I made up the term at 16. Found out in my 20s that it was real.
Asexual
We value all members of the ace community. Join to discuss topics regarding AVEN, art, projects, news and share valuable information to fellow Aces.
Please refrain from engaging in behaviour that is exclusionary of the Ace community. All aces are valid here.
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Rules:
1. Be Respectful, Aphobic comments will be removed. This is not the place to debate our existence.
2. No Illegal Content
3. No Spam
4. No Explicit Content
5. No Enciting Harassment, Brigading, Doxxing or Witch Hunts
6. NSFW should be behind NSFW tags.
7. Content should be related to Asexuality or the LGBT+ movement. All Asexuals and Allies are welcome here.
8. Reposting of Reddit content is permitted, try to credit the OC.
9. You do not have to be Asexual to post here, allies are welcome!
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See also:
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If there are more please send me a DM.
I think it was 2014 or 2015 where someone suggested to me that I might be aro. either I misheard it or they mispronounced it, but I thought "what? aromatic? what's that supposed to mean?" and kinda dismissed it.
a bit later, maybe also 2016, I stumbled upon the term asexuality. and I found myself in there as well. to me, it was less "omg, I'm not broken!" but more "ah, that's the word for it". I was already kind of aware of my non-existant level of attraction and desire to look for a relationship. I'm sex repulsed, so that made asexuality rather clear.
in terms of being aromantic: I never kissed, hugged or cuddled with the teenage girlfriend I had (into which relationship my mother kinda coerced me into. not out of bad faith, though. I had almost no friends, and she just wanted me to encourage to feel romantic love toward someone and experience how awesome it's supposed to feel)
so, some years later, I also stumbled upon the aro label. even though I knew it was applicable, I didn't really vibe with it for quite some time. maybe because I my sex repulsion made my asexuality a lot clearer and significant than my (I guess) romance indifference.
Today, I've embraced both labels. I'm glad to have found them, because it opened up a world for me to find other like-minded people online (I'm not aware of anyone offline being aro or ace) to share discussions and memes with.
the a-spec community is/was one of the last things I regularly returned to reddit for, if this community finally picks up some steam, I might be able to stay here for good. :)
Ayy there's an Ace community again! I was 25 when I finally pieced it together. Thanks to the resources at /r/asexual.