Tag: LGBT

20 Activities to do This Pride Month

Saturday marks the first day of pride month (my favorite month), so it’s only right I use my very intelligent brain to formulate a list of activities to inspire you to be extra gay this month. Plus, they’re a bit more interesting than “go to pride,” although that will be the first option on this list because come on, that’s part of the point. But maybe pride isn’t your thing, or you’re not at a place in your life where pride is something you can, or even want, to do. So, these are smaller things you can do to celebrate your pride.

Existence is protest! Happy pride!

  1. Go to Pride

Duh. Now listen, you don’t even have to go to a big city pride event. You could go to a small city block party instead! 

  1. Make Friendship Bracelets

Make bracelets in the colors of your pride flag, or your friends flags! They could be traditional knotted string bracelets, made with beads, or both! 

  1. Make a Pride Playlist

Curate a playlist of all your favorite gay songs, or listen to mine

  1. Have a Dance Party to Your Pride Playlist 
  1. Decorate Clothes for Pride 

You could paint rainbows on your pants, embroider a flag on a jean jacket, or bedazzle a cowboy hat! 

  1. Do Drag Makeup

Drag makeup will instantly make you cooler and hotter. 

  1. Go to a Drag Show

Maybe you’re not that into makeup, so you could watch people in drag makeup instead! Plus, you’d be supporting your local queer community.

  1. Make Gay Cards

Make pride cards for your gay friends, or make posters and deliver them to all the gay people you know. This could be a whole adventure. You could surprise your friends, or gather them all up and make it a group activity. Go to the craft store, get supplies, decorate all day! 

  1. Add Your Pronouns to Your Social Media Bios 
  1. Bake a Rainbow Cake 

Or bake a cake in the colors of your pride flag!

  1. Watch a Gay Movie 

Paris is Burning, But I’m a Cheerleader, The Life and Death of Marsha P. Johnson, the options are endless. It could be a fun movie, or a documentary and you could study up on your queer history. Get a blanket, make some popcorn, cozy up, and be gay!

  1. Have a Pride Picnic 

Gather your friends and put each person in charge of bringing a food the color of the rainbow, or, bake your pride cake together and eat it at the park!

  1. Write a Short Story About a Little Gay Person 

I do this all the time anyway, but if you’re not an English major blog owner like me, this could be a fun challenge!

  1. Host a Talent Show 

Gather all your gay friends and make them perform their unique talents. Or, if your only talent is being gay, lips sync for your life! 

  1. Dress up as Your Favorite Gay Icon

You’ll catch me as Chappell Roan. 

  1. Have a Slideshow Night 

Recently my friends and I have done slideshow nights discussing our types, and assigning songs to each other. Next, we’re describing our gender as objects, so you could really do anything! 

  1. Tie Dye Clothes
  1. Embroider Clothes 

Or you could crochet, sew, do something crafty! 

  1. Make Earrings Out of Clay

Take another trip to the craft store for earring posts and clay, and create fun little shapes. There’s nothing gay people love more than funky earrings. 

  1. Give me $20

If you’re an ally, it’s mandatory to give all your gay friends money. I don’t make the rules. Or, if you can’t spare any change, you can read my blog and send it to your friends. 

  1. Donate 

Okay, I’ll make this list have 21 ideas since the last one was kind of a fake. A super easy way to support the queer community is by donating. You could donate to small local organizations near you, or you could donate to The Trevor Project or other larger LGBTQIA+ organizations. 

Okay. That’s all. Have a lovely pride month. I can’t believe we get to be gay for thirty days. 

Actually Important Asexual Culture You Should Know

Since I usually write about my silly little ace life, I thought it would be cool to share some important aspects of ace culture that are beyond funny stereotypes about cake and rings. So, this post is a bit more legit. It’s not all garlic bread and puns. These are important roots for the ace community and we get a bit into queer theory (which is my favorite thing probably ever – besides Conan Gray of course). 

  1. AVEN and David Jay

David Jay is probably one of the most well-known asexuals in the community. Tired of asexuality being ignored, he created AVEN (Asexuality Visibility Education Network) in 2001 for aces and allos to gain education and talk to each other. It’s currently the biggest platform for asexuals to gather and communicate on the forums. There are over 130,000 members as of 2021, and I’m sure that doesn’t even include the daily visitors who check it out as I do. 

As an asexual who frequented AVEN at the beginning of my sexuality crisis I can confirm that AVEN is actually a really special place for a lot of aces. There’s a great sense of community and it’s really nice to read stories and experiences of other aces when being ace can feel isolating. Plus, there’s book and movie recommendations, canon ace characters, surveys to fill out, and people to meet. AVEN is responsible for advocating for the DSM to change HSDD to be more ace-inclusive and not pathologize those who identity on the ace spectrum. 

Although this is probably one of the most well-known parts of ace culture, it’s arguably the most important due to its prevalence in ace spaces and the work AVEN has done for the community. 

  1. A Prude’s Manifesto 

“A Prude’s Manifesto” is a spoken word poem by Cameron Awkward-Rich, and although often heard about in the ace community, is often brought up in books on asexual/queer theory. This is one of the most prevalent asexual poems and probably one of the only ones you would find if you were to look up asexual poetry. The main idea of this poem is that Rich discusses things he would do rather than have sex as well as self-love, romantic relationships, religion, and asexuality. It is funny and beautiful and of course politically charged. 

The poem begins with Rich saying “Here is a list of things I like more than having sex” followed by “reading,” “peeling back the skin of a grapefruit” and “riding my bike away from parties.” He says that “Love is a girl who slept beside me barely touching for two years.” Some of my favorite lines are “When I touch her it is with someone else’s hands,” “The best love I have ever known was sin or sacrilege,” and “I have been made ghost and reborn as flesh.” 

Anyway. It’s just a stunning poem, and the spoken presentation adds such a personable layer. You should listen, and then probably listen again. 

  1. Ace Zine Archive 

I’m going to be so real with you guys, I just recently found out about this. I’m currently reading Asexual Erotics which I mentioned in my last blog post, and that book discussed this archive, which I immediately Googled and checked out. It’s a super cool website where you can find online zines (a shortened magazine type publication) about being asexual. Some of the zines are artistic, while others are more prose and education based. 

These are super cool to check out and it’s nice to see asexuality turned into artwork and other mediums. One of my favorite ones was on the intersectionality of asexuality and race, which was especially cool and interesting. You can check it out here: zine! (I recommend downloading to be able to see it best.) 

  1. Kinsey Scale X

The Kinsey Scale is a test to determine where one lies on the sexuality spectrum. One could score from 0 to 6, the former being heterosexual, to the latter being exclusively homosexual. However, there is a secret seventh option which is “X.” This is a marker for those who do not experience sexual attraction. This is incredibly interesting because although the test does count for the ace community, it labels them in a way that ostracizes them from the rest of the queer community by giving a letter instead of a number. On the actual graph itself, there is no actual spot for the ace community. 

Although this scale was invented to show the fluidity of sexuality, I would argue it is binary and allonormative in nature. It assumes people are having sex and that they would fall into a category that can be prescribed a label. However, even though there are some flaws within this test, I can’t ignore the fact that Kinsey was doing research for the queer community that would be important later on. 

Researchers acknowledged the existence of asexuals yet often left them out of further research. Later, in the early 2000s, more research was done on asexuality and it has been slowly included more and more into research on sexuality and in queer spaces. 

  1. White Washing in Ace Communities

This is a topic I’ve more recently come to know about, but it is in fact crazy, and by crazy I mean absurdly racist. Unfortunately, the ace community is made up of predominantly white people. Societally we’ve been known to protect white sexuality, especially for white women. Children and white women are expected to be asexual, while people of color, especially Black women, are hyper-sexualized. 

Yasmin Benoit is a great example of this. She’s probably one of the other best-known ace activists besides David Jay. However, she receives an incredible amount of aphobic and racist backlash as she’s a lingerie model and goth in her daily-presentation. A lot of people don’t understand how a Black woman who is “sexy” in her career could be asexual, especially when there’s a long history of Black women being seen as exotic and animalistic. 

This just goes to show the heteronormative violence in our society that women simply owe men sex for existing. It’s a misogynistic and objectification of women that has long been rooted in our culture. 

There is a stereotypical white, nerdy, cisgender male as a prototype for asexuality. Those who are white, cisgender, overweight, or “ugly,” are also assumed to be asexual as an excuse or assumption that no one would want to date them and therefore are not having sex. This idea that one must look a certain way in order to be sexually attractive and desire sex is rooted in sexism, fatphobia, and obviously white supremacy. This makes it challenging for those who are people of color to be believed and have their identities validated when society has hyper-sexualized POC and desexualized many white people. 

Okay. That’s all. I’m sure you all found this so interesting and cool and probably the best thing you’ve ever read. Until next week! 

More Asexual Books You Should (and shouldn’t) Read

I wrote a blog post a couple months ago about books on asexuality that you should (or shouldn’t) read, and since then I’ve read a few more so it only makes sense that I should make a part two. And as always, I am gladly accepting recommendations/suggestions for books and authors to read!

  1. Refusing Compulsory Sexuality – Sherronda Brown

At the end of the first blog post I mentioned that I was currently reading Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda Brown, and oh my god that book changed my life.

Now, this could sound stupid to some, but this book really opened my eyes to white supremacy and how everything (sex, gender, patriarchy, politics) boils down to white nationalism. And sure, I knew about this, but as a white person, I live in a little bubble of privilege and am clearly naive to the difficulties surrounding race, because I’ll never experience life as a person of color. The way whiteness is so deeply tied to society and heteronormativity and sexuality is so deeply rooted it is almost unfathomable. And it is so interesting to learn how asexuality, and especially Black asexuality, goes against these cultural norms. This book discussed race, the hyper-sexualization of Black girls, the fear of the Black phallus, BLM categories on Pornhub, disability, colonization, discrimination of aces in the queer community, asexuality as a white identity, and literally so much more. If you’re interested in critical race theory, or queer and gender theory, I’m sure you would find this book fascinating. 

Rating: 8/10

Would I recommend it? Yes 100%. 

Would I read again? Yes. This book is definitely a scholarly one, so it is not the easiest read, but it is incredibly interesting and super educational. 

  1. How to be Ace – Rebecca Burgess 

Like the last blog post, this was another book that, to my surprise, was a graphic novel. And by now we probably know I’m not the biggest graphic novel fan, but that did mean that I could read this book in a day. As an ace person who occasionally just wants to read a silly little book about another ace person, this was a great option. Rebecca simply just talked about how they realized they were ace and the experiences they had surrounding that (mostly in university) and how that coincided with their OCD and anxiety. The illustrations were cute and it had a happy ending so I don’t have any complaints. 

Rating: 7/10

Would I recommend it? Sure!

Would I read again? Probably not. It was good, and an easy read, but I don’t find myself reaching for graphic novels often. 

  1. The Charm Offensive – Alice Cochrun

When I picked this book up I didn’t expect any characters to be ace, but the main character is demisexual! This book was one I saw on BookTok, and if you know me, you know I have let BookTok screw me over again and again. I see a book on BookTok, everyone says they love it. I get said book. I read book. I don’t like book. I get upset everyone told me to read mediocre book. I go on BookTok. I pick up another book. The cycle continues. 

Well thank god this book broke that cycle. 

The Charm Offensive follows Dev and Charlie through a split POV as Dev works on a television show – basically The Bachelor – and ends up falling for the bachelor himself, Charlie. This is obviously an issue as Charlie has just realized he’s gay, and is most definitely supposed to fall in love with a woman on the show he signed up for to fix his reputation. This book was so cute. It was funny and sweet and I read it so quickly. Plus, there’s a tiny short story the author published called A Charmed Christmas that gives a quick update on the characters in the future. 

Charlie is demisexual and Dev, who is allo, is nothing but supportive of this part of his identity. The ace representation was subtle, but nevertheless there, and that’s all I could ask for. 

Rating: 8/10. 

Would I recommend it? Yes!!

Would I read again? In a couple years I could definitely see myself picking this one back up for an easy, uplifting read. 

  1. Kiss Her Once for Me – Alice Cochrun

Because I loved TCO so much I obviously had to read another book by Alice. And to (slightly less) of my surprise, the main character was once again demisexual. I would bet a decent amount of money this isn’t a coincidence and Alice herself is demi, so that means I’m probably supporting ace authors by buying her books and that’s a win/win situation!

KHOFM is a Christmas romance, though I think you could read it any time of year. Ellie and Jack had a meet-cute a year ago on Christmas that lasted only a single day, and due to some events we learn about later cause Ellie to run from the situation, leaving this perfect woman behind. In the present Ellie is still heartbroken over this amazing Christmas love affair. However, she is struggling to make ends meet, so she decides to join a crazy fake-marriage plan with her boss who promises to give her part of his inheritance he’ll earn only when he’s married. Ellie and Jack end up meeting again, and Ellie has to figure out if she should stay loyal to her faux-fiancé or follow her true feelings. 

This was super cute and wasn’t as predictable as you might think. Plus, the character’s met at Powell’s Bookstore, and I’m currently writing a screenplay where the characters meet as Powell’s which is a crazy, but cool, coincidence. 

Rating: 7.5/10

Would I recommend it? Yes!

Would I read again?  Like Alice’s other book I could see myself reading this again a couple years from now. 

  1. Asexual Erotics – Ela Przybylo

Asexual Erotics is not for the weak. Be warned: this book is a challenging read. And as someone very interested in queer theory, someone who consumes queer media, reads queer and feminist theory for fun, and is currently in school for a minor in gender and sexuality studies, this book had me scratching my head in confusion. 

This book is incredibly academic. However, it is also incredibly interesting. While there are some paragraphs and sentences my brain skims over with lack of comprehension, there are certainly some amazing lines. Working on Audre Lorde’s theory of erotic, Przybylo defines erotics as “energy of collective struggle to end oppression” and ties this theory into race, lesbian bed death, feminist theory, spinsters, and the asexual child. 

In order to explain this, here’s some sentences I found incredibly interesting: 

“Ianna Hawkins Owens discusses how compulsory heterosexuality has uneven racial histories, such that whiteness has tended to emulate an ‘asexuality-as-ideal’ as demonstrative of a form of innocence, moral, control, and restraint, while black people have often been positioned as hypersexual so as to justify enslavement, lynching, and other instruments of racism.” 

“Kathryn Kent argues that in the postbellum period and the early twentieth century, marriage signified differently for white women and black women such that white women sought self-autonomy through refusing marriage while black women sought self-determination and entry into the public sphere through marrying.” 

I haven’t completed this book in total yet, and I’m currently about half way through. I found the introduction to be interesting, and the first and second chapter to be interesting but definitely more theorizing than actually proving anything. However, the second half of the book covers topics I think will peak my interest, so I’ll let you know when I finish, 

Rating: TBD

Would I recommend it? Yes! However this is not for the faint of heart. 

Would I read again? I can see myself using this as an academic piece in classes and discussions on asexuality. I would probably re-read certain parts and not the book in its entirety. 

Love Lies Bleeding, Young Royals, and More Queer Media I’ve Recently Consumed

If there’s one thing about me, it’s that if I watch, read, or even look at something, it’s going to be queer. In honor of that, here’s my thoughts on some queer media I’ve consumed over the past month: 

  1. Love Lies Bleeding

Last week I saw Love Lies Bleeding in theater, and it was crazy. First of all, I will state my bias and say that I am down bad for Kristen Stewart. She is, truly, so fine. So, was my main objective for seeing this movie my desire to stare at Kristen Stewart on screen for ninety minutes? Yes. Plus, I love gay people, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen a gay movie in theaters. 

Starting with the positives, this movie truly captures every lesbian experience and stereotype. Only lesbians will meet, have sex, and move in with each other the next day. Only lesbians will point a gun at their girlfriend to make out with her three seconds later. And, only lesbians will flee their home, bringing only their fluffy orange cat with them. 

This movie was entertaining. Kristen Stewart was hot as hell. The auditory and visual components of this movie were insanely cool and the acting was genuinely good. I gave it a seven out of ten, although I could be convinced it was a 6 if you really tried due to the whack ending. 

There were lesbians, murder, cover-ups, family drama, corrupt police officers, body builders, and some really weird bugs. Plus, the gay people in the movie didn’t die, so I consider that a win. 

Now, that doesn’t mean this movie was perfect, because I certainly have some questions for the director. The ending was crazy. I assume it was a metaphor, but I could have gone without it. Also, there was a trauma induced throwing up scene, where Kristen Stewart was yakked out of the mouth of her jacked girlfriend, where she was a slimy larvae looking creature, and that was just plain weird. Plus, a lot of people died, and no one saw the murders happen?! I know the police are corrupt, but damn, not a single neighbor saw a body being dragged down the stairs? 

If you want to see an entertaining- grungy-80s-horror-lesbian-film, this is the movie for you. 7/10. 

  1. Late to The Party

Taking a completely different direction from that movie, two weeks ago I finished Kelly Quindlen’s novel, Late to The Party. I had heard really good things about this on TikTok (my first mistake) so I decided it was one I needed to read. Upon getting this book in my possession I did in fact realize that dear Kelly is the same person who wrote She Drives Me Crazy which I thought was just an overall bad book with annoying characters and juvenile writing. Unfortunately for me, and for Kelly, her writing hasn’t really seemed to improve since her last book. However, I did like this book more, but that’s not to say it didn’t have its faults.

First of all, the main character was annoying as hell. The writing was mediocre and the one word I would use to describe this book would be cringe. The main character had serious pick me energy, and blamed literally everyone else for her issues when they were in fact all her fault. The main character was 17 and was convinced she wasn’t a real teenager because she hadn’t kissed a girl or gone to a party. She was acting like she was the least cool person ever. Let’s be real right now, this chick just got her license and she’s acting like she’s forty and never tasted ice cream. Get a grip. 

Unfortunately being a creative writing major has ruined my ability to enjoy books, because the entire time I was reading this I was workshopping it in my head and giving it some serious edits. But it did make me feel hopeful for the future because if a novel with this mediocre writing could be published, surely someone will want to publish me when I write my own novel. 

That was a lot of negativity. I promise there were aspects of this book I liked. I did appreciate how the book didn’t focus on the character’s coming out. I prefer queer books where the characters are simply just queer. And, I am a sucker for a coming-of-age book. Plus, I may or may not have been close to tears or crying multiple times during this book. It was actually sweet, and I love young gay people meeting other gays and falling in love. It was kind of giving found family and I love that. 

I was also pissed when I went on GoodReads and found that everyone and their grandma was giving this book a five out of five. Come on…

If you want a mediocre but sweet book about young gay kids that simultaneously makes you want to chuck your book across the room and cry happy tears, this is the book for you. 5/10.  

  1. “Alley Rose”

Conan Gray’s third album is being released on April 5th, and he’s released his fourth single, so of course I’m feeling super normal and not at all insane about it.

But seriously, this song is so good. And I know what you’re thinking. Jadey, you absolutely eat up every single thing Conan does. And to that I would say, you’re completely right. However, with the last few singles, upon first listen I wasn’t crazy in love. Don’t get me wrong, they’re bops, but it took some time for them to grow on me. But when “Alley Rose” came out, oh my god. I was speechless. I was flabbergasted. I was shaking in my boots. I was listening on repeat 24/7. 

If you want a heartbreaking love song with one of the best bridges Conan has ever written, this song is for you. 9/10. 

  1. Young Royals

The third and final season of Young Royals came out and I’m going to be so for real right now…if this story wasn’t about gay people it would be painfully boring. This show is incredibly slow. There’s about one sentence every five minutes. Plus, it’s in Swedish, so I have to decide between subtitles or an English voiceover that doesn’t match the mouths. 

To continue being honest, I also haven’t finished the season yet…and if it doesn’t end with Simon and Wilhelm smiling and being happily in love I’m going to actually be so upset. 

I won’t give this a for sure rating just yet…but I can assume I’ll give it a solid 7/10. 

  1. A Bit Fruity

Matt Bernstein is the creator of the podcast A Bit Fruity, and if I could say one thing to Matt it would simply be “I love you.” If you are in the least bit liberal, or even know someone liberal, you probably follow, or at least have seen someone repost, Matt’s Instagram. Matt posts a lot about queer news and education about the community. They’re funny, critical, and somewhat recently started a podcast. And it’s saying a lot that I love it so much because I am not a podcast girly. I can appreciate one, but they can get boring. Never Matt’s! They’re funny, well-thought out, and so so interesting. As someone deeply interested in queer theory and politics surrounding queerness, this podcast was literally made just for me. I’m truly hooked every episode. New episodes are released on Tuesdays every other week, and let me tell you, Tuesday cannot come soon enough. 

Definitely another 9/10. 

Childhood Signs I was Asexual and Queer

I’ve seen a lot of videos on YouTube where people talk about childhood signs they were gay or trans or non-binary or what-have-you, so today that’s what I’m going to share with you!

Now. I will say this is a bit different from other experiences and sexualities. The first is because little kids don’t experience sexual attraction (duh). So for the sake of this post, most of these statements are things I felt or thought about from the age of twelve (ish) onward. Additionally, there weren’t a ton of signs I liked girls as a kid because I genuinely did like boys, and my lack of sexual attraction definitely played a role in that. And of course none of these things made me asexual or queer. A lot of people could probably relate to some of these in some aspect, but for me they ended up connecting to my queerness. 

Nevertheless, here are some childhood signs I was asexual: 

  1. I wanted to adopt kids. 

Ever since the fifth or sixth grade I have wanted to adopt kids, and it was always a big if. Now, I’m not that interested in having kids, but if I did, I would still want to adopt. This is a personal preference but also in connection to my asexuality that you…uh… have to have sex to get pregnant, and somewhere in my inner subconscious I knew I would never do that. And in relation to this point we move onto our next one…

  1. I didn’t want to be pregnant. 

Getting pregnant…not for me. I have a distinct memory of being in the sixth grade and thinking I didn’t want to be pregnant because I would have to try to get pregnant and that was gross. I thought that was just me being an immature kid and I wouldn’t think that later but eight years later here we are. 

Side rant, I think it has been way too normalized for straight couples to go on and on about how they’re trying for kids (given they’re trying to conceive “naturally”). Like, okay Jennifer, we get it, your husband is going down on you every night. I do not need that imagery. Time and place. Plus, Jennifer would go out of her way to say something weird about queer couples adopting or going through IVF. The hypocrisy is crazy. 

