tiredofcishets
tiredofcishets
cookie run is aro culture
802 posts
Aces and aros are LGBTQ+ | Not the original owner | If this url makes you uncomfortable, feel free to block me | he/they pronouns | bi aro trans man | Call me Sea | header credit to aro-aceplace | I made my own icon but the flag is the alloaro flag | No discourse. Period | I am an anti so anti-antis block me please 💚
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tiredofcishets · 1 year ago
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okay so uh. idk how i'm gonna do this. but i figured since i never use this blog i would do a little update just for anyone who still wants to keep up with me. but i'm 23 now! epic cool guy in his early 20s swag or whatever. uh i also have a girlfriend now and i love her very much she's amazing but also i'm still aro. we've talked about it dw too much its chill. she's chill. also if uh. you want to keep up with me as a person my main is @starswallowingsea . i havent released my main before due to personal concerns but eh i doubt anyone cares about this blog anymore so go nuts and have a great day
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tiredofcishets · 1 year ago
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Genuine question, but why is a specific "alloaro" flag needed? Doesn't the normal aromantic flag work to cover that? Since "allo" isn't a marginalised category like at all, so I'm kinda stuggling to understand why it's necessary... (I'm aro myself so I'm not trying to troll or anything honest)
Good question! In theory, yes we would all be covered by the aro flag and that would be enough (and then you ask why aroaces need 5 different flags when it should be enough to just split the two flags vertically and use them in edits.... right?)
So allosexuality, when paired with alloromanticism, isn't a marginalized identity, inherently yes. But because it's paired with aromanticism in this situation, the story changes. A lot of aspec spaces are geared towards aces specifically, and a lot of arospec spaces are made specifically for aroaces.
So where do alloaros go? There's a lot of arophobia coming from aces and a lot of alloarophobia from aroaces (obligatory disclaimer that no, I don't, in fact, hate aces or aroaces).
Alloaros get shoved to the side in our own community, with aro tags being something like 50% aroaces, 10% alloaces (yeah, BIG PROBLEM), 35% general posts that may or may not be tag spammed posts, and 5% posts about alloaros. If we're lucky.
There's a lot of "ew sex is gross" posts in aro tags, even though aromanticism isn't an asexual identity. Or people who go to alloaro blogs and say aces can't be arophobic but alloaros better stop being acephobic and tearing the community apart. Or people who still assume that we're all predatory because we "want sex but not romance" even though alloaro experiences aren't all the same and some of us don't even want sex, we just experience attraction.
And we finally said that we've had enough of being shoved to the side. That's why we have the alloaro flag, even though the general aro flag should be enough for all of us.
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tiredofcishets · 3 years ago
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I saw some posts about aro ppl confusing their squishes with having a crush but I never saw a post about aroallo ppl who confused their sexual attraction with having a crush so shout-out to us also!
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tiredofcishets · 3 years ago
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shout of to alloaro mlm— your lack of romantic attraction and your sexual attraction does not make you a predator, it does not make you shallow, it does not mean you are ‘proving negative stereotypes’ of mlm. you are allowed to be sexually attracted to men while not loving them. you’re attraction is normal and deserves to be respected
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tiredofcishets · 3 years ago
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To aro men, especially trans aro men,
Friendly reminder that you are not encouraging toxic masculinity by being aromantic.
Friendly reminder that you're complete and whole. You don't need a romantic partner (particularly a woman) to fix you.
Friendly reminder that it is okay to want friends who you can have sex and nothing "more". Friendly reminder that there need not be a more. Friendly reminder that friendship can be everything.
Friendly reminder that you will have meaningful relationships. That you have meaningful relationships. That meaning in relationships is transcendent of language. It is something you create.
Friendly reminder that you're a good man.
Friendly reminder that you are loved for who you are. Whatever love means to you. And if love means nothing to you then you are cared for, respected, safe, whatever it is you want.
Friendly reminder that masculinity transcends the rules we've laid out for it.
