by Drew Hubbard
•
31 July 2024
I recently did a survey for aroace-spectrum humans to answer about what they like, dislike, and want from characters that represent their lived experience. The aroace-spectrum covers asexuals, aromantics, and aroace people and the spectrum it covers. Asexuality means feeling little to absolutely zero sexual attraction. Some people may feel some, or need to get to know a person first. Demisexuality and gray-sexual also comes under this. Aromantic means feeling little to absolutely zero romantic attraction. Again, some people may feel some, or need to get to know a person first. Demiromatic and gray-romantic also comes under this. People may be asexual but not aromantic, or aromantic but not asexual. They may also be both, or be somewhere within the asexual and/or aromantic spectrum. If you want to include aroace-spec characters in your stories, and you should, here are the results to the questions I asked the community. As always, no minority group is a monolith. You may find some answers are the absolute opposite of another answer. This happens within any minority group. The best way to use these results is to see what answers best work for your character and story, and use it as a starting point. You will get a lot of info from this results, but for best authenticity, I always recommend talking to an authenticity reader of whatever specific label your character is, to really create a fully nuance, and authentic character. These answers are an excellent starting point anyway, that you won't find anywhere else online. But please don't share the link in public forums or social media. Send them my newsletter link and that person can get access to these results and all other survey results (you'll find them by scrolling down to the bottom). Here we go. FYI answers have been left unedited and uncorrected for typos. Question 1. What does being under the aroace umbrella mean to you? (Feel free to touch on the specifics of your label if you’re happy to do so). An easy way to explain why I am not that into some of the popular media out there, and why I don't really care about dating/marriage. Also a way to find other people who feels/experiences the world similarly It means understanding myself, understanding that there’s nothing wrong or broken in me. While I identify as aroace, my relationship with my asexuality and my aromanticism is different. When I first heard about the ace spectrum, I figured I must be demi and because I had never been in a relationship I hadn’t experienced any desire to have sex with anyone. Later I got explained what sexual attraction was (or at least I got examples of how it manifested) and I started to realize that I actually was fully asexual. For me, that was a relief since the idea of sex and been thought of in a sexual way, have always seemed kinda disgusting in my opinion. Even kissing, the few times I’ve done it, did nothing for me at best and left me a bit grossed out at worst. Finding out about asexuality, while scary for being different, was liberating and very easy to accept. On the other hand, I thought I coulnd’t be aro because I really wanted a relationship, I love consuming rom-coms, and had crushes (even a boyfriend, if you count technicalities). No one seemed able to define romantic attraction to me without the sexual part, so that didn’t help. It took putting myself in uncomfortable positions to figure out that I was in fact aro. It made me reframe what I thought were crushes and how I actually picked the people I’d “fall” for or got influenced by people around me. Also, apparently social anxiety shares symptoms with crushes, so there’s that. Turns out wanting a relationship (with no one in particular, just the idea of it) ain’t the same as feeling attraction toward someone specifically. I aslo realized romance is fine in fiction but picturing myself IRL in those scenarios just made me cringe. Figuring that out caused me a lot of grief, because I lost the idea of how I had pictured my life was supposed to be. It’s also terrifying because of relationship hierarchies in society, and how it feels like I’ll never be anyone’s priority. As of today, being aroace has made me more aware of my boundaries and keeps me trying to figure out what kind of relationships I want. It means that it’s ok I’ve never been able to ‘make it work’ with someone else, because ‘making it work’ always made me feel so uncomfortable and anxious. I feel content knowing I’m Ace because I’m not built wrong, I’m just built differently. Sadly I feel more ostracization from being on the ace spectrum than I ever did when I thought I was pan. Not only from outside the community but even within. It almost feels like people come at it from, this makes no sense to me so it is immediately wrong which is so sad. The inability to attempt to understand people that think differently than you is the root of all exclusion and most hatred. So being ace is a very lonely existence with very few people ever understanding you,no matter how often you try to explain. It can also lead to people attempting to take advantage of you in relationships because no matter how often they say they understand they still attempt things you don't want to do constantly. can only speak for myself as asexual, but its mostly a sense of not belonging in a hypersexualized world. before figuring myself out i felt like an extraterrestial because in a world and social circle that started to have relationships and most importantl sex on a regular basis as a sort of merit when i just didnt give a fuck about any of that anf had to play it down, make excuses, lie or tank mild harassment (happened ~2 years after puberty finished and i went to a party where a few outed queer friends talked to me and randomly dropped the word. did some research the next day and it finally all started to make sense) now i am out in most of riend circle and i feel a lot more comfortable being myself and it feels great, at least when my friends respect my identity. as a society, we still have a long and rocky road ahead I'm a sex-repulsed aroace person, and for me it just means being a part of an identity whose lives are enriched by so many people. Friends. Family. Community. (already answered this, just wanted to add something. My original entry started Right now, I ID as demisexual/demiromantic if asked for a label... if you want to pair this answer with the original one.) Being AroAce has given me complicated feelings. At first I was kind of sad and worried, but it also answered a lot of questions for me which was helpful and after a few months I accepted it more. Currently, I'm really proud and happy with my identity especially after meeting other Aro/Ace folks and hanging out irl. Having this identity has helped me figure out more about what I want my life to look like and the possibilities that exist for me. It means liberation and independence. It means I can stop seeking out relationships I have no interest in, and simply enjoy what I have. It means that I have started to value my friendships and other connections even more, as I feel that my understanding of love had been redefined. The world tells us that all friendships and relationships will ultimately play second fiddle to the one; for me, that simply isn't true, and I love that feeling! Right now, I ID as demisexual/demiromantic if asked for a label, even though I never really felt I needed one, and I feel it doesn't 100% fit. (It is, however, a convenient shorthand when explaining why I'm not interested in casual hookups and things like that). In reality, I can be a very sexual (and, to slightly lesser extent but still, romantic) person in the right context with specific people *at specific times*, but I also go long, long stretches of time (ie up to 9–12 months) without needing anything sexual at all. If I'm also stressed & tired, my sex drive is -0 and there's no evoking it, I don't want to be touched, and will be physically repulsed if you try to engage me in even a hug (for context, I'm also autistic, which may influence the physical response here to some degree). For me, my identity as autistic is stronger than my identity as aro/ace, I feel my relationship with sex/romance has more to do with my neurotype than any separate set of feelings or processes around sex/romance specifically. I'm also more aromantic than I am asexual, because romance requires focus and attention to someone's feelings and I find that exhausting. Sex has a practical, non-intellectual component that (for me) is preferable to all the ~*feelings*~ of romance. It also intersects well with kink space, esp the dom/sub, leather, restraints etc subsection of kink, which can be very stimulating without actually a lot of physical contact. I enjoy writing, and reading, erotic fiction more than I enjoy actually engaging in physical sexual acts. This might however also be an expression of my autism more than the ace feelings (but to me the two are inextricably linked so who can really say). If a person finds it helpful to consider themself to be under the aroace umbrella, then they belong! I find it a helpful framework for understanding my experiences, which are that I do not experience sexual or romantic attraction, am repulsed by the idea of having partnered sex, and find the idea of romance uncomfortable to consider for myself. But different people under the umbrella will have different experiences. Some people hate the idea of how being aroace gets you seen by allos as an emotionless robot, and some aroace people are like...ok but the emotionless robot is relatable actually. There's such a wide spectrum! Asexual - I just don’t experience sexual attraction to anyone. I’m quite indifferent to the act itself. It means that all of the nuances and 'gray (lol) areas' of my relationship within a hetero-cis-normative social structure have space, validity, and acceptance. It allows me to find the right words or exist without specific words to describe my lived experience. To me asexual means that I’m not thinking about sex (like really ever) but it doesn’t stop me from being attracted to people or wanting meaningful romantic relationships. I don't really know how to put it into words, because at the same time I feel relieved to finally know myself and I still feel kind of.. idk, wrong? I still have a lot of compulsions about romantic relationships and sex. I often catch myself subconsciously forcing myself to do these things because it's what's expected. Amatonormativity sucks lmao. I am asexual, and I have known this since the age of 16; I have never considered myself to be anything else since. I am now 27, and I’m figuring I may also be on the aromatic spectrum— probably grey or demi, as I have experienced