  1. I wanted to keep my last name. 

I’ve definitely talked about this before but I have another distinct memory of being in the fifth grade and thinking I would only take my husband’s last name if it was really cool. I still agree with this but with a wife or partner. And I mostly just want to hyphenate my name with my partner’s if it sounds good. And if it doesn’t, no biggy, I’ll just keep mine and not have to go through the legal loopholes. 

  1. I never had a lot of crushes.

I never had a lot of crushes growing up and part of it made me feel mature because I wasn’t boy crazy. Even now, I still don’t crush on people very often. I thought a lot of the boys around me were gross and not up to my standards, and I still think that! However, now I know my asexuality plays a huge role in that. I don’t get crushes on people because I feel sexually attracted to them. I have to think they’re pretty aesthetically attractive or I know something about them that makes me see them as a good partner. 

  1. In middle school I had a friend I thought was so pretty and cool. 

In the sixth grade I was friends with this girl who was in my orchestra class and she had dyed hair and I thought it was so cool. I remember thinking she was so pretty and I wanted to hang out with her. Now, I’m all for intimate female friendships and appreciating your friends’ beauty, but this sounds pretty gay. Looking back this was definitely the first crush I had on a girl, and Little Jadey didn’t even know! In her defense, the crushes I have on people do feel like a pretty intimate friendship, because I don’t have any sexual thoughts, so Little Jadey couldn’t have dug into it that much. 

  1. I thought I was a late bloomer (of sorts). 

Now I wasn’t actually a super late bloomer. I wasn’t the first in any capacity, but I wasn’t the last. I didn’t have my first real crush until the seventh grade, and that was pretty late compared to my peers. Because of this, I figured I wasn’t interested in sex due to that, and in a few years, by the time I reached college, I would be interested. Now as an almost twenty year old college student I still don’t want sex. Wow! All these feelings I thought would arrive when I was a teenager never came. 

  1. I was fascinated by gay people.

One time in the eighth grade a woman came in as a guest speaker. She was with this other guy, and honestly I have no idea what they were even talking about. Probably about their job and college and giving us inspiration for what we could do or be in the future. Anyway, that’s not important. The important thing is that I just knew she was gay. The way she looked and the way she acted, and at the time I didn’t even know that much about the queer community. I just knew, and the whole time I waited for her to drop a hint about her wife or something, and she never did. And the sorta sad thing is, I still feel this way now. When I’m out and about I still get secretly excited to see other queer people. I don’t feel this way at school or with people around my age, because there are just queer people because it’s more accepted in my generation. However with adults I get excited because it’s pretty rare to see an older queer person. I hardly ever see trans adults who are grown up and happy, or gay men who are fathers or grandfathers. And unfortunately that’s due to a high suicide rate and the AIDS crisis. 

All in all these things are memories and feelings I look back on and can see how they relate to my life now. It’s crazy to think about me as a little kid and know that Little Jadey has been queer all along, and she has so much to find out and love about herself. 

I Tried Drag for the First Time, and the Queer Joy was Real

Over the past couple months I’ve been pretty hooked on watching Trixie Mattel on YouTube. I have always been fascinated with makeup videos and reviews and first impressions for the past seven or eight years. Trixie does such a funny and interesting take on that through her career of drag. Because I’ve been obsessed with her videos I thought it was only appropriate to start watching Rupaul’s Drag Race. 

Now, I have heard of this show for years. I follow drag queens on social media and have watched multiple drag shows in person. However, I had never gotten around to watching the Drag Race. But about four weeks ago, I decided now was the time. I pulled up Hulu, clicked on season 10, and began watching.

When I told you I became immediately hooked.

Oh my god.

I am so utterly addicted to that show. 

It’s so good. I can’t believe I’ve never seen it before. The makeup. The fashion. The camp. The drama. The jokes. The community. The queerness. The TRANSFORMATION! I love all of it. It is truly all of the things I love: gay people, fashion, makeup, and comedy, all wrapped into one show! The new season just came out, and after I finish my current season, you best believe I am going to watch the latest season and form so many opinions. (Update: I watched the first two episodes of season 16 and Dawn is my current favorite!)

All of this is to say, I had to try drag makeup of my own. I’ve wanted to try drag for a while. I was inspired by Trixie, and a lot by Chappell Roan. She does her own drag makeup and is heavily inspired by queens, and I really loved how she does drag as a feminine person. 

So, here’s how the process went down:

I gathered inspo pics. I was inspired by Chappell, Trixie Mattel, Blair St. Clair on season 10 of Drag Race, and Phoebe Bridgers in drag from one of the boygenius shows. 

Then, I started. 

I layed down a ton of moisturizer, primer, and setting spray. I put on the most foundation I’ve ever used, contoured my face, and heavily applied concealer. After all of that I set it all with powder, then began contouring with a hot, hot pink. I added hot pink blush and contoured my nose with pink. I did a big winged out pink eyeshadow look with thick black liner and glitter. 

I originally wanted to leave my brows alone because I didn’t have a glue stick to block them, and I didn’t want to try to take off all the glue. So instead I filled them in as normal because the look needed it. I applied highlight and false lashes (it was a lot harder than I thought), and finished with a pink lip. 

This was a trusting process kind of experiment. At first I thought it all looked really messy, and I was questioning my makeup skills for a moment. I’m a pretty good makeup artist myself, but I was worried this style of makeup wouldn’t carry over. However, I persevered, and added finishing touches of glitter and more glitter, and everything pulled together beautifully. 

Then I had to take a picture of my work, standing in the bathtub in my parent’s bathroom for the best lighting with a tripod and self timer. Plus, I documented the whole thing. I filmed my application process because a moment like this needed to be remembered. Who knows if I was ever going to do it again?! Turns out I did it again. I even bought some more makeup for it. It was so much fun the first time I was planning different looks from the moment I finished. 

Miz Cracker came to drag race with a book full of pictures of her past looks for inspiration, and I think that would be so cool to make with the drag looks I create to see the improvement and how many different looks I can create. 

It also made me feel really confident and proud of my queer identity. It was cool to be a girl doing drag, and it was cool to feel so confident in such a crazy look. Plus, I felt like I was doing a cool thing being an ace drag queen, because sometimes the queer community is caught up in celebrating queer sex that people forget you can be queer and never have sex. 

Watching a show where everyone is queer and queerness is celebrated is really awesome. It makes me feel closer to the queer community and gives me hope for a more accepting world. The queens on the show are spreading so much queer joy. 

I filmed the process of my drag look super casually, and ended up putting it on YouTube. Back in the day, I was really into making YouTube videos, but I haven’t posted in about a year. I decided this one would be fun to upload, so if you’re a reader who has never seen me this could possibly be a jumpscare. I also feel like I can communicate way better through my writing, and simply talking to a camera makes me either feel really fun and myself, or like someone who has never formed a sentence in their entire life, so take the video with a grain of salt. Anyway you can watch it here: Video! 

Okay that’s all I have! If you’ve watched the latest season of Drag Race please let me know I need to know all the thoughts and opinions. 

Similarities, Differences, and Commonalities Amongst Male and Female Asexuals: A Friend Interview! 

You guys. It’s an exciting day in the World of Jadey and the World of Average Asexual. Why? Because I’ve made a friend! Plus, he’s ace! I know. We’re all shocked. Jadey knows how to make friends?!