Friendly reminder that international men's day is for you.
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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*touches notes* what happened there
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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Not to talk about cookie run on side but I'm actually excited for this new event
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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Remember when I played My Horse Prince on this blog
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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shoutout to the mlm who aren't yearning pining aching or even interested in a romantic relationship. it's okay to have a low (or no) romantic drive. you're still mlm and welcome in the community. shoutout to the mlm who are ace and/or aro and feel alienated from the community for it. you can be mlm and not in a relationship. you can be mlm and uninterested in having a relationship. your identity as mlm isn't tied to your desire for a relationship and you deserve to be seen and heard within the mlm community. not all mlm are interested in lovecore and yearning and daydreaming etc. despite what tumblr seems to say. it's okay and normal and healthy to focus on you. your identity isn't tied to anybody but yourself.
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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It's okay to be arospec and want romance. It doesn't diminish your identity at all.
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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Being trans isn’t about pain, suffering, or hate. It’s a journey of self discovery. All journeys have hardship, but they also have accomplishments, fun, and moments of pure joy.
Be proud of yourself and don’t let people tell you that you can’t have fun or happiness and be trans.
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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Don’t call an aro person ace unless they say you can.
Don’t put an aro person under the ace umbrella unless they say you can.
Don’t put the entire aro community inside the ace community. They are not just a subset of asexual.
Aros and aces share the aspec community, not the ace community.
Being aro does not automatically mean you are ace.
Do not say acespec and aspec are interchangable, because they’re not.
This sort of thing plays into aro erasure, and it is extremely arophobic. Even if you’re perfectly fine with it for yourself, you are erasing massive handfuls of people who are aro and not ace.
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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Tumblr media
Richard Siken
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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re: Moses Sumney
Originally, I wasn’t going to say anything, because I have a significant audience and I didn’t want to put a spotlight on something if nobody was paying attention to it. But I’ve seen more and more about this, so I decided to say something.
I am not going to boost the original post that’s going around that seemed to start all of this, because I think it’s disingenuous and I don’t want to spread it around any further. In fact, I may regret bringing this up at all, but I digress. For context: some folks have recently learned that Moses Sumney, who wrote the album “Aromanticism”, does not explicitly self-identify as aro. Many are upset about this, and feel that by invoking the name of aromanticism as his album title and leading people to believe that he identified as such, he is profiting off of the aro experience in some way, or using us for his aesthetic.
I deeply understand the frustration I am seeing re: Moses Sumney right now. It is incredibly disheartening to see that a celebrity you thought shared your identity doesn’t, and I think people’s discomfort with Sumney using the title of Aromanticism and leading people to believe he was aro is warranted. While he never explicitly identified himself as aro, naturally people are going to assume as such when you allude to those experiences so heavily and name your album after it. I think all these feelings are valid and I don’t want anyone to feel like they aren’t allowed to feel pissed or let down.
However: I would strongly caution us against this kneejerk reaction some folks seem to have had to cancel Moses Sumney over this. The original post I alluded to frames Sumney’s actions as exploitative in some way, as though he were intentionally profiting off of the aro community somehow. Here are my thoughts on the matter:
1. The aro community is not exactly in a position right now where talking about us really earns you any clout. Regardless, Sumney has stated that he turned down opportunities meant for queer artists because he does not identify as queer. I believe him; it’s certainly okay if you don’t, but to suggest that he has profited off of being perceived as aro seems unsupported to me, given that many critics and reviewers of the album have willfully misinterpreted it anyway. There are very few interviews with Sumney, to my knowledge, that seem to entertain the possibility that he might be aro as anything positive.
2. While it is understandable to be upset with Sumney for not being clear about whether or not he identified as aro when the album was released, it is unfair to expect him to use the labels we would like him to if he does not want to, even if the experiences he has described are tangentially similar to our own. This is particularly important given that Sumney is a Black man, and as he himself has stated, Black folks are often not given the same agency over their identity and orientation that white people are. Especially when he is a public figure–Sumney is a Black artist who deviates from the heteronormative standard, regardless of how he labels himself (something he himself has explained), and thus he was always going to be boxed in and picked apart by media outlets looking for someone or something new to sensationalize for clicks. At the end of the day, while being a celebrity, he’s still just a person, and he doesn’t owe anyone constant corrections or explanations of his identity or the use of labels he does not want to use.
3. “Aromanticism”, the album, was deeply influential in the aro community at the time of its release in 2017 and remains as such for many to this day. Many arospec folks resonated with it in some way or another, and frankly just seeing someone in the public eye acknowledge the very existence of aromanticism and create art related to aro or aro-adjacent experiences was groundbreaking for many of us during a time when the word “aromantic” hadn’t even been added to the dictionary yet. And that’s something else important to note–even if Moses Sumney doesn’t identify as aromantic, the experiences he talks about in interviews and alludes to on the album are aro-adjacent ones. To that point:
4. I understand that many feel like their identity has been used as an aesthetic. Even if that wasn’t Sumney’s intent, I think it’s valid to feel that way. But if we don’t allow anyone who doesn’t explicitly self-identify as aro to even invoke the name of aromanticism in their art, we will be hard-pressed to find anyone willing to talk about us at all. Maybe I would feel differently if we were in a place where talking about aro issues was the latest trend and Sumney could truly profit off of us, or if the album was a complete willful misrepresentation of aro experiences. But I don’t think either of those things are true, and I am troubled by the fact that an album that has been lauded as a piece of iconic aro media is suddenly being cast aside as exploitative and bad simply because Sumney doesn’t actively share our identity labels (a fact that was publicly accessible long before this, just for what it’s worth, though I don’t blame anyone for not knowing that).
Again, I want to reiterate that I don’t intend to invalidate anyone’s feelings on the matter. I share some of those sentiments myself. But Sumney’s work (both on the album itself and in interviews and statements he has given surrounding it) to challenge amatonormativity should not be discounted. Personal feelings about Sumney’s handling of the situation notwithstanding, the release of the album was in and of itself a net positive for the aro community. I personally don’t think him not identifying as aromantic discounts that in any way, and I fail to see the issue with that.
tl;dr Please don’t take anyone’s interpretations of Moses Sumney’s words and actions as gospel (including my own!). “Aromanticism” is an album that resonates with many aro experiences, written from his own experiences, and its positive influence doesn’t disappear once people realize that Sumney isn’t aromantic. By all means, feel however you want to feel about it and about him���but I would discourage anyone from jumping to conclusions about Moses Sumney’s intentions and cancelling him/his work because of it.
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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re: Moses Sumney
Originally, I wasn’t going to say anything, because I have a significant audience and I didn’t want to put a spotlight on something if nobody was paying attention to it. But I’ve seen more and more about this, so I decided to say something.
I am not going to boost the original post that’s going around that seemed to start all of this, because I think it’s disingenuous and I don’t want to spread it around any further. In fact, I may regret bringing this up at all, but I digress. For context: some folks have recently learned that Moses Sumney, who wrote the album “Aromanticism”, does not explicitly self-identify as aro. Many are upset about this, and feel that by invoking the name of aromanticism as his album title and leading people to believe that he identified as such, he is profiting off of the aro experience in some way, or using us for his aesthetic.
I deeply understand the frustration I am seeing re: Moses Sumney right now. It is incredibly disheartening to see that a celebrity you thought shared your identity doesn’t, and I think people’s discomfort with Sumney using the title of Aromanticism and leading people to believe he was aro is warranted. While he never explicitly identified himself as aro, naturally people are going to assume as such when you allude to those experiences so heavily and name your album after it. I think all these feelings are valid and I don’t want anyone to feel like they aren’t allowed to feel pissed or let down.