romantic feelings once or twice. However, I have decided I don’t want a relationship. To me, being ace is simply ‘a lack of sexual attraction to another person’ or ‘a low level of sexual attraction, in the case of identities like demi and grey’. Aces can enjoy sex and sexual acts, have a libido, watch porn, and still be ace. Although I am a sex-repulsed asexual, I know not all aces are sex-repulsed, and even that can be a spectrum. To me, being sex-repulsed means that I hate the idea of me being involved in a sexual act with another person. However, I don’t mind talking about sex with people and will happily listen to them talk about it; I have a libido, watch porn, and own toys. On the other hand, I know people who are repulsed by all sexual acts, including solo acts, and do not like talk of sex. Aromanticism is a little more difficult for me, as I am still unsure where I fall with this. I know it’s defined as feeling little to no romantic attraction, and that I do relate to that. I am also not really into romantic acts. But I am struggling with placing myself, and I may content myself with saying I’m on the aro spectrum without picking a specific label. I tend to think of myself as Gray Ace, as I do occasionally experience attraction to people, but I am always a bit surprised by it! I have never pursue this attraction: it's so fleeting, it has never really seemed like a mandate, more like an interesting passing experience. (I'm probably Aro, but tbh this has never seemed like a part of my identity, more like a thing I might bring up if it becomes super relevant, like my vaccination status. IDK why ace is a meaningful label to me and aro isn't.) As an aroace individual it means that I am not intrinsically motivated to pursue sexual or romantic relationships with others, as I do not have an innate physical desire/need for relationships on these grounds. As a person that is not sexually attracted to others, sex is not an important aspect of the ways in which I relate to others and want to be in relationship with them. As a person who does not feel a romantic pull to others, I deeply value my platonic and familial relationships and hold them in high regard. I appreciate all the ways in which someone can experience attraction to others and it allows me to have deep connections to those in my life. i'm glad the umbrella exists and i really feel at home, especially being in contact with others who fall under the aroace umbrella helps to figure things out. however, when talking to people who do not identify as aroace or when trying to explain my sexual identity to non aroace people, i mostly felt misunderstood or judged. In some instances, people began distancing themselves from me. so, in short: being under the aroace umbrella feels great when i'm among fellow aroaces but it feels isolating when i'm among non aroaces. it means that i think sex isn't the most important thing in a relationship and that relationships aren't the most important thing in life I am biromantic asexual. This means that I experience romantic attraction to all genders, but not sexual attraction. It took a long time to figure this out about myself! To me it means not experiencing sexual attraction in the way allos do. Being separated and outside of that world because of its infrequency if it’s present at all. Not understanding it’s importance either. I ID as Demiromantic asexual. For me it means having a deeper understanding of my own experiences regarding attraction, split-attraction, and libido. It has really helped me leave aside a lot of the feeling of not fitting in and forcing myself to engage in romantic and sexual interactions that made me heavily uncomfortable just to try and fit in or because I felt that I just wasn't experienced enough and I had to be to become comfortable with it. It helped me find community as I was figuring out identity. I only ever develop romantic feelings for people who I first have a strong connection with as friends and sexual attraction just never happens, although for me that is independent from libido, which is still generally low but existent. Although I don't use the labels too publicly, it meant I could express my experiences/identity to friends in a more structured way that they can even look further into on their own time if there's anything unclear. to me it's having some trouble with finding relationships (i'm aroallo, but my sexuality is like only 80ish percent allo if that makes sense), but also havong comfort knoeing i'm not alone I prefer not to identify as anything, because it feels so finalizing and I’d like to be able to experience the same intimacies that others crave and enjoy. However, mostly I just don’t think about it. I suppose sex, for me, is more enjoyable in theory. For me it's a bit of a lack of commitment. I'm alloaro so this will definitely not be a universal experience among all of us, but I often feel myself initially attracted to people but then unwilling to be in a relationship. For me, being aroace is mostly about one single part of my identity. I don't really separate my romantic attraction from my sexuality; they come together. So, even if i call myself asexual, I'm aromantic as well. So, it's more about how being aroace separates me from others, in the sense that I have trouble understanding the peers that don't share this part of my identity, and that can be alienating. But it's also about having an easier time to understand the world through lenses that are not purely romantic/sexual, and finding joy in every kind of relationship. And it's also about how unique the perception I hold for my own identity defines me. Being asexual to me means a lack of the sexual “pull” that most people feel towards others. I was very surprised to learn that seeing and thinking about attractive people is generally a cause for arousal, because I’ve never experienced that. I do still experience arousal sometimes and feel pleasure from sexual stimulus. I may even desire sexual contact with others, though it’s usually for “unorthodox” reasons like desiring an emotional connection or wanting to help someone feel good. There’s also a large gap for me between fantasy and reality. It might be fun to entertain certain sexual ideas in my head, but that doesn’t mean I’m excited by the thought of putting them into practice. Not being sexually attracted to people, and only being romantically attracted based on having made some other deep connection first. It means my priorities are different, that I find fulfillment in different ways, and that I see relationships in a different way. I'm more analytical/intellectual about sex and relationship dynamics. I can feel underappreciated or neglected by friends, or infantalized by family, because I don't attend events with a partner attached to my arm. I face some of the social or practical disadvantages of being alone but don't feel inclined to fix them with the solutions provided. (e.g. I'm not included in plans for couples or that I'm lower priority when I need a favour, and people suggest I need to find someone. My identity and source of adventure in life is not about falling in love or building sexual tension. I prefer to make jokes and cause havoc and turn everything into social commentary. My aro and ace aspects complement my AuDHD in having me constantly challenge expectations and assumptions and my need to know deeper reasons why a certain life is expected of us. I eschew heteronormative gender roles and don't see or accept the limitations perceived by people subject to their dynamics (e.g. I don't accept that men shouldn't have to take as much care of themselves if they have a wife, and I don't understand why dating politics around money or making moves are such a big deal). While I greatly value friendships, I find it harder to keep engaged in them when people enter stages of life without much else going on but their relationship. It means that I am normal and that I belong. I dont really know the specifics of my micro-labeling just yet but I am pretty sure I am aroflux (moving across the Arospec). Generally someone who has no sexual attraction to anyone, although the spectrum of this is wide. Although sex-favourable asexuals enjoy having sex, they just don’t feel the attraction. I’ve never looked at anyone and thought “I’d have sex with you”. But as a male homoromantic asexual (gay asexual) I find have romantic attraction to men as in I’d like to kiss, marry and cuddle/spoon a hot guy but no sex related actions, not even a BJ! It means no longer feeling broken or like a disappointment when my version of attraction and desire doesn't match the 'norm'. As an alloromantic demisexual without aesthetic attraction, I was always weird for not thinking people were hot, for who I was attracted to, and for the way my sexuality didn't live up to what people seemed to expect. It wasn't that I didn't want /anything/, so I was supposed to want everything, right? But I didn't, and I don't, and having words to explain that to potential partners has helped immensely. I no longer feel like I have to pretend sexual interest when I'm in a committed relationship where it feels unnecessary to me. I put myself through some terrible situations because I thought I was somehow not right. There is trauma in my past that I could have avoided if I had not been trying to live up to something I didn't even realize I didn't need to be. Giving words, space, and legitimacy to those feelings means a healthier and happier life with better relationships. It also means feeling less alone. It means experiencing little to no sexual attraction So I consider myself aroace with intellectual and aesthetic attractions but not sexual or romantic ones. Setting aside the formal definitions for my identities - for me, being aroace means being able to define my relationship (or lack thereof) with sexuality and romance in the world around me. In my case, feeling free and fulfilled to not engage and instead leaning into my personal strengths and putting my passions/skills elsewhere. For me it allows me to be my authentic self. Living and growing up in a world where allosexuality is the norm really skews the view of one’s self. But finding your identity and allowing yourself to break free from societal norms is a very freeing experience. It allows me to feel comfortable as myself and show my authentic self to others more freely. For me specifically, I see myself as 100% asexual in that I don’t feel sexual attraction toward anyone. Yet I am comfortable with sex as a topic or a plot line in the media I consume and even occasionally fantasize about certain fictional characters. But it’s all in theory for me, like I enjoy things like a sadomasochistic dynamic and occasionally become aroused by it. But when I think of doing those things with another person, I have no desire at all and find such a situation uncomfortable and even revolting at times. It is similar for my aromanticism. Growing up in this world, there is always an expectation of dating the opposite gender by others around me. I also enjoy consuming media within the romance genre (though I mostly only enjoy it now if the characters involved are queer). With an overactive imagination and maladaptive daydreaming, I often find myself fantasizing a romantic future with friends, especially ones I’ve recently made. But the same thing applies to the way I view romance, as I enjoy the ideas and theories of dating, being in love, all that. But the idea of actually trusting someone, spending romantic time with them, dating them, kissing them.. I find it unappealing and uncomfortable. At times, it’s difficult for me to determine whether or not I have always been this way/always would become this way, since I had crushes during middle school and high school. I wonder if the trauma I experienced throughout life made me into the way I am. Nature vs nurture type. I was in heavy denial over my aromanticism and occasionally still am now. I wish I wasn’t aromantic sometimes because it is a unique sense of loneliness. So for now, my aroace identity is something to lean back on when I don’t want to think of the specifics of my identity, something that can give me a vague sense of community and an explanation for why I am the way I am. Damn internalized aro/acephobia, huh. Lmao. I apologize if my answer is depressing.. It meant to realize I was not broken or weird and other people felt and thought similarly to me. It was discovering that my romantic attraction is not as attached to my sexual attraction (by first learning this is possible!), like most people (allos) and THAT is fine (I adopted the demisexual label as it feels like that is me but i am more comfortable just saying i am part of the ace umbrella when talking with people). It is feeling understood and happy to have the words and community to embrace myself and the way I navigate life. I usually call myself a biromantic asexual just to simplify it, I also call myself queer. I'm also agender and amonogamous (different than polyamorous). Being asexual for me just kinda makes me a-everything... I get huge crushes on people every now and then, but I am not sexually attracted to anyone, no matter how much I love them. I sometimes explain it to people like this, You know how lesbians are not attracted to men at all? That's how I feel about everyone. Or, Imagine someone you just couldn't be attracted to, like a 90 year old person, maybe. That's how I feel about everyone. Or like, Who are you sexually attracted to? a) cis-women b) cis-men c) trans women d) trans men e) gender fluid people f) nonbinary people g) agender people h) fish (hello Troy Mcclure) i) none of the above I am always choice i) This doesn't mean that I have no libido and don't have sex. I can get aroused by foreplay or other physical stimuli, and then want to have sex with a person. Especially when I drink. But because I'm not attracted to anyone, that means the person could be anyone, and I have no preference for any gender. I just have to not be repulsed by the person's personality or lack of hygiene. I am totally open to answering any questions you might have about aceness if you'd like to reach out to me. DM me on Twitter anytime: @elisaintime experiencing little to no romantic/sexual attraction (i am completely sex and romance repulsed) I would personally label myself as something between gray- and demisexual/ romantic. Personally, I think being on the aro/acespec can be quite isolating, because of societal expectations to be with someone. For me, this sense of isolation has been there from a young age. I've never felt much attraction towards anyone, and it often made me feel as if there‘s something wrong with me. I'm glad there's a community for aroace people because it definitely eases this feeling, although the aroace community is still very misunderstood. So, I guess being aroace to me means having to face a lot of allonormantive standards but also finding community in those who are like me. I'm asexual but not aromantic. I'm ok with sex to make my partner happy, but left to myself I could happily not have any and I never think about or experience sexual feelings. I'm not disgusted by sex, but it's like exercise to me, something I make myself do for the benefits it brings (ie, being closer to my partner) rather than an activity which is enjoyable in itself. I'm demi sexual. Being aromantic but allosexual, I experience sexual attraction but not romantic attraction. Aromanticism is experiencing little to no romantic attraction. For me, that means I don’t experience the emotions associated with romantic attraction. It can get confusing for sexual partners because many folks don’t separate romance, sexuality, or sensuality in their heads. So when I do something that they decide should go in the romance box, they discredit my orientation, not understanding (or choosing to to understand) that a romantic relationship isn’t about the behaviors you exhibit—it’s about the emotions you feel while you do. I’m demisexual, which means that I feel sexual attraction to someone after I’ve formed a strong emotional bond with a person I could perceive as a partner. (So I very rarely experience sexual attraction to anyone!) When I was younger and didn’t understand my sexuality, I would often say that I preferred personality over looks, and that because I’m a Virgo (haha) I judge people too much to like them. But I’ve learned since then that I’m demi, and that I’m much more romantic than I am sexual. I love the performance of romance, the giving and taking care of aspects of it. Sex—it’s all right. I like that my partner likes it, but I could do without! Well I'm asexual and not aromantic so I can only talk about asexual experiences. Honestly, being able to have a community that understands me and my so called weirdness. I just like being able to meet others like me. I'm pansexual and aromantic. I realized I was aromantic at 40. It was both terrifying and exhilarating. For most of my life, I had avoided dating, and when I did, I felt I was doing it wrong. Realizing that I was aromantic increased the value of the many different relationships/attractions I had that were not romantic--alterous, sensual, sexual, and platonic--and how beneficial they were to me. The way I love isn't something to be fixed. It is who I am, which adds variety to the ways humans can engage with each other. It's made my mental health and lived experiences better. It means living outside of the sexualized and romanticized expectations of society. So for me I identify as romance repulsed aromantic which means that when I receive romantic advances, I become incredibly disgusted. In the past when I was asked out for the first time ever, I was in total shock and actually got sick. It combines with my autism as I do not pick up romantic advances or social cues, so when I miss the cues and suddenly somebody perceives me as a potential love interest I just become totally repulsed. However, as a demisexual, I do desire some element of a connection with a person. I experience the urges to have sex, but combined with my aromanticism its never occured where I have found a partner or partners that I would feel comfortable engaging in the act.I am not sex repulsed and I do enjoy for example, sexually explicit songs and making sex jokes, far greater actually than my allosexual friends.For me, I feel I fluctuate between where I identify within the ace community and I have had a major experience last year where I was harassed for 10 months due to my rejection of somebody. I suppose Im more likely than others to put a degree of being aro up to trauma, but Im open to the possibility of it changing in the future. But for now this is how I personally feel aroace applies to me Under the umbrella of aro-ace includes a number of identities, including grayromantic, graysexual, demiromantic, demisexual, aromantic, and asexual. There are many others, including those who don’t have a label preference or prefer to be unlabeled. I am grayromantic and graysexual (I experience romantic and sexual attraction very rarely) and demiromantic and demisexual (I need to get to know a person really well before I can be romantically or sexually attracted to them, usually), so I fall on the aroace spectrum. Please note that romantic and sexual attraction are different. Someone can experience one but not the other. Also, attraction is different from one’s own actions. Someone can be asexual and be sex-favorable, sex-repulsed, or all sorts of in between. It means being whole in oneself and standing against compulsory (hetero) sexuality. It means building community in ways that supercede the nuclear family. I'm aroace and what that means is I'm not sexually or romantically attracted to anyone. That doesn't mean I don't find people attractive; it just means I don't want to have sex or be in a romantic relationship with them. I'm not sex repulsed but I definitely skip past it in books/shows/movies/etc. I'm good with reading books with romance in them but Romace genre is not my favorite genre though I'm more likely to read a romance if it is queer. I consider my friends and chosen family as my most important relationships. Being asexual simply means I don’t feel sexual attraction. I am aegosexual, so I may be aroused by erotica or fictional scenarios. But I’m very sex neutral about having sex. There are so many things I’d rather do. As for romantic attraction- I’m not sure I understand what that even is. So perhaps that makes me aromantic as well! For me being under the ace umbrella means understanding and safety in a way I can't quite explain. Ace people are often treated as broken or weird, or juvenile. You'll get it when you're older. Kind of thing. Getting to be under the ace umbrella reassures me that other people feel this confusion, that I'm not broken. People understand, and there is safety in understanding. But being ace means a lot of people will never understand you, and you may also never understand them or yourself. (For me) I identify as Demi, but I'm not actually sure I've ever felt sexual attraction to a person. I do think I've felt romantic attraction, but I have often confused intense platonic love with that and gotten myself in trouble. I've looked at a person and thought wow, I just want to stare at them. In some situations maybe I want someone else to do sexy things with them, but I don't really want myself involved at all. But the main point is, I don't really know what I've felt. It's