It’s a very exciting day because he’s going to answer some questions about his asexual and aromantic identity for the sake of education and curiosity so we get to compare and contrast our ace experiences. I am so excited for this post. Personally I hadn’t met any ace boys up until this point in my life. The other ace people I know are female or AFAB non binary/gender nonconforming people. And we all know that there aren’t that many asexuals so anytime I get to talk to another ace person, let alone befriend them, is a very exciting day. 

I’ve conjured up a handful of questions that I had my friend Nolan answer. I also answered the questions myself, and compared and contrasted some things I found interesting. 

  1. How do you identify? (Gender, sexuality, pronouns, etc.) How long have you identified as ace/aro? 

Nolan: I consider myself male (he/him) and am demiromantic (only feels romantic interest in people they have a pre-existing connection with) and apothisexual (repulsed by sexuality all together). A recurring theme when talking to people that are aro or ace is that once they learned it was a thing, there was no doubt in their mind that it perfectly summed up their orientation. It’s no different in my case; when I learned of the two spectrums a couple years ago, I felt an immense weight lifted from my shoulders, as I no longer needed to justify my differences and could feel comfortable in my own skin.

Jadey: I’m a cis female and use she/her pronouns. I’m ace (as we all know by now) and my romantic orientation is queer/unlabeled. I’ve identified as ace/queer for about two and a half years. 

Unlike Nolan, there was no magical click in my brain when I heard about asexuality for the first time. I’ve heard a lot of aces say that when they heard the term they immediately knew that was the label for them. Just like my understanding of my queerness, it took a long time for me to really understand what labels fit me and how I identified. However, once I came out as queer and ace I became super comfortable in those labels and feel super happy about being out and ace!

  1. Do you feel that you fit into queer spaces? 

Nolan: Yes and no. Almost all my friends are queer and I like learning about their experiences, but it’s something I’m relatively new to. As the leader of my college’s Neurodiversity Club, I’ve wanted to do a collaboration with the college’s Pride Club, seeing as our members are all queer. Since most of us aren’t active in the Pride Club, I think it’d be a perfect opportunity for us to explore the intersectionality of Neurodiversity and LGBT identities. In short, it’s a work-in-progress, but I look forward to establishing myself more in queer spaces.

Jadey: I do feel that I fit into queer spaces. I think my preference for women/gnc people definitely adds to my feeling of queerness. My aceness adds a layer different from the general queer population, but it feels queer nonetheless. 

I also am in predominantly queer spaces. Yay! Gay people! Besides attending Pride Club, my major consists of a lot of queer people, and I surround myself with queerness in other aspects as well. I write about queerness and consume a lot of queer media. I do have some queer friends, but my closest friends are cishet. Thankfully they are all amazing allies and celebrate my queerness and are never afraid to make a gay joke when the opportunity presents itself. 

  1. Do you feel that your gender impacted how you came to terms with your aceness? Do you feel that it was harder to come out/accept your aceness because of masculine stereotypes of being sexual?

Nolan: Honestly, no. I’ve been a non-conformist for all my life, and that extended to my avoidance of sexual topics or ideas before discovering asexuality. With the family and friends I came out to, it wasn’t a challenge convincing them I wanted to live a celibate life (that was clear), but rather that it was an identity in the same vein as being gay or transgender. As they saw it, asexuality is a lifestyle choice defined by restraint instead of an absence of sexual feelings, and it’s a point I always try to make when explaining asexuality that while I’m proud of it, it isn’t a choice I made for myself.

Jadey: (For the sake of this question I’ll be answering it with feminine stereotypes.) I don’t think my gender impacts how I came to terms with my sexuality. When I was figuring it out I knew of a lot of other queer people and women, so it never crossed my mind that there was some sort of stereotype of female sexuality I needed to uphold. I also ever internalized any societal expectations of women’s sexuality, so there weren’t any obstacles I had to face to be comfortable in my identity. If anything, my asexuality and queerness make me feel less feminine. And this is by no means a bad thing. There are simply feminine experiences that I don’t experience as a sapphic asexual. 

I guess aces are just non-conformists. It seems that our gender didn’t impact our experiences with our sexuality and the both of us didn’t struggle with preconceived notions of how we should experience sexuality. 

  1. Do you see yourself represented in the community (queer or ace specific)? 

Nolan: I’d say so, especially as I meet more people from both communities. With asexuality there are a lot of variations, like demisexuality and cupiosexuality, and meeting more people has shed light on how many perspectives there are. Even so, when meeting someone from a different subset we still tend to see eye-to-eye on a lot of things, especially (cliché as it sounds) how nice non-sexual things are and that there’s too much emphasis on sexuality in today’s society. With the queer community I also feel well represented, with the intersectionality of neurodiversity and queerness being a consistent topic in the Neurodivergence Club since it’s something we can all bond over.

Jadey: I definitely see myself represented in the queer community largely due to my romantic orientation. There are less aces but there are still some. Plus, my existence allows other unlabeled aces to exist and know someone is like them! 

There is definitely a niche understanding when meeting other ace people. It’s truly a feeling I can’t explain. Personally I feel quite a deep understanding and connection with other aces no matter how well I know them simply due to the fact that we both don’t experience sexual attraction, and there’s a language surrounding our identity a lot of other people, queer or straight, don’t get. I also definitely agree with Nolan that it’s easy to see yourself in other groups as well due to the intersectionality of my identity. I agree with a lot feminist discourse as well as queer ideology and those things can oftentimes go hand in hand. 

  1. Do you feel that you can’t relate to other men or do you feel “othered” by your aceness? (In other words does your gender play into how you might feel isolated by asexuality?)

Nolan: It may not feel like it in college, but there’s plenty of allosexual men that don’t make a big deal of sexuality, and since those are the men I associate with the most, I tend not to feel ‘othered’ on that front. Where it does become an issue is with me being arospec; I’m demiromantic, with this making me feel alienated from guy-friends that have more to say than I do on relationships. Even so, this kind of dynamic isn’t exclusive to men, it’s just easier to compare my romantic orientation to other men and feel ‘othered’ in doing so than with my sexual orientation.

Jadey: (Once again I’ll be talking about relating to other women.) I do sometimes feel that I don’t relate to other women due to my aceness more so than my attraction to women. It’s easier to say “boyfriend or girlfriend” for example, to create space for me, rather than include asexuality in discussions about relationships and significant others which is a popular topic in society, but especially with my age group. However, most of the time I feel that I fit in, and when I don’t, I would say it is because of my aceness and not other aspects of my identity. 

Wow, some differences here! It’s interesting how we both don’t feel super alienated by our identities. I feel like cishet/allo people might think we do, but turns out we don’t! I would also agree that the people I spend time with aren’t very consumed with sex and sexuality, so that does help me fit into spaces. 

  1. Do you know other asexual men? (If you don’t, do you want to? Or does gender not matter when meeting/befriending other aces?)

Nolan: Not to my knowledge. I’d be thrilled to meet someone that was, since it could mean knowing someone with a similar outlook as mine, but I don’t think it could only happen with men. In fact, I have almost the same outlook on asexuality as some of the non-male asexuals I’ve met, so while it’d be exciting to meet another asexual man, I wouldn’t expect him to have the same perspective as mine. Overall, every asexual person has their own personality and experience, and I’ve learned not to expect anyone’s approach to asexuality to be predictable.

Jadey: I technically know one other ace guy (besides Nolan), but I didn’t know that he was ace until I graduated high school and we went our separate ways. So technically yes! But I definitely know a lot more female or non binary people who identify somewhere on the asexual spectrum. Gender doesn’t matter to me. I think it would be cool to be friends with more guys and ace guys specifically because it would be interesting to learn about their experience. However I’m happy to be friends with anyone no matter their gender or sexuality. 

