Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Lovette Jallow's avatar

I had to go back and record my own voiceover in my studio. Today I write about what love feels like when you’re asexual, Black, and autistic.

Not the kind built on spectacle or urgency but the kind that waits for resonance.

Stillness before touch. Safety before desire.No butterflies. No chase. Just truth.

What about you?

Have you ever felt out of sync with how the world defines love?

How do you recognize connection when it doesn’t look like the script?

#asexuality #demisexual #BlackAutisticVoices

Expand full comment
Lilith Selene's avatar

I hope that people in their teens and twenties can recognize their asexuality for what it is now that people speak of it more openly. Because I didn’t. I thought I was weird, that I just had a low sex drive or that others I knew that particularly high sex drives.

It was only a few years ago that I realized just how different my desire for sex was from allosexuals. I’d started to wonder if I was asexual. I had a single conversation with a friend I live with about his experience of initial attraction to someone compared to mine. And it was so mind blowingly different that I stopped questioning and acknowledged that, yes, I AM asexual.

When I was younger the way we talked about asexuality was very narrow. It was more in line with aroace folks than folks who are ace but also romantic. As such, I never considered that I might be asexual.

People talk about compulsory heterosexuality but few people talk about compulsory allosexuality. It was that compulsory allosexuality that made me, in a small dark corner I didn’t like to look at, think I was strange.

I hope more people talk about what asexuality is and isn’t. I hope younger generations break the chains of compulsory sexualities earlier than some of us did.

Expand full comment
42 more comments...

No posts