confusing, and strange. I've never looked at a person and known 100% if I was attracted to them. I've thought people were so beautiful it took my breath away, but I've never felt... like a pull towards them. Simply lack of romantic and sexual attraction. Many ace/ aros are confused where they are on the spectrum and don't want to label themselves incorrectly so we so many micro labels. But I prefer to say I'm asexual / aromantic. When I say I'm ace and aro, I am talking about the entire spectrum. My sexuality is fluid, sometimes I can feel attraction after an emotional bond or no attraction at all regardless of a bond. For me it means I experience romantic attraction, but never sexual. Which makes relationships fairly unlikely. I most often report myself as aroace-spec, but if I had to be specific, I'd probably say that I'm demi for both aro & ace. To me, it's a general rejection of amatonormativity. The ace label was easier to find (early 20s) but the aro label I didn't stumble across until my late 20s. Under the ace umbrella, I feel very rare sexual attraction and only with a close bond (one person ever in my life, who I'm currently married to). For my aro umbrella, I have slowly discovered that my sounds fake, but okay reaction to romance in almost every media was not, in fact, universal. To me, life and love feel clear cut. There's not the fuzziness or transition of oh, I'm romantically attracted to this person. I told my spouse I didn't want to date but I knew that they'd be the person I'd marry. I love them, but the idea of dating made me feel icky. Since I'm married and have a kid, being aroace doesn't really come up with others in my day to day life, but I feel like it shapes my entire existence. Things that other people expect to be a given feel alien and incomprehensible to me. Coworkers casually talking about finding each other attractive literally boggles my mind. People who say there's no platonic explanation for this make me slam my head onto a desk. I've never experienced a crush in my life. As a middle schooler, when other kids were talking about crushes and stuff, I remember listening during biology class about lipids carrying hormones through the body and knowing that I was underweight and thinking ah, guess I just don't have enough lipids yet. (Spoiler alert: that was not the issue ahaha). Being aroace for me is being tired of arbitrary delineations between types of relationships and celebrating the transcendence that is my personal brand of love. i find that the definition of asexual as “self contained sexuality” that gets used in the Asexual Manifesto really resonates with me. To me, there’s a wholeness to asexuality that I find really comforting. In a world that tells you so often how you need a romantic/sexual partner to be happy, knowing that I’m a complete person by myself, even sexually, is really grounding. I feel like no one really knows about us even in our own community. Aphobia is very real and I have never actually seen an accurate representation of it on tv or in books. And since every asexual experience is very unique to each person, I always find myself in situations where I have to explain what it means to be on the asexual spectrum and it is an alienating feeling, quite exhausting. It is extremely important to me to be represented and acknowledged in LGBTQIA+ community. Many people don't even know that A stands for asexual and not for ally. it means I dont have to like what everyone does and I can do things my way even if no one understands. it means that my feelings and sensations and body does not have to aling with other people's opinions or experiences. I am aroace and I experience love in a deeper level than just romantic. love needs no labels. you can feel things your way and you can experience the world your way too For me it meant I wasn't broken and it wasn't something wrong with me - getting a name for how I felt allowed me to identify it and feel less alone. Reading about aegosexuality in particular for me let me understand interactions I had with friends growing up - things like people assuming I was a lesbian because I'd say oh yeah she's gorgeous/hot and only now in my 30s realising that I meant it in an aesthetic way while others didn't I'm biromantic asexual. It mostly just means I have no interest in sex. I'm a little disgusted by it, particularly by the thought of the exchange of bodily fluids. It also means being excluded (by a small and small-minded group) from discussions around queerness despite the fact that I'm biromantic and currently in a relationship with a fellow nonbinary person. Just look at how Yasmin Benoit was treated when she was announced as the leader of the NYC Pride parade! Aces also tend to be infantilized because we never met a societal milestone. I am demisexual, which means a strong emotional bond is needed before I can feel sexual attraction. I am also a hopeless romantic and could happily take or leave sex, although I do love kissing, being held and caressed etc. I know that's just my experience, though. I am also mostly sex favourable although this varies. The big umbrella is about sexual and romantic attraction that differs from the norm and skews towards less or no attraction. Narrower terms help individuals to find community but the whole affair is very situational and fluid. I identify as asexual but homoromantic. I am not sex repulsed but have no interest in having sex. I can do it (for a partner, for attention, etc.). I consider myself less romantic than others I’ve met but I approach my relationship with pragmatism and love/ adoration. Question 2 What tip/s do you have for a writer creating an aro/ace/ aroace-spec character in a story? There isn't the ONE aro/ace/aroace story. Talk to more people, read about more people, and realize that a lot of the online stories are very global North oriented Personally, as someone who doesn’t mind sex and romance in books, but is repulsed irl, I’d love to see more sex repulsed characters in queer platonic relationships. I feel like a lot of the ace rep I come across in books is Demi, which is great! But I’d love if a character doesn’t end up finding someone they’d do sex with every now and then, but still finds someone who loves them all the same. I believe that there are as many ways to be a-spec as people who identify as such, because of all the variables in both spectrums. That means you have a lot of different possibilities when creating your character’s experiences, but don’t try to make one character to cover everything. Just as with any allo, our sexual orientation is just a part of who we are, not our whole identity. Even when we are struggling with it or if its taking a lot of focus in our lives for whatever reason, we still have other things going on. Depending on your goal, don’t be afraid to experiment with how much it does (or doesn’t) impact the plot. Also, don’t just think about a-specs in romance or coming-of-age narratives: how would these characters do in adventure, sci-fi, horror, etc? Also, read Ace by Angela Chen. Create someone that is kind and outgoing, but friendly to all, and not necessarily romantic with any. I think any writer writing about lgbtq or neurodivervent characters needs to lean more into the fact that lgbtq and neurodivervent people tend to flock to each other. There's not usually the token gay friend, more like the token straight friend. Also if you start before a character knows they are aro/ace just knowing it is generally a long process to figuring yourself out, generally going through multiple labels and relationship trial and error until you finally come across the term, or finding yourself in someone else's story of how they came to their understanding of their identity. try to understand and implement the everyday struggles of an aspec person in a heteronormative, hypersexualized world It's a common phrase, but -- it's a spectrum, so don't be afraid to reflect that. I'm a sex-repulsed aroace person, but I love seeing *all* aro/ace representation. So many folks conflate purity culture and prudishness with being ace. Now I might get squicky about sex, BUT I also recognize that I live in a world where a lot is sexualized. That's the norm. I make jokes about it. I'm not afraid to--I've learned how. And frankly, I know plenty of others aces/aros that enjoy sex as an activity, even though they too don't experience attraction. No matter which character you write, understand that because of the world we all live in, aroace folks do experience things differently. i.e. the whole world has no problem essentially recommending sex and/or romance as a corrective measure to fix us (and our apparent hormone problems). But we also love things you might not expect--I love romance stories, even if I don't want that for myself. (and even if I personally skim steamy scenes). I love and hate the cake analogy, but it can be a useful starting point. make the story about literally anything else but centered around romance and sex. being asexual for me literally means that sex is only in my life in the form of other people’s stories. i am averse to sex and don’t even want to want sex, and i have many other things i care much more about. I don't label myself as polyamorous because I'm not really interested in relationships at all. I do, however, exist in a polycule somewhat, as what they call a comet. I think it's under-explored how that kind of configuration can actually benefit aro/ace people in that we don't get pressured to carry all aspects of a traditional relationship, like you do in a monogamous relationship. The pressure of regular sex e.g. in a normal mono relationship has made me basically stop dating because it's too difficult to navigate those expectations. As a comet to one polyam person in a polycule with at least three different people it is much easier to actually enjoy the relationship. We spend time together when I can/want to, without me having to feel like I abandon them or withhold anything when I go 8 months without wanting anyone to touch me. They get their sexual and romantic needs met by other people in the meantime. Our relationship is mostly intellectual, with some romantic aspects (which may not qualify as romantic by mainstream definition, but they're too personal to share). The sexual aspect is mostly tied to a specific kink (softdomme restrain & denial with very little physical contact) and it all works really well. So, what I mean to say is that an aroace-spec person can be in a polyamorous relationship and enjoy kink sex, and still be very much aroace. :D Regardless of if your character is Ace (not Aro), Aro (not Ace), or AroAce, I would make sure you are aware and knowledgeable of both identities, their spectrums (look into angled identities for AroAce characters), and their relationship to one another which can change. I would also say that if you are playing around with having an Aro/Ace character be in a relationship you should look into and know about Queer Platonic Relationships. A decent amount of Aro people in particular, but also Ace people are Amatopunk or proponents of Relationship Anarchy. This would/could effect all of the relationships the character has including friendships. So do some research beforehand and consider if it feels right for your character. 