a baby, have gone to physiotherapy for professional guidance in structurally healthy locomotion, will we (re)learn faster in the future? 


*Three at least, there are probably more. 

Profile

mesotablar: Echidna on leaves (Default)
Mesotablar

April 2022

S M T W T F S
      12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 3rd, 2026 08:42 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios