Re: The You Game!
Posted: Thu Feb 19, 2015 2:01 pm
So ^ really did have sexytimes? < wasn't sure before now!
< doesn't see that as being a separate problem from rape in general, < thinks these people who commit these sorts of crimes are going to do it one way or another, this just happens to be an "excuse" in some casesJewish Candy wrote:There is also the issue of corrective rape and other kinds of violence (particularly if you don't belong to the groups asexuals are most commonly portrayed as)... whether that's done by ignorant people or not, it's still done.
< is just saying that all people need to put up with shit from others at times, but when the critics exist in such a minority, people need to learn to put up with them.Jewish Candy wrote:a) asexuality is therefore seen as something to be corrected and b) this view can negatively impact asexual people.
Wtf?Jewish Candy wrote:< can't believe there are still people who believe the A in LGBTQIA+ stands for 'Ally' and not 'Asexual'.
< thinks that this is a fantastic article that highlights quite an observant stance towards terminology. Regarding this portion:MrBadGuy wrote:http://www.wired.com/2015/02/demisexuality/
In <'s opinion, the terminology, when it comes down to things, is largely unhelpful. It can be quite the opposite in some cases, as the concept of terminology, regardless of what can be said, is to provide designation. In the short-term, it can give people a sense of identity, it's a catchphrase that allows similar people to flock together. In the mid-term, it can make you unconsciously feel the need to conform to that designation. Two people are likely to label themselves as the same thing when the underlying causes are very different, which in the long-term, can create an even greater loss of identity, because their issues aren't being dealt with the right way. < thinks this is especially the case with younger people who only have online communities to interact with. Of course, there's very little scientific backing behind any of this, which is why < sees it as potentially harmful; science is the key, misnomers are not. One very good thing that can come out of this though is, due to the rising popularity of these terms, scientific research on it is probably going to increase a shitload.If the taxonomy seems loose and even confusing, it’s because the terms were created almost wholly online, arising on gaming-site forums and a nest of interrelated Tumblrs, blogs, and subreddits. They don’t necessarily describe fixed identities but serve more as beacons for people to locate each other online. While the rest of the world was using the web to invent and gratify new pervy thrills, these people used it as a wormhole out of a relentlessly sexual culture. It might be the only corner of the Internet that is not laced with porn.
So although labels are a big part of it, demisexuals and gray-aces don’t get too caught up in the lingo. They tend to be pretty comfortable with the idea they might change. A few months after that Friday at the outreach center, Genevieve realized she is more of an asexual than a gray-ace, and Sean now isn’t sure if he’s demi or ace. “Every single asexual I’ve met embraces fluidity—I might be gray or asexual or demisexual,” says Claudia, a 24-year-old student from Las Vegas. “Us aces are like: whatevs.”
< doesn't intend to offend, but the ratio of people who think they're asexual when 15/16/17 to the amount of people who truly are asexual is like looking at a pie chart of how long humans have existed in the Universe. < also thought < was asexual a few years ago, as did emshomar apparently. A friend of mine who thought she was asexual recently told < that she finally discovered who she was, and that it ended up just being an odd sort of kink. A lack of sexuality is incredibly rare and, to < at least, isn't something to toss around lightly as something to claim you have, because it leaves the few in the world who are genuine lost among a crowd of 'fakers', and that situation is a horribly depressing one to be in.Sny wrote:< is asexual and actually very happy about that
A similar thing has been prevalent in psychiatry, which is only now being addressed, and consider that that's a closed community. For its benefits the DSM can do, and has done, a hell of a lot of harm by squeezing people into those kinds of categories - sometimes with political motivation. But at the same time, < knows a lot of people who find things easier to manage simply from having a name to put to their 'thing'.Adsolution wrote: In <'s opinion, the terminology, when it comes down to things, is largely unhelpful. It can be quite the opposite in some cases, as the concept of terminology, regardless of what can be said, is to provide designation. In the short-term, it can give people a sense of identity, it's a catchphrase that allows similar people to flock together. In the mid-term, it can make you unconsciously feel the need to conform to that designation. Two people are likely to label themselves as the same thing when the underlying causes are very different, which in the long-term, can create an even greater loss of identity, because their issues aren't being dealt with the right way. < thinks this is especially the case with younger people who only have online communities to interact with. Of course, there's very little scientific backing behind any of this, which is why < sees it as potentially harmful; science is the key, misnomers are not. One very good thing that can come out of this though is, due to the rising popularity of these terms, scientific research on it is probably going to increase a shitload.
This is quite similar to <, though for < is was to do with accepting a physical condition as not impacting <'s sexuality in the way that < had imagined.Adsolution wrote:A friend of mine who thought she was asexual recently told < that she finally discovered who she was, and that it ended up just being an odd sort of kink.
< is uber sorry, but < has no idea what ^ just said, not one bit of it, < thinks it's the wording and sentence structure.Jewish Candy wrote:A similar thing has been prevalent in psychiatry, which is only now being addressed, and consider that that's a closed community. For its benefits the DSM can do, and has done, a hell of a lot of harm by squeezing people into those kinds of categories - sometimes with political motivation. But at the same time, < knows a lot of people who find things easier to manage simply from having a name to put to their 'thing'.
Ok, if you say so, but < isn't convinced that it's "society at large", just that people with negative reactions to things tend to be more vocal, especially online.Jewish Candy wrote:- Not a minority, as already discussed. This is society at large still having the generalised view that asexuals are broken in some way. Opinions have been shifting in the right direction over the last ten years, which is fantastic, but still, not a minority.
No of course < isn't talking about that, although < supposes an extraordinarily thick skin, physically, might be used to repel such an attack- Unless you're talking about the rapists, in which case, being raped is not something to 'grow a thicker skin' over. < is sure that wasn't the point ^ was trying to make
Yeah, < knows, < isn't trying to bring any new advice, < just feels that sometimes people want to feel like they're being oppressed or whatever, when really they're not. < isn't saying that this is the case here, but < is offering it as a possibility. < doesn't know much about it except that < hasn't encountered any ill-will towards asexuality (calling it broken) in <'s circles- People are just getting on with it and living with this stuff already. There's nothing new in that advice. < never understands why whenever these issues are brought up, this is the response certain people run to...
Oh god, < can now see all the areas where commas would have been useful! Sorry!Adsolution wrote:< is uber sorry, but < has no idea what ^ just said, not one bit of it, < thinks it's the wording and sentence structure.< is very curious though, can ^ rephrase?
This is very true, < finds it most often coming from people who wish they had been through greater hardship in order to become stronger or whatever. < can actually sympathise with them to some degree though, because society really seems to care a fuckload more about people who've been through shit and simply lived to tell the tail more than people who haven't, when it isn't really something they achieved or had control over. Sure, it can give you thicker skin (or not, depends on who you are), but there's just as high a possibility it could make you an ignorant asshole as it could an open-minded Jesus. Or anything in between, though it has a tendency to push extremes a bit more.MrBadGuy wrote:< just feels that sometimes people want to feel like they're being oppressed or whatever, when really they're not.
Ah! < gets it now. < agrees, and is actually quite glad to hear that < isn't a huge minority in this thought process (< hadn't really considered its prevalence in the professional community, though it seems obvious now that ^ mentions it).Jewish Candy wrote:But no matter. < was just noting that the unscientific labelling you discussed is a problem that the psychiatric community has grappled with since its inception, and that the problem is not limited to open communities like those found on the internet. The DSM is still a nightmare and still leads to incorrect or unhelpful diagnoses. But, at the same time, simply having a 'word' to use for a condition can be useful for people. So, basically just < nodding <'s head sagely.
< hopes that's more readable...?