1. Please don't make their ace identity their entire personality! It's great to see ace representation, but I prefer when there is more to a character - I want to see ace characters with rich friendships, varied interests, and strong connections to the world around them. They don't always have to be bookish introverts (Nothing wrong with bookish introverts, of course - I happen to be one myself - but there's more than one way to be ace). I'd love to see a life-ofthe- party ace, who loves knowing they're not going home with anyone at the end of the night! 2. There has been some dangerous ace rep in the past (the infamous episode of House, for example - and more generally, cases of characters describing someone as 'asexual' as a means of suggesting they're a bit odd and incel-like). It's important we redress this by showing asexuality as a strength, with a world of possibilities. 3. It would be nice if authors could introduce a bit more subtlety to their writing about aroaces too - it doesn't need to be spelled out in endless exposition, which can be such a turn-off. Can authors find ways of having characters refer to their fierce independence, and lack of interest in relationships in more creative ways? 4. There is undoubtedly a crossover between asexuality and neurodiversity, but I think this has to be handled with care. I am a (broadly) neurotypical ace, and it's important we don't give the impression that aces are, by definition, neurodiverse. It can be dangerous both for aces and for neurodivergent people (many neurodivergent people are allosexual and it can be dangerous to give the impression they are incapable of love). We have to find clever ways of distinguishing between the two. Personally, I get turned off a story when characters start using labels for themselves in casual conversation. It feels very constructed and unnatural to me. I'm sure there are friend groups e.g. where this is normal, but it never has been for me. I've never felt well-represented by stories claiming to have good aro/ace (or queer in general) rep, because those that really go for being representative all go *too hard*. It becomes a focus itself, as if the labels themselves must be written out on the page in order to be represented – I hate that! I hardly ever talk about my sexuality or to what level I am aro or not with other people! Don't be so obvious about it, don't spell it out. I haven't really dated since I became aware of the existence of the aro/ace label (it's been years), but I remember feeling stressed out on dates because I can tell when, in the general script of A Date it would be natural to add some physical contact or where a kiss might be appropriate and stuff like that, but I didn't particularly want to do it. And I could tell the person I was with got disappointed, or got mixed signals. I've had people tell me that I didn't seem that interested in them or one that went you don't seem to need a romantic partner, I'm not sure why you're on dating apps?. It was hurtful at the time, but I also couldn't disagree, because I hated dating, it's exhausting (again, a lot of this is the autism –being around people is very taxing for me). So, the feeling of wanting friendship or companionship, but not being able to perform to the script of dating and therefore being rejected is very raw for me still. It's lonely. It's also stressful. Everyone wants to move so fast, while it can take me years to connect with someone to a point where I would like to be sexual with them, they write you off as not interested after two dates without kissing. No one sticks around long enough for me to develop attraction. :( don't try to aim for The Perfect Representation, bc we can look like a lot of different things, and don't be prescriptive about what being aro/ace must mean about a person. being aro, ace, or aroace is one aspect of what makes a person themself, and is an important aspect but is also not the only aspect. make sure they're a full person rather than just being present to be aroace rep I think mainly make sure they’re a person outside of their sexuality as well. remember that these labels are not static and one-dimensional. These labels are there to refer to a relationship between a self and a social system and there are many ways that it may look. For example, asexual isn't just about the lack of sexual attraction, it is a way to describe the varied ways that a person experiences their place in a sexually normative world while existing outside of it. Talk to people who identify as somewhere on the spectrum. Get multiple perspectives because we all see aceness differently and your writing should reflect that nuance. Sorry idk uhh like, as long as you're being respectful and do your research I think it's fine! I'd also say that even tho a character is aro/ace or both, there are tons of different relationships and they can still be (and not be, as well) in one! Aro/ace strict characters, as well. Things like queerplatonic relationships, and tbh even traditionally romantic relationships. There are so so many different kinds of relationships. The most important thing is communicating! Every person is unique in the way they feel and express themselves, and I think that's beautiful. I think first you should establish the kind of character you want to portray. 1) Remember that everyone is different and that ace/aro is a spectrum. Not every aro is ace, and not every ace is aro. It is also only part of your character, not their entire personality. 2) Being aro/ace does not make your character childish/immature/cute/ innocent or vice versa. Your character can be immature and ace, but they should not be immature because they’re Aspec or Aspec because they’re immature. 3) I think it is important to show Aspec characters with other meaningful relationships. There’s this stigma around these identities, especially aromantic, that they’re cold or emotionless, so it’s important to show their relationships with friends and/or family. Maybe less true now, (I'm old) but since everyone only knows the inside of their head, most people grow up assuming they're allo, and that everyone's experience of attraction looks like theirs. Many aces don't figure it out until they're quite a bit older. Hopefully it's not as true as it used to be, but it used to be much easier for women in some Christian cultures not to know they are ace, since they receive the message women don't like sex, they just give it to men who pressure them or because they love them or w/e. The first time I knew a woman who was open about being horny, it was revelatory to me. I didn't know I was aroace until after getting married. I always recognized I was different from others (beginning around middle school) because I wasn't boy crazy or really interested in dating; I also didn't understand why people would want to be with people with terrible personality/ethical traits because they were physically/sexually attracted to them. Nonetheless, this really didn't impact my life - I never put much thought into why I didn't want to date and seemingly was able to resist whatever sexual urges other people had that drove them to illogical behavior/unhealthy relationships. I think it is important that a writer decenters sexual and romantic relationships from the storyline and instead focuses on all the other personality traits, talents, hobbies, and career goals of the aro/ace-spec character. I think it is important to demonstrate that we're deeply caring, loving, passionate people who live fulfilled lives - not that we're in agony over the fact that we're not in a romantic/sexual relationship. it perhaps depends on how old the character is but perhaps the most important thing is to not portray an aroace character as being incomplete (when they are single), unsexy (it's time to break this stereotype! aroace people are sexy too!) or sad (because they seemingly can't find the right person). i am not sad because i am who i am! it's society that assumes that i must be sad for not having a partner. from my experience as an aroace teenager, i did a lot to fit in, and figuring out my sexual identity took much longer than it took my fellow gay friends. A story arc that explores figuring out asexuality needs many pit stops before arriving at the end. lastly, because aroaces tend to be less interested in love and sex, they have a closer focus on other interests and hobbies, and these mean a lot to them. i don't know many aroaces who sat at home and wondered what is wrong with them (when figuring out their sexual identity), they had/have hobbies, and they live a full life. since relationships aren't a priority for many of us, we spend a lot of time on friendship, platonic bonds, and our community <3 Everyone experiences being ace/aro spec a little bit differently. Some ace people want to be in romantic relationships, some don’t. Some ace people are okay with having sex or intimacy, and some aren’t. Romantic and sexual attraction are two different things!! There can be romance without sex, and there can be sex without romance. There are a lot of ways to engage in intimacy or closeness that doesn’t involve sex. Cuddling, holding hands, or kissing (sometimes) can all be ways to show intimacy without going further. The character can still acknowledge other people are attractive/beautiful/ handsome! We know! And it’s important to know that aromantic and asexual don’t always go together! I’m HYPER biromantic and demisexual. We come in so many flavors. I personally find attraction confusing and weird. Others don’t know enough to even think that! Research identities and see what fits your character and story the best. Keep in mind the split-attraction model (or research it if never heard of before) and the distinction between attraction and libido. Sure, for many ace people these can align but for plenty of others it doesn't. It's important that even if the character is aroace with little/no libido or sex repulsion, the language used to describe them and their identity doesn't deny the existence of other aroacespec identities and experiences. Also, you have to be very careful if any trauma is present/related to the character and how this happens and is