sherokutakari:

eighthdoctor:

sherokutakari:

eighthdoctor:

vortisaurus:

vortisaurus:

the idea of two aromantic platonic partners having a “convenience marriage” is like my favorite thing right now I’m both getting really excited and cracking up over the possibilities I mean just imagine:

  • “we got married because of tax benefits”
  • “we got married because it gave us an excuse to have sleepovers every night
  • “we got married because it seemed convenient to ‘pool our assets’ (aka our library is now twice as big, as is our collection of Disney movies)”
  • “we got married because it gave us an excuse to ask for toasters from people as wedding gifts”

#we got married because weddings are really exciting and we can plan it how we want it and it doesn’t need to include kissing bc that can be weird#but it gives us an excuse to have a dessert table#because dESSERT TABLE#I just want dessert table festivities#festivities around a dessert table#ahh#desssseeeeerrrrrt#CHEESECAKES THOOOOOOOO#YOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 

this is the most important addition anyone has made to this post bless you and may the Force be with you my friend

 (x)

 We got married because broadway duets while doing choreswe got married because HALF AS MANY CHORESwe got married because surprise cookies on bad dayswe got married because surprise cookies on GOOD dayswe got married so we’d never have to ask the other if we could come over today againwe got married so our parents would stop asking (x)


Tags:

#aromanticism #anything that makes me laugh this much deserves a reblog

par-la-fenetre:

par-la-fenetre:

Neuro-atypical Weather Forecast

Read my other webcomics here.

Shamelessly reblogging myself and putting this little comics into the series “Ma République”.


Tags:

#not sure why they expect me to be able to focus on the crawl and the speech at the same time #I suppose that’s part of what the subtitles are for #abandon the audio in favour of devoting all primary sensory processing to visuals #(recently I was watching one of those how-to-adult videos) #(and there was a bunch of text on the screen that was *different* from what they were saying) #(I had to go through it twice) #(once listening and ignoring the video) #(once watching and ignoring the audio) #(and then the following video basically said) #(that if somebody else asks me out on an ambiguously-romantic date) #(it is *my* responsibility to make it clear if it is platonic) #(otherwise it will be and *should* be assumed romantic) #(like dude) #(if you’re going to suggest an outing it’s *your* job to state what you mean by that) #(if you rely on societal narratives to determine whether we’re dating) #(we’re *both* going to feel betrayed by the other) #(you’re going to feel strung along) #(and I’m going to feel you tricked me into dating you) #(it should not be possible to *accidentally* date someone) #(I didn’t go back to those videos after that) #tag rambles #lots of tag rambles

Repurposing (Carnival of Aces, February 2014)

(or: How Valentine’s Day Taught Me the Meaning of Christmas)

I genuinely like Valentine’s Day.

That is to say, I like the version of Valentine’s Day I celebrated growing up. In my family, Valentine’s Day was (and is) primarily about familial love, as expressed through gifts of chocolate. Sure, Mom and Dad gave each other presents, but they also gave their kids presents, and (most years, when we were able to arrange the shopping trip) we gave them presents. Every year, I looked forward to waking up to the heart-shaped containers of chocolates, sitting on the dining room table or next to people’s computers. Eventually, I developed the tradition of saving the last piece of Halloween candy to eat on Valentine’s Day. (I still do that today. There’s a peanut butter cup sitting beneath my coffee table. Its time has almost come.) For dinner, we ate heart-shaped foods: hamburgers, biscuits, whatever we could mould into a heart, with heart-shaped brownies for dessert.

At my homeschool play-date and field trip group, each kid was expected to give cards to all the other kids. The parents provided candy to be shared by the group. Though I was occasionally reluctant to give a card to a child I didn’t like, I never thought of cards as being about love in the romantic sense.

When I got a little older, into my teens, I began to be exposed to other conceptions of Valentine’s Day. One of my friends complained about all the couples making out in the halls of her high school on Valentine’s Day, saying that it was hard to even dodge them all. I remember thinking it was kind of weird that that was how they responded to Valentine’s. I’d vaguely heard of romantic-supremacist approaches to Valentine’s Day, but they didn’t seem quite as real to me as what I’d grown up with.

Last year, in an open thread at the Asexual Agenda*, I saw some fellow aromantics commiserating, struggling through a holiday that so explicitly left them out and put them down. My first thought was that sure, the most mainstream interpretation is pretty bad, but it’s not hard to make it into something worth celebrating.

That’s about the point where it occurred to me that I had heard those same thoughts coming from non-Christians who celebrated Christmas. I’d never agreed with them; I thought Christmas was too poisoned by its hegemonic nature to ever be enjoyable. Yet here I was, on the other side of essentially the same disagreement.

I still despise Christmas, but I understand now why people would like it even if they don’t agree with the hegemonic aspects. I still like Valentine’s Day even though I don’t agree with the hegemonic aspects, but I understand now why people would despise it. (For that matter, even the familial-love version would still alienate many people if it were more widely enforced.)

Happy holiday to those so inclined. My sympathies to those who aren’t.

*I know people coming here from the Carnival know what blog I’m talking about already, but my followers might not. (I recommend it, by the way.)


Tags:

#oh look an original post #carnival of aces feb 2014 #Happy Valentine’s Day from an aromantic asexual #Tolerable Christmas from an agnostic Jew

We Are Magneton: brin-bellway replied to your post: Sorry about you dad :S mine is of…

wearemagneton:

brin-bellway replied to your post: Sorry about you dad :S mine is of the camp that you can’t be anything but gay straight or trans, but he’s less vocal about it lately since some “scientific study” recently. But I’d offer my house if it was mine too XD I can imagine it: “G,…

Good: Mom noticed (at least several months before I did) that I’d never shown any sign of having a sexuality.

Bad: She expressed this as “You could be a lesbian for all I know.” Seems to me if someone never shows any sign of a sexuality, your first thought should be ace. If she’d said that, maybe it could’ve gotten me thinking a few months sooner. This probably indicates she thinks asexuals don’t exist.

Odd thing is, I knew asexuals existed since I was thirteen or so. But with the influence of heteronormativity, I misinterpreted platonic stuff as being signs of straightness. I felt a bit jealous of the asexuals whose blogs I read. Unlike them, (I thought) I didn’t have an excuse for reacting to pretty much every sex act I ever heard of with “You do what? Okaayy…” They never really sounded that appealing.

Nor did I ever feel any infatuation towards people. I knew damn well what infatuation felt like. I’d felt it with books, games, cartoons, music: it’s a feature of my neurotype. More experienced (read: romantic) people of said neurotype told me romantic infatuation felt recognisably similar, so clearly that hadn’t happened. I figured I was too sheltered to find a suitable boy.


Tags:

#heteronormativity   #asexuality   #reply via reblog