For the reader at home, it’s way more likely that women identify as asexual rather than men (this could be largely due to societal stereotypes of men being sexual, and the pressure they feel to uphold that. Booo toxic masculinity). The majority or asexual people I know are women, and the rest are trans or non binary. Because asexuality is such a vast experience, I know I wouldn’t be able to fully relate to any ace, but we would definitely have some commonalities. 

  1. Is your asexuality intertwined with your aromantic identity? Was it harder to realize you were ace or aro? 

Nolan: I wouldn’t say it was harder to realize, but it was harder to accept that I was aro. The idea of having a romantic relationship appeals to me, and I didn’t want to be arospec if it meant not being able to connect with other people on that level. The honest truth, though, is that my idea of a happy and fulfilling relationship is vastly different from most people’s; my idea of intimacy involves sharing life experiences and opening up to another, but I balk at the idea of love that seems shallow or possessive, hence my discomfort with sexuality and serial monogamy. Overall, I’d say my asexual and aromantic identities are closely interlinked, but they’re also very different from the other, with sex being something I’m averse to while the idea of romance captivates me.

Jadey: Since I’m not aromantic, I’ll talk about my allo identity and the confusion I’ve had with that. I will say that my asexuality and alloromantic identity are more connected than I initially thought. For a while I questioned if I was on the aro spectrum, and for a split second did consider my romantic orientation on the aro spectrum. Now I don’t think it is. I’ve questioned if I might be demiromantic, but I figured if I enter into a relationship and develop feelings after a deep connection has formed, then I’ll know. However, I do think that my sex-aversion affects what I consider romantic in a relationship. For example, many people consider kissing romantic, but that feels super sexual for me and therefore I don’t want to do it! For my case, it was harder for me to realize I was ace than that I liked women. I figured that out first, and after/a bit during, it was something I considered. Once I realized my identity was not straight, I had more space in my brain to consider being ace. That took a long time because I was confused. No one really sits you down to explain sexual attraction and libido and all the things, so I had to search the web for ages to try and figure out what those things meant in a way I understood. Once I was able to do that I could begin to understand that sexual attraction was something I didn’t experience, and that made me asexual. During this time I was also afraid of being wrong. I simply just didn’t want to insert myself into an oppressed community and realize I was wrong and leave. Obviously, you can jump in and out of the community, and consider a million and one labels and you’ll always be accepted. At the time it was just something I was quite concerned about. 

Wow, I had a lot to say about that. This just proves that the ace experience is so complex and different and interesting!!

Let’s Talk About “ace song” by Izzie Burton

As one does, I was scrolling on TikTok, and, thanks to the algorithm knowing me better than I know myself, came across a video of a person using a filter to tell you what asexual stereotype you are (there is also an aromantic one if anyone was curious). I got “You may of thought that wanting sex in high school was overrated.” Now, besides the minor grammatical errors in that statement, that is true, and although that was fun, I was mostly intrigued by the song that played with the filter. Upon my first listen it seemed to be a song about asexuality so I did some investigating (I clicked two buttons) and found out what song it was. Turns out the person who uploaded it was Izzie Burton and it was an ace song, which was literally called “ace song.” I immediately went to Spotify to see if the full version was out. (If you don’t know, a lot of people tease parts of songs on TikTok before they’re released.) 

It was out, which was a great surprise to me, because as we all probably know by now, there are not a lot of asexual songs out there. There are a few songs that have been claimed as ace songs, but many of them are not written by people who identify as asexual. So, I was very interested to see what this song was about.

Unfortunately, “ace song” is not a happy song, but it was certainly one that represented the ace experience well. I decided it was only necessary to do an analysis of the song (being the English major that I am) and discuss the importance of ace voices. 

To me, this song was the opposite of “We’ll Never Have Sex,” a song written by Leith Ross celebrating asexuality. “ace song” was a really cool alternate version of the ace experience. “We’ll Never Have Sex” is one of my favorite songs, discussing a simple relationship filled with love for the sake of love, without sex. However, it’s very important to have multiple narratives of asexuality. There seems to be (with a lot of minority experiences) a single narrative. There are assumptions made about the community that aren’t always true. “ace song” gives another experience of a relationship and the truth that ace relationships can be challenging and upsetting. 

Izzie Burton is a singer who has been releasing music on all streaming platforms since 2022. She produces very stripped down songs with minimal production where her voice is the prevalent instrument. “ace song” is accompanied by a soft guitar track. I haven’t been able to find the full lyrics online so the lyrics here are simply what I heard.

The song starts out with the lyrics “I don’t want to kiss you, or maybe I do,” and damn we’re getting right into a classic ace experience. I personally relate heavily to this line, as an ace who likes the idea of kissing, but doesn’t actively participate in it. I want to want to kiss people. It sounds fun and romantic. But the actual idea of kissing someone makes me feel icky and uncomfortable. 

That line is followed by “You said that you understood/I don’t think you do.” Burton seems to be singing about a romantic partner in this song, but this line is universal in the ace experience. No one, besides other aces, understand the ace experience. It’s quite a niche identity, and experiencing sexual attraction is portrayed as a universal experience. To no fault of their own, some of the most important people in my life will never know how I truly experience life. My mom and sister and best friends will never truly understand no matter how much research they do. They simply will never experience asexuality. 

Later, Burton sings “I just want love.” Arguably, that’s what everyone wants. It doesn’t have to be romantic or sexual, but everyone wants to feel loved and accepted. When wondering about her feelings of love, she asks “But is it something I’m not capable of?” Although this is an ace experience, it reminds me of the aromantic experience, and the difficulty aros face with feeling like something might be wrong with them because they don’t experience romantic attraction (which there is obviously nothing wrong about that, aro people slay). 

It seems that her partner seemed like a good fit, but Burton reveals that they are not when she sings “I thought you’d be different/that made it just hurt worse.” I understood this relationship to be one where Burton dates someone who is allosexual. They claim to respect her asexuality, but yet their actions say otherwise, hurting Burton more than a simple rejection of her asexuality from the start. 

Then we have the most painful line: “But when you said something’s wrong/we both know that you meant me.” WOAH. I was nearly in tears hearing that for the first time. Burton expresses the painful realization that her partner isn’t happy in the relationship, and the blame is put on her due to her asexuality. Being an ace person, I can’t help but wonder if my asexuality, something I can’t control, is what deters people from dating me. Would people be interested in me if I wasn’t ace? Is my asexuality going to leave me alone and unloved? It’s a difficult thing to work through, and Burton lays the truth out so simply through such a difficult situation. I can imagine that nothing hurts worse than being rejected for a core part of who you are. This is definitely a large reason many ace people feel broken or not good enough, because our allonormative society views sex as a necessary part of relationships. 

The last verse reminds me of Phoebe Bridger’s “Waiting Room.” In that song, Bridgers repeats the line “Know it’s for the better,” nearly forty times until the listener becomes numb to the sound. Although Burton doesn’t sing her line nearly that much, she does repeat the line “Just hold me, could that be enough?” quite a bit. The repetition of this line portrays her deep desire for acceptance and a relationship without sex. I relate to this line heavily, as I too desire a relationship where love is shown through simple forms of physical touch like being held by the person you love. 

Anyway. Another day another ace analysis. I think this song is super slay and a great emotional song about the ace experience. I hope Izzie comes out with more songs about her ace identity. I know myself and other ace community members appreciate her art and look forward to more. 

You can listen to the song on YouTube here

My Recent Queer Soapboxes – Harry Styles Queerbaiting, the “Right” way to be Queer, and Internalized Homophobia

There’s a few different discourses in the queer community that really get my blood boiling, so today I decided to take that opportunity to discuss them all with you. 