described in relation to their sexuality. Pathologizing is one of the biggest issues the aroacespec community still faces, not that characters can't have trauma but the distinction must be clear. Finally, it's great when characters are not constantly faced with negative reactions every time their identity is brought up. while aspecs can be in relationships that they aren't attracted to, i'd reccomend avoiding it if you don't fell confident protraying the nuance of showing how a character feels about the relationship. havong the character go without a relationship is also amazing representation and helos break anatonormative (hope i spelled that right) orms I don’t necessarily have tips bc I believe everyone’s experiences are so unique. There’s some ace stories I’ll read that I’ll relate to instantly and others where I know it’s an experience others have but it’s not my perspective. The same can be said with my gender and sexuality as well. I would say, perhaps, tho, that it’s a fluid process. I’ve slept around and not realized I didn’t care for it. It parallels comphet, in that way, for me. Until I took a step back and examined my own interests instead of just what I thought would keep people interested in me, then I’ve had to come to terms that I’m under different umbrellas than I once thought. Just don't change their opinion at the end of the story. Keep it consistent. Some people want to be in relationships even though they are aromantic. There's lots of different types of relationships from Queer Platonic, to friends with benefits, or maybe your aromantic but are still in a romantic relationship with your partner. There's lots of different reasons and they really can't all be summarized in one character. Go deep and decide microlabels... you don't have to mention them but they'll help you write more specific experiences. 1. To avoid characters that are tragic/sad because they can't feel those types of love/affection. We have lives that are rich especially because of the other relationships we've built through our lives. There are already enough characters that feel they should be fixed, don't make yours another one. 2. To create characters that are happy within themselves and their relationships without feeling like they're missing something. There's nothing to miss. Oftentimes, it feels like sex is treated as the natural end-point or “goal” of an emotionally intimate relationship. While ace/aro-spec people may still be interested in sex for other reasons, I still think it’s important to consider that our “end goal” will often look different. For instance, I would be perfectly satisfied to literally share a bed with someone and cuddle under the covers, without any need to take things “further”. We aren't all autistic, and we aren't emotionless robots. We just have different base desires. Don't assume we're naive! We can be very observant, or experienced but with different emotional outcomes. Some of us know we're aro/ace early on and some of us need to come to a realization after experience. We have different levels of tolerance for sexual/romantic subjects, from squeamish due to discomfort at the idea of being in it, or indifferent/amused because we have no stake in the game. Include cultural factors, like different religious backgrounds, unique experiences for BIPOC folks, or language impacts. There are intersections of disability and asexuality/aromanticism, but that doesn't mean they're linked. It needs to be more than just Im ace or that they (The character) just dont date. That not all of us are aro. The rare time I do see an ace character they always seem to be aro. I get crushes, even though it's rare, I fall in love. I don't mind physical things but it can take me a long time to work up to it and it may not happen as often as the other person would like. And how physical things don't always come natural. Let them be fully fleshed characters too! An explicit statement that they’re ace could be helpful in solidifying them and making the aceness canon, but take it deeper. Get into their thoughts, feelings, experiences, dialogue, internal monologue, where they may have contrast to their peers or secrets they don’t always tell everyone. If this is a side character, it still could be cool to have them share some of that experience with the MC; they could even be positive experiences! On the flip side, not all representation has to be about the struggles. It can be happy or even just neutral normal. Gay representation is often easier because a character can just have a boyfriend/girlfriend/partner or call someone hot and everyone else already knows. For aces, it’s understandably harder to give immediately obvious rep. I’m still figuring it out myself, but chances are, since amatonormativity is all around us, aceness shows when a character reacts in contrast to everyone else’s “normal” reaction. It doesn’t even have to be a big deal—there’s opportunity for an ace character to be sarcastic or funny when they see allo characters act funny. Chances are, it’s more obvious a character is aro/ace when they’re older and unpartnered because their priorities are elsewhere and they don’t see the need to change that. There have for centuries been a lot of stories with the cold, heartless, perpetually single person who either needs to learn to change that to show they’re human, or never change that and thus are an inhuman villain. I see a lot of rich aro/ace representation in subverting these tropes, in which a character is unaffected by usual attractiveness but demonstrates warmth, happiness, or care for humanity in different ways. They don’t even have to be outwardly super affectionate to show connection—like Wednesday! Remember that consent and boundaries are very important. I’d also say include some sort of authors note or annotation that explains what sexuality is, because it’s not a common term. Also would love to see a sex-favourable character because those are rare, and it’s important to spread the message that having sex doesn’t invalidate you as an asexual person. Be clear about where under the umbrella you want them to fall. Some people are aro-ace, but there are sex-positive aces and aros who love a little flirt, and not everyone is both at once or to the same degree. Not every ace is sex-repulsed. Most aro and ace orientations are not caused by anything, trauma or otherwise. They just are, like any other sexual or romantic orientation. But both aro and ace folks are discriminated against, with everything from microaggressions about not finding the right person yet to corrective rape. Be careful when applying your traumatic backstories. And, if it's appropriate in setting, having a character actually describe themselves with labels is super useful right at this moment, when aro and ace representation is really only just starting out. Characters should not be a stereotype I would say this really for any queer character - but an especially important key to compelling aro and acespec characters is fleshing them out as whole people in a positive sense. By that, I mean not that they are not just not doing or not feeling/engaging in something, but rather emphasizing what they are doing/ what they do feel/how they do engage with issues, trends and people around them. Our identities tend to be framed oftentimes as a negative, open space, lack of something, but all the aces and aros I know are anything but. If you are going to do it, make it well known that this character is aro/ace/ aroace-spec. The biggest struggle for the community is the wide population not knowing what it is or knowing people like that exist. Try not to write the character in a way that prevents the audience to discredit that character’s sexuality. Well for starters, consulting people who fall on the aro/ace spectrum is good! Such as these questionnaires lmao. But other than that, I’d encourage talking to a range of people. That way, we avoid any stereotypes and writers are able to get a real feel for their characters. I don’t publish any work, but I do enjoy writing and doing literary role plays. So personally, I am empathetic with my characters in the way that I put myself in their shoes even if I don’t completely understand what it is like to have a sexual desire or a romantic attraction. Might be a little difficult, but I definitely encourage trying a similar approach, if other writers are similar in their approaches to characters. It also doesn’t hurt to contact trusted people who are aro/ace and see if your characters are “realistic” enough! (I couldn’t think of a better word :( sorry!) Aces long for romantic relationships too! Not everyone is sex repulsed! I wish when portraying an ace character in a relationship, they didn't suddenly focus on the sexual part when it happens, like a major breakthrough, as if we are being fixed. We are more than just sexual beings and by making sex the central part when someone is a sex-favorable ace, feels like taking away part of the identity. I hope for stories to show more intimacy and strong emotional relationships that does not have to include sexual acts every time. Also aces make sex jokes too lol or dress sexy and doesn't have to mean we want sex. Also wish more characters and plots focused on platonic relationships. Platonic relationships deserve to be in the same level as romantic ones, if not, I think they are more important. Been alive for over 30 years and my friends and family are everything to me. I never felt I was missing something and I think that is something other people should see in stories too. Oh, for characters to be diverse. I feel there is a lot of white aces representation. POC and disable aces exist too! (I know there's some Asian characters but they are the least) Focus on the emotions and the cerebral. Imagine the people are amorphous blobs of consciousness--what might attract them to each other? Figure that all out for your characters first before you put them into meat suits. Anything to do with the physical is aesthetic. I can become interested in a person because of their sense of style, if it seems cool to me. Because the sense of style, the way they dress, groom themselves, carry themselves, or even treat their body, can make me think they would be a really interesting person who I would want to know. Consider that a huge proportion of asexual people are also neurodivergent. And often twice-exceptional. I personally am level 1 autistic and gifted (I'm a member of Mensa and Intertel) Also consider that a large proportion of asexual people are into the kink scene. I can't speak to this personally, but I recommend you find some kinky aces and listen to how that works for them. don't be afraid to write them as just as human or down to earth as any of the rest of the characters in the story. and especially if said aroace character is a lead - make sure they have their own struggles/insecurities. aroace people don't have it easier bc of their identities, in fact it can cause a whole breadth of other issues in facing off amatonormativity (which is very similar to heteronormativity, i wish more media acknowledged this!) Read/ask about the experiences of aroace people. Also, to me, my own identity is a little confusing sometimes and I can't predict the pattern of my own attraction, and I'd love to see that represented somewhere! Recognizing that labels aren't exact. Having an ace character doesn't mean they will always behave in exact correspondence to their label. People are complex. And sexuality can change over a lifetime. I my experience demi people do not experience love (or attraction) at first sight. We have to get to know the person and form a friendship first. It takes time. Also, I do not know sexual attraction to strangers or even pictures. I can say this person looks beautiful but would never feel sexually attracted by just looking at some one. 1) DO NOT CONVERT US. I REPEAT: DO NOT CONVERT US. We are just like any other romantic or sexual orientation and writing it away with therapy IS ENDORSING CONVERSION THERAPY 2) some folks do have a root to their lack of sexual attraction—just because there’s a reason for something doesn’t invalidate its existence. **But if that is not your experience, it is not yours to write.