fuckyeahsexeducation:vladtheimpalainvalhalla:vaspider:notalwaysweak:joannablackhart:yamino:tristifer
fuckyeahsexeducation:vladtheimpalainvalhalla:vaspider:notalwaysweak:joannablackhart:yamino:tristifere:himteckerjam:intersectionalfeminism:Acephobia in the LGBT+ Community from the documentary (A)sexuality. It is just…so fucking weird how threatened people feel when it comes to Asexuality. I still can’t wrap my mind around it.I’m so happy this post is being reblogged by LBGT+ people who aren’t asexual. I keep on reading posts by non-ace LGBT+ people of support to the ace community, and of being stunned by this reaction by a movement which should know better than to judge. AND THAT MAKES THIS ACE SO FREAKING HAPPY. The woman in the first photo expresses my sentiment. I know I belong in the queer/LGBTQIA movement. I want to belong. But I just don’t know if I’m welcome. I’m so happy that there are so many people on Tumblr who do not fall into the catagory of outright refusal of asexuality.I know not a lot of people understand asexuality. And I know there’s confusion about it, about our experiences, and about how we fit in the movement. But let’s talk about this. Let’s have this conversation.I mostly don’t delve into the ace tags, but I hear there’s a lot of ace-hate that and I really don’t get it. I don’t understand how asexuality is threatening.You know what I (as a queer ace-spectrum person) find most threatening? Getting unwanted sexual unwanted advances from both queer and straight people. I’ve gotten them from people of all spectrums and it always makes me profoundly uncomfortable, and often unsafe. It just boggles my mind how people are upset by the concept of asexuality. That’s like getting really mad at someone who isn’t hungry. What’s the point? Just shut up eat your own sandwich. (And stop chewing on me.)Wow, the fuck the people in those images.Nobody has the right to disrespect anybody else’s sense of self. It may not be for, you but that does not give you the right to be an asshole.We really need to push more for LGBTQIA+ to be a standard, instead of just LGBT, especially considering that even the B and T are already invisible in much of the community.Not supporting some of us = not supporting all of us.Not supporting some of us = not supporting all of us.It really, really does bear repeating.I couldn’t be further from ace, but for serious. If we’re not in this together, we’re not in this at all.This makes me so angry. I have friends who are ace, and they are just as much a part of the queer community as I am. We need to embrace asexuality and treat it with the respect that it deserves.You can see this documentary on Netflix. I’ve heard mixed reviews about it. Has anyone seen it? What do you think about it? -- source link