  1. Harry Styles is Queerbaiting 

Many people seem to be convinced that singer-songwriter Harry Styles (he needs no introduction, we all know the man) is queerbaiting, which,  if you don’t know, is a marketing technique when a company or platform hints at queer romance or representation without actually portraying it in order to pull in a larger audience. 

However, Harry Styles is not queerbaiting. Why? Because people can’t queerbait. 

Who can queerbait? Companies, entertainers, and marketers. 

People are not a commodity. People do not owe anyone their sexuality. 

Many people feel that Harry is not doing anything for the queer community, even though he presents himself in a very androgynous way. He wears color and glitter, he was on the cover of Vogue in a dress. He waves pride flags around on stage and helps fans come out at his concerts. 

The people who think he is not queer clearly know nothing about him. They don’t know about his song “She,” they don’t know that he doesn’t label his sexuality, and they certainly don’t know about the Larry fan theories (not that I’m suggesting those are real). 

Harry Styles has never confirmed his sexuality because he has never labeled it. Additionally, just because Harry presents himself in a certain way doesn’t actually say anything about his sexuality.

“Well, he’s only been seen dating women. He must be straight.” 

Assuming Harry Styles is straight because he has only been seen dating women is biphobic. Just because he has only publicly dated women does not mean he has not privately dated men. He doesn’t have to date the same gender as him to prove his queerness. A bisexual or queer person dating a member of the opposite gender does not make them straight, just like dating a member of their same gender does not make them exclusively gay or lesbian. Harry could only date women for the rest of his life and if he experienced attraction to men or people outside the binary, doesn’t make him any less queer. 

“Okay, even if he is queer, he hasn’t done anything for the queer community. He never speaks about queer issues.” 

Let us all be reminded that Harry Styles is a singer, not an activist, although many artists are activists, that is not the job they signed up for. Yes, Harry has a huge following and has influence over millions of fans. That does not mean he has to become a political figure. He is simply a singer and songwriter. It is important that people with big followings know their power, and that is why many celebrities speak out on issues important to them. However, that is not their job they signed up for, and it is not the role they have to fill. We don’t know what Harry is doing in his private life. And heck, the man is probably voting to support queer issues, which is one of the most important things anyone can do. 

Harry is often compared to the love of my life light on this earth Conan Lee Gray. For some reason, people can validate Conan’s queerness, but not Harry’s. Because Conan has exclusively said he doesn’t label his sexuality, and often shows queerness in his music videos by portraying same sex couples, or showing himself interested in people in members of the same sex, his unlabeled queerness is accepted. He also almost exclusively writes lyrics with gender neutral pronouns, and when he does use binary pronouns, the outcome is usually queer in itself. 

For example in his song “The Exit,” off of his sophomore album Superache, Cone sings “You love her, it’s over.” Here the pronoun suggests that the person he dated is queer. If it was a straight presenting relationship and he dated a girl, he would be singing about the girl falling in love with another girl after Cone and her broke up. Or, if he was dating a boy, the boy would like girls and boys because they had dated Conan. 

This portrayal of queerness, as well as Cone’s androgynous style and pride-flag-waving at concerts allows people to accept his queerness even though he typically does not speak out about the queer community (although he has in a few interviews). Suddenly, when Harry does many of these things, it’s seen as queerbaiting, which is a dangerous double standard. 

  1. If You Haven’t Faced Discrimination, You’re Not Queer

I see this a lot in ace discourse, and that is that ace people can’t possibly be queer because they’re not discriminated against. First of all, that right there is discrimination because you’re dismissing our identity as queer. And secondly, being queer is not a competition of who has it the hardest. Basing queerness on who is the most oppressed is a dangerous and invalidating game. 

The only reason we’re discriminated against is because of people holding up the cisheteropatriarchy. The people who cause us the most harm are straight, cisgender, white people. 

The only thing that makes you queer is your experiences outside the cisgender and heterosexual experience. Asexuals are queer because we experience attraction outside of the norm. Something as simple as our existence and our different approaches to romantic and sexual relationships puts us outside of the binary. Our relationship to our sexuality impacts our gender expression and experiences in a cisgender heterosexual world. 

Not to mention that many ace people are not straight or cisgender. And for the aces who are, it’s up to them to decide if queer is a label they want to use. 

Additionally, the Oppression Olympics allows queer people to continue to be discriminated against by straight people in order to prove our querness. Just because I haven’t been hate-crimed doesn’t mean I’m any less gay than someone who, unfortunately, has. 

  1. Internalized Homophobia is the Queer Person’s Fault 

We see this a lot with politicians, where supposedly straight anti gay male politicians are caught having sex with a man. Oh my god! They’ve been queer all along! That’s why they’re homophobic! It’s because they can’t accept themselves!

This then leads people to believe that everyone who is homophobic is secretly gay. Is it true that there are people who are homophobic because they’re suffering with internalized homophobia? Yes, of course. But simply saying that every homophobic person is gay places the blame entirely on queer people. 

Assuming that every homophobic person is gay allows the blame to be placed onto a marginalized community and never lets the true oppressor take fault for their violent actions. 

Are secret gay people really the ones murdering trans women? Assaulting lesbian couples? Misgendering and bullying nonbinary kids to the point of suicide? No. 

Racist people aren’t racist because they’re secretly Black. That logic makes no sense. 

Homophobia is a systemic issue, and is being upheld by straight, cisgender, white men. The only people who should be blamed for homophobia are the people who are actively hurting the queer community. 

  1. There’s a “Right” Way to be Queer

Apparently there’s a “right” way to be queer. Sure, we can get married and adopt kids. Yeah, transexual people should be gendered correctly. Sure, we can dye our hair and hold hands with the person we love. 

But, god forbid we exist outside of the gender binary, or use neopronouns, or look too alternative, because suddenly we’re making the community look like a joke. Straight people won’t take us seriously. Republicans will continue to vote against us if we aren’t “normal.”

Spoiler alert: there’s no “right” way to be queer. Queerness exists on a spectrum, and that experience looks different for everyone. 

Let us all remember that social media is not real. It is all online. It is not what you see in real life. I see a lot of online discourse from people within the queer community saying that there are queer people who we “do not claim.” These are typically gender nonconforming people who have extravagant makeup and use neopronouns that we see on social media. While some people might not understand this, the truth of the matter is that people within the community worry they are ruining our credibility to non-queer people. 

Their logic is that straight people can understand those who are gay and lesbian, maybe trans people too, but when people use bug/bugself neopronouns, that’s a step too far. That is too queer, and it makes the “normal” queer people look like idiots. Because surely if we call our friend by their neopronouns and their chosen name is Stick, then we’re just hopping on the gay agenda. 

The truth is that these people are never going to accept us. Also, it just doesn’t matter. These people we see online who are supposedly being queer in the “wrong” way are just that, online. The people I’ve met in real life who are trans or nonbinary or have chosen their name and use neopronouns are real genuine people. They are kind and cool and, shockingly, not that different from me. They simply want to exist and be supported. Frankly, everyone does, no matter your gender or sexuality. 

For laughs and giggles, let’s say you do meet a real person who uses bug/bugself pronouns, and wears a ton of eyeliner and makes those weird movements you see on TikTok. They’re probably fine people. And if they’re not, if they’re hating on allo/cishet people and are mad when people misgender them, assuming everyone understands neopronouns, that’s on them. No one is going to understand your identity right away. As much as you want them to, as upsetting as it is, that’s life. Plus there are a ton of “normal” (aka cis/het) people who are weirdos. There are “normal” people who are crazy. Whacko! Insane! Look at the politicians we elect and the people we support! Look at the woman running the Libs of TikTok account calling out random school teachers and queer people for existing or having pride flags in their classrooms. She targets these normal people and then allows her followers to harass them on social media, and spread their personal information revealing their home address and place of employment. Then she claims her account is not responsible for her fans calling in bomb threats to schools! That’s pretty freakin’ whack. 