** You risk invalidating all of our identities with your misconceptions. 3) sexuality doesn’t translate in innocence, purity, naïveté, etc. They’re grown, too lol. They can like sex jokes too. The topic of doesn’t have to be uncomfortable or triggering—it just isn’t always relatable. 4) Aro/Ace folks can and do get married. They can and do have children. 5) aromantic/allosexual—just like being bisexual—doesn’t mean you’re a ho. Sometimes we totally are, but monogamy doesn’t equal morality. Many, like myself, find being on the same page EXTREMELY important. I don’t cheat on people, I don’t insert myself into monogamous relationships, I don’t like or coheres. 6) if one more person tells me I just haven’t been swept of my feet… 7) Don’t assume we don’t know things lol. There are a TON of things I don’t get about romantic relationships—I do not understand returning to people who hurt you (barring abusive relationships which are designed to entrap) But despite that lack of understanding—I *know* that these dynamics exist and can read them very well. My best tip is to remember that the keyword is “spectrum”. Even if you’re using real individuals or other characters as models or guides, it’s not *the* experience, because everyone experiences it differently. When writing an aro/ ace character, you have to consider them on a specific, rather than general, level. This will help avoid stereotyping. Oof that's a hard one since it's such a varied label. I'm gay ace so that's mostly what I can talk about lmao. I want romance! We can go on dates, kiss, hold hands, fall in love, get butterflies around the person/people we like. I just don't want to have sex. And I probably never will as the idea makes my stomach churn. Like unless both characters are asexual (I'm making this monogamous) there will be the inevitable conversation about not wanting sex. Been there done that. Just don't write us like robots, please. Please show the variety of healthy relationships that people on the aro and ace spec people have. Show the value in their platonic and sexual relationships. Explore the entire spectrum. Actually talk to aro and ace people. Learn the challenges they face, how they express feelings, how they move within their relationships. To give the character as much attention as any other. If your story is revolving around relationships, dive into it and don't shy away. It is okay for Ace/Aro storylines to create conflict with other characters because that is how it is in everyday life. We do get questioned and excluded from conversations, the best thing is to not carry that over into the media and make it even more acceptable. Aro and ace people have different presentations and don't all have the same experiences. I also would avoid having the inclusion of these characters be seen as tokenistic and try and explore how a characters identity as aro or ace impacts their story eg avoid sex education's style having one ace character where their coming out is just looks to camera as google definition of ace is said. It combines with other identities, as example Im an aromantic woman and I experience an isolation from other women due to the expectation that women love romance, whereas ace men suffer from not being seen as man enough if they dont like sex. Do your research into different kinds of aroace identities and experiences! You’re already at a great start. Ace Dad Advice on Instagram is one of many great sources. There are lots of indie fiction books by aroace authors that have great and diverse representation as well. I haven’t read all of these yet, and representation varies by book, but some authors who I know include great representation in their books include Margherita Scalia (aromantic rep), Sarah Wallace (demiromantic, demisexual, and aromantic rep), and Azalea Crowley (asexual rep). I also hear great things about the trad pub book Dear Wendy by Ann Zhao (asexual). I think a lot of aro/ace/aroace-spec characters I've seen have been coming out or coming to love oneself stories. Don't get me wrong, these are useful and they serve their purpose. But I'd love to see a self actualized aroace person. One who has come to terms with and loves themselves. Who has built a community and has troubles from being non-partnered in a marriage-centric world but that is only PART of their story. I also think a lot of aro/ace/aroace people have a different relationship to their gender than most allos. It'd be fun to see that in a story as well. Do your research, especially if you aren't aro or ace. There are so many different experiences for being aro/ace/aroace. I want to read more books about aro/ace/aroace joy. Friendships are just as important as romantic relationships. Ace characters can enjoy sex! Being asexual myself, my characters in romance usually form some kind of connection first and they may even find the other character beautiful- but they don’t feel anything sexual or use words such as “hot” or “sexy.” If they decide to have sex, they enjoy it but it’s never this amazing mind blowing thing. Also, asexuality doesn’t exist in a bubble. It can coincide with autism, gender dysphoria in transgender people, depression etc. So of course asexuality is a real thing, but it can be hard to untangle from other things going on in our lives. Trauma as well. They don't really need to behave differently than anyone else, and there doesn't need to be attention brought to their aceness unless the situation turns specifically towards dating/sexual intimacy for them. I make a LOT of sex jokes! I draw penises! I seem like a pretty horny silly gal if you didn't know I was ace. As long as it's pretend or separated from me, it's fine. I can also hear of friends exploits and not be grossed out. An ace character doesn't NEED to be sex repulsed at all. They can just be regular and then be like nah I don't wanna do that but thanks for the offer. Where I would bring attention to it is dating, the uncertainty of is this person going to understand? Push my boundaries? Or if they specifically are in a sexual situation Talk to asexual people and listen to their stories. Each asexual person is different and going to have different experiences. Do research, talk to people (Twitter is a really good place for finding people of the ace community). It's such a wide umbrella that everyone's experience is different. Every person experiences their identity differently, but umbrella labels can feel easier for them to explain to other people, and have some comfort (though I know other people feel differently about this and love their microlabels)! I think it's important to really think out how your character came to understand their identity, because unlike other sexual identities that hinge on an attraction that exists possibly outside the norm, the LACK of attraction is so much easier to miss, because society will just keep telling you it hasn't happened YET. The critical moment for realizing you're aro/ace/aroace is when you realize Whoa, actually, I know it isn't ever going to happen, and that's so f-cking chill. (or whatever accompanying emotion). Personally, as an aroace-spec person, I am totally fine in my normal every day life without thinking about my identity until the moment amatonormative comments are made, and then it feels like I'm in some sort of cosmic joke. I think being able to write an inner monologue of a character who either understands or is working out their identity in a believable way is important. And most importantly, I (and I'd think other aroace spec people) don't want to see a character let other characters who don't understand try to bully them out of their identity. Talk to folks in the communities you wanna include in your story, especially if their identity is going to be relevant to the details of the story. Like, if you as a creator are not Black, I would hope you’d think to talk to Black folks if you were going to include a Black character in your works whose Blackness is relevant to the story. Don’t make your ace/aro characters explain asexuality/aromanticism to the reader I would love to see a gray asexual character in a story. A character who rarely feels sexual attraction but when they do, they do. I would also love to see an asexual character with a high libido cause people usually confuse sex drive with sexual attraction. There are lots of people out there who are indeed on the asexual spectrum but they don't even know it because they can't differentiate between sex drive and sexual attraction. A story exploring that experience would be nice. Also asexual people are very good at writing sexual tension because we are often in need of our imagination to trigger certain desires in us to initiate intimacy. We rely on our creativity a lot and it's an interesting detail about asexual people. Lots of kinky people are asexual and it's worth exploring so that people might stop seeing us as robots without desires. A very passionate asexual couple would an interesting story to tell. there are so many different ways to be in the aroace-spec. it is just a name, a label for people who are different, but there are no limits to different. don't try to embrace everyone in one character, no one can feel or have it all. stick to what you belive and what you character tells you about them. don't try to force anything or to make them be like every single person on the spectrum cause it's not possible Please don't make us empty or robotic. I care about my friends and my partner deeply. I felt broken for a very long time and most of the examples of characters I see out there are either the robot trope or are cold and calculating people. I'd love to see characters who navigate an Allo world and either have no interest or just connect to others in different ways - I can appreciate beautiful bodies and consider someone aesthetically attractive, just don't consider sex on the top of things to do. The lack of desire is the most important thing, of course. Characters don't have to be sex-repulsed, but I've seen very few who are, and it'd be really cool to see more of them! I also think it's important to emphasize that ace people can have happy, healthy relationships where the lack of sex just isn't even an issue. These relationships, naturally, can be queer, too! Don't assume that they're totally naive and know nothing about sex, or that they're all repulsed by it. Also people who are aro/ace/aroace-spec are still able to find plenty of things in life to fulfil them without sex or a relationship. There is a TREMENDOUS feeling of disenfranchisement being ace in gay male communities. Where sex has been outlawed and reclaiming it is important to queer movements, my identity has caused discomfort because the idea of repressing sexuality is tied to oppressive systems and there is natural pushback. When writing for queer characters, I would encourage writers not to assume that coming out bestows us with an encyclopedic knowledge of queer histories and identities and we are sometimes unwittingly cruel and othering to one another. Also sex negativity can be part of ace identity but it is not a given. Consider whether the ace character has a relationship with sex that is more economical or practical. Question 3. Who is your favourite self-labelled aro/ace/aroacespec character in a tv show, film or book and why? I don't watch enough tv, and I don't really read things because there's an aro/ ace/aroace-spec character. But I do headcanon many characters as ace or aroace I love Clementine in the book How to Sell Your Blood and Fall in Love by DN Bryn. He’s also great autism rep and I related to him well. He is Demi but like I said, that’s usually what I come across in books, so I don’t relate completely but most of his experience was relatable for me Georgia from Alice Oseman’s Loveless by miles, because it feels like she’s me. Her internal process, the situations she put herself into, everything mirrored my own experience and how I feel. Also I read it at the time when I was still figuring out the aromantic part, and I put myself in a situation similar to her, and when I read it I cried so much because it was the moment it finally dawned on me that I was, in fact, aro. Also, I want to mention Isaac from Heartstopper (TV show), because once again I connected with how he was affected by the others expectations and commentary on his relationship with the other guy. Also, like me, he read Ace by Angela Chen, which was a huge game changer in how I perceived myself and how I undesrtood even more common concepts like “consent”. I hope him reading this book brought attention to it, because it offers great reflections on sexuality not just for a-specs but also for allos. I like Jughead Jones. He’s friendly and a part of the group and adventures, while being accepted exactly how he is. Alastor in Hazbin Hotel. I haven't seen many aro/ace characters in the things I've watched as they are more so in animated shows and I haven't seen many. I really like when it's something that is understood and accepted without making a big deal of it between different characters. That doesn't always feel like real life, but it is the goal in life so it's always nice to see. And hopefully the more it is shown the more it will be accepted. i really like to see karlach from baldurs gate 3 as sex favourable aspec, because she is physically unable to touch anyone and despite being horny all the time after you manage to cool her down a bit, she goes on a romantic date and REALLY likes to kiss and cuddle instead of having sex (although you totally can) Ekundayo Kunleo from Raybearer Nathaniel from Tarnished are the Stars Alastor from Hazbin Hotel (is cannonically ace) Keladry of Mindelan from Tamora Pierce's stories is a good example of someone who doesn't come across as ace (and probably doesn't have the vocab for it to self identify) for a lot of folks but whom the author has said is on the ace spectrum. Sohmeng Parminhal from the Saoni Cycle Series by Avi Silver. I love her bad. Most of the series is her POV so we know her feelings and motivations all the way through. The way her QPR with Hei and *spoilers* Ahn develops is really beautiful to watch and I feel like we get so few Aromantic characters in media especially ones where you see how far they go for people they love and they get to be real and fully fleshed out. I don't even know if I can do justice to this series here, but Avi Silver does amazing work for queer stories and The Saoni Cycle Series has both an Aromantic Protagonist and an Ace Protagonist (in book 2) so it's a good example of writing these characters, in my opinion. I like Nancy from Every Heart a Doorway (Seanan McGuire). She's a cool, richly written character and being ace is only a small part of her personality - there's much more to her and you find out she is ace almost in passing. Most ace representation in TV/film either makes me cringe or is so minimal as to be pretty much negligible. I've read Loveless and I like the way Alice Oseman writes her central character, but I didn't love the book, simply because I don't enjoy YA fiction as much as I used to. (NB: I haven't seen Bojack Horseman and I have only seen one series of Heartstopper, so haven't seen Isaac in full flight yet - I'm not enjoying YA as much as I used to, so I'm slow on the uptake). Don't really have one, because I don't seek out that kind of stories? And again, if they explicitly label themselves as aro/ace/whatever, I often like the story *less*. For me, being aro/ace means being not interested in talking about it either. It's like talking about God with an atheist – what's the point? I think a character can be canonically aroace without using that specific terminology, and to be honest most of my favourite characters don't actively use that label -- probably because I most enjoy reading scifi, fantasy, and historical fiction, so labels that come out of current queer movements aren't necessarily relevant for the characters to be using. I don't read much that's set in the present day on planet earth! However it does severely limit what characters I can name that are explicitly aroace. But some of my faves are Murderbot (from The Murderbot Diaries series), Breq (from the Imperial Radch trilogy), and Strength and Patience of the Hill (from The Raven Tower), all nonhuman intelligences who I find highly interesting and who make it very clear they're not interested in sex or romance. I like how much they're just....exactly themselves, and how they're shown to care deeply about the things and people that are important to them, in their own ways, even if none of them makes a lot of sense to the allo humans around them. I particularly relate to Murderboth and Breq, whose experience of neurodivergence and of relationship to emotions is familiar to me too. One book that's set on modern earth and can be more explicit about these things that I really like is Elatsoe. The main character, Ellie, is explicitly asexual (and probably aromantic) and it's just a fact about her, and there's no ace 101 speeches by characters or narrative. I also really like Zach from That Kind of Guy who is demisexual, and I enjoyed that his character arc, of learning how to say no to people, includes the sexual dimension but isn't limited to the sexual dimension. The kinds of things that make a person who they are will show up in multiple layers of their life! special mention to Enjolras from Les Miserables whose mistress is the country of France. <3 I DON'T find him relatable but I do love him! Todd from Bojack Horseman. It felt like a natural progression of his character and was handled great because it was a facet of him. I also think it’s interesting that the Head Writer spoke about it ‘feeling right’ for Todd to be asexual and later realised that that was probably because of stereotypes and unconscious bias but because they had consultants, he was able to make sure the representation didn’t fall into any stereotypes of unconscious bias. I don't really have one. Isaac from Heartstopper. There is just something so wholesome and relatable about this kid who loves everyone else’s romances but doesn’t need it for himself. Plus, I was sold on him the moment he stood at a sporting event reading a book. That is peak nerd icon behavior. We love to see it. Lilith from The Owl House. I really like how they portrayed her, it was really refreshing. I like how they never tried to put her in a relationship too. Probably Lilith Cawthorne from The Owl House. She’s an interesting character with a well-developed story that takes her from villain to hero. Being ace isn’t part of her story, but it is there in that she doesn’t have a love interest. In the beginning, she comes across as cold, but it’s not related to her being Aspec, and it’s shown she does care about her sister. She’s also a flawed character. She messes things up, makes mistakes, and does things she later regrets. As the series goes on, we see her develop strong relationships with not only her sister but Luz, King, and especially Hooty. I like her because she’s an interesting character who just happens to be aro/ ace. I like her because she’s flawed and not written to be some sort of perfect aro/ace person. Though I would like to throw in an honourable mention for Heartstopper's Isaac, I thought his discovery of asexuality and aromanticism was really nicely done. (I was going to say none, but:) Rukha in The Map and the Territory by A.M. Tuomala. She's so loyal to her friends and interested in people, the fact she's not interested in sex/romance is a really small part of her. I do not have one because there has never been an aro/ace-spec character I relate to. i only know two, and i like them both: isaac from heartstopper and todd from bojack horseman. i like that isaac's story arc follows figuring out sexual identity and does so in a realistic way. he isn't mocked or portrayed as the last sad single in the friend group. todd's asexuality is only explored in a later season of bojack horseman which shows that he