However: I would strongly caution us against this kneejerk reaction some folks seem to have had to cancel Moses Sumney over this. The original post I alluded to frames Sumney’s actions as exploitative in some way, as though he were intentionally profiting off of the aro community somehow. Here are my thoughts on the matter:
1. The aro community is not exactly in a position right now where talking about us really earns you any clout. Regardless, Sumney has stated that he turned down opportunities meant for queer artists because he does not identify as queer. I believe him; it’s certainly okay if you don’t, but to suggest that he has profited off of being perceived as aro seems unsupported to me, given that many critics and reviewers of the album have willfully misinterpreted it anyway. There are very few interviews with Sumney, to my knowledge, that seem to entertain the possibility that he might be aro as anything positive.
2. While it is understandable to be upset with Sumney for not being clear about whether or not he identified as aro when the album was released, it is unfair to expect him to use the labels we would like him to if he does not want to, even if the experiences he has described are tangentially similar to our own. This is particularly important given that Sumney is a Black man, and as he himself has stated, Black folks are often not given the same agency over their identity and orientation that white people are. Especially when he is a public figure–Sumney is a Black artist who deviates from the heteronormative standard, regardless of how he labels himself (something he himself has explained), and thus he was always going to be boxed in and picked apart by media outlets looking for someone or something new to sensationalize for clicks. At the end of the day, while being a celebrity, he’s still just a person, and he doesn’t owe anyone constant corrections or explanations of his identity or the use of labels he does not want to use.
3. “Aromanticism”, the album, was deeply influential in the aro community at the time of its release in 2017 and remains as such for many to this day. Many arospec folks resonated with it in some way or another, and frankly just seeing someone in the public eye acknowledge the very existence of aromanticism and create art related to aro or aro-adjacent experiences was groundbreaking for many of us during a time when the word “aromantic” hadn’t even been added to the dictionary yet. And that’s something else important to note–even if Moses Sumney doesn’t identify as aromantic, the experiences he talks about in interviews and alludes to on the album are aro-adjacent ones. To that point:
4. I understand that many feel like their identity has been used as an aesthetic. Even if that wasn’t Sumney’s intent, I think it’s valid to feel that way. But if we don’t allow anyone who doesn’t explicitly self-identify as aro to even invoke the name of aromanticism in their art, we will be hard-pressed to find anyone willing to talk about us at all. Maybe I would feel differently if we were in a place where talking about aro issues was the latest trend and Sumney could truly profit off of us, or if the album was a complete willful misrepresentation of aro experiences. But I don’t think either of those things are true, and I am troubled by the fact that an album that has been lauded as a piece of iconic aro media is suddenly being cast aside as exploitative and bad simply because Sumney doesn’t actively share our identity labels (a fact that was publicly accessible long before this, just for what it’s worth, though I don’t blame anyone for not knowing that).
Again, I want to reiterate that I don’t intend to invalidate anyone’s feelings on the matter. I share some of those sentiments myself. But Sumney’s work (both on the album itself and in interviews and statements he has given surrounding it) to challenge amatonormativity should not be discounted. Personal feelings about Sumney’s handling of the situation notwithstanding, the release of the album was in and of itself a net positive for the aro community. I personally don’t think him not identifying as aromantic discounts that in any way, and I fail to see the issue with that.
tl;dr Please don’t take anyone’s interpretations of Moses Sumney’s words and actions as gospel (including my own!). “Aromanticism” is an album that resonates with many aro experiences, written from his own experiences, and its positive influence doesn’t disappear once people realize that Sumney isn’t aromantic. By all means, feel however you want to feel about it and about him–but I would discourage anyone from jumping to conclusions about Moses Sumney’s intentions and cancelling him/his work because of it.
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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Ppl who tag my posts that only say aro/alloaro as ace/asexual.... why
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tiredofcishets · 4 years ago
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Aro mlm: your attraction to men is not dirty or wrong. It is still pure and good, and attraction to men isn’t softened or “made better” by romance. You are not predatory or abusive. You are you, and that’s plenty good enough, and to be admired.
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