These groups queer people are trying to win over are mostly Republicans, and in their eyes the only “right” way to be queer is to not be queer at all. 

Republicans aren’t going to accept their quiet next door lesbian neighbors, and they sure as hell aren’t going to support their idea of queer people which is cat-litter-using-furry-plant-named gen Z kids. 

Harry Styles isn’t queerbaiting. Oppression isn’t a competition. Internalized homophobia is not our fault, and there is no right way to be queer. 

Asexual Books You Should and Shouldn’t Read

As an English major, an asexual, and a writer, I think it is only fitting that I discuss what asexual books are good, and which ones are…not so good. Now, I have obviously not read every book about asexuality to ever exist, but I have read a couple, and I definitely have opinions on them. I am always looking to read more about asexual characters and experiences, so maybe one day we’ll have a part two.

Also, there is an issue with underrepresentation with ace stories, so my selection to choose form is not incredibly large. However there are a good number of ace stories I haven’t read, and definitely plan to work my way through. 

Anyway, here are the books on asexuality that you should and shouldn’t read: 

  1. Ace: What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex – Angela Chen

Ace was the first book I read on asexuality, and arguably the most well known book about the ace experience. I really enjoyed this book, and out of all the books I’ve listed, I found this one the most educational. There were some personal stories shared by the author about her romantic partner that I found frustrating to read. That was mostly due to the author’s insecurity and struggle with her ace identity. It was a very personal thing to include, it just wasn’t relatable to me as an ace person. She discussed great points of intersectionality in the community such as race, gender nonconformity, and disability. This was certainly the most thought provoking read on asexuality.

Rating: 4.5/5 (I previously gave this book a 10/10 when I talked about it here but I think that might be a touch too high). 

Would I recommend it? Yes! I would recommend this to people in the community, other queer people, and allies looking for a deep dive into understanding the ace experience. 

Would I read again? Yes!

  1. I Am Ace – Cody Daigle-Orians

I Am Ace is written by social media content creator Cody Daigle-Orians. Cody is best known for their YouTube Channel, Ace Dad Advice. I occasionally watch their videos and decided to read their book to support an ace creator, my local bookstores, and to see if I, a reasonably well-educated ace, could learn anything from a book that was deemed one for “beginners.” 

Turns out I had so many more opinions than I thought I would. 

First of all, I hate the font. The font is weird and not dark enough and there is so much space in the margins and the words that are too big just jump all the way down to the next line leaving big awkward gaps where words are supposed to be. There were a lot of sentences in parentheticals which felt odd to me. The format of the book itself felt out of place. There were big bold questions and bullet points and lists and it didn’t read like a novel at times. 

Additionally, and this is something I’ve found throughout Cody’s content, there was a lot of repetition about the stereotypes of asexuality. Listen, it is important to bring awareness to stereotypes and prejudices in the community, but as an ace person who has heard those, and has never experienced them myself, it was quite annoying. I don’t need to be reminded that people think I’m broken and weird. And even if I had heard those things about my sexuality, I don’t need to be reminded of it!

There were also a lot of bad analogies and ones that just didn’t make sense to me. 

I learned about fictosexual and felt aphobic. Fictosexual is where people only experience sexual attraction to fictional characters and not people…listen…I’m all for supporting other aces…but are some of these micro labels going a bit too far?!

There were a few good things about this book. The personal anecdotes Cody told about themselves and their partners were interesting. There were some good discussions at times about ace joy and experiences, but overall the cons outweigh the pros. 

Rating: 2/5 

Would I recommend it? Probably not. I could see this beginning good for an ally wanting an introduction to quality, but honestly there are better books. 

Would I read again? No.

  1. A Quick and Easy Guide to Asexuality – Molly Muldoon and Will Hernandez 

This book was exactly what it was titled. This was a graphic novel written by two aces to give new or younger aces an introduction into the community. 

I read it in one sitting and even had my mom read it who found it educational but also confusing. 

Because it was a beginner guide I wasn’t sure exactly what I was going to learn, but even I learned something new! Turns out axolotls are a mascot for the ace community. I don’t know exactly why, probably because of the ace-olotl meme. But I don’t really need a reason. They’re cool so I’ll take them. 

The only thing this book didn’t discuss was the more inner-community jokes and stereotypes such as aces love cake and garlic bread (those things were on the cover but weren’t discussed at length). It didn’t mention ace rings, but honestly I could see them making a part two and it would be really cute. 

Rating: 4/5 

Would I recommend it? Yes! This book would be great for anyone. Aces, allos, other queer people, young people, older people, everyone! 

Would I read again? Yes but it was so short and simple I didn’t feel the need to go out of my way to relearn anything or revisit it because I knew a lot already. 

  1. Gender Queer: a Memoir – Maia Kobabe

I got this book for free at school during banned book week and read it in one day

While writing this post I decided to read the reviews, and oh boy were people mad. Now, I don’t know what libraries this book was in, but according to some very angry people it was in elementary school libraries. 

I doubt that.

However, if it were, people definitely have a right to be mad because this book is not for kids, however it is definitely for those over the age of thirteen, and if this were in a high school library that would be acceptable. There are some sexual images, but honestly they were quite mild. If I, a sex averse ace, can handle them certainly an allosexual 60 year old republican can too. 

This book was good, I can see this book being important for those figuring out their gender. This person shared real struggles,and although they were not ones I faced, and I sometimes did not agree with how e handled things, that doesn’t mean it’s a bad book. This was one person’s real experience, and e are obviously a talented individual who just wanted to share eir story. 

No, this book was not indoctrinating kids. No, this book was not pornography as some angry republicans think. This book is for teenagers and adults looking to read a book about someone who isn’t a cisgender straight white man. 

Out of all the books I read on this list this one is the least about asexuality. Although the author is asexual, this story was more about eir journey to figure out eir gender and eir asexuality was more of a subplot. This was also the only book I’ve read where someone uses exclusively neopronouns. At times the author seemed to be a bit insecure and lacked confidence to truly express themselves. This is obviously a relatable issue, but can be somewhat difficult (and by difficult I mean kind of annoying) to read. This person also talked about eir experience with receiving pap smears, and honestly I hope they talk to someone about it because they had an awful experience. I do think however they could have included more about how e should have handled that because it came across as scary and painful and overall bad, perpetuating the idea that reproductive health is scary and something you should avoid which is not a message we need to be sending. 

Rating: 3/5

Would I recommend it? Sure!

Would I read again? Probably not. It was good but personally I’m not a big graphic novel person so I don’t typically reach for this kind of book.

  1. Loveless – Alice Oseman

I talked (or yelled) about this novel here. 

As for fictional books representing asexuality, this is probably the most popular, and for good reasons. This is the only book on this list where the character is also aromantic. I usually read books about asexual alloromantic characters because that speaks to my experience the most. The diversity in this book was great, the topics discussed were relatable, and friendship was prioritized. 

Rating: 5/5

Would I recommend it? Yes 100%!

Would I read again? Definitely. Everytime I see this book in stores I think about how I want to reread it. 

I’m currently reading Refusing Compulsory Sexuality by Sherronda Brown, so I’m sure one day I’ll have another post dedicated to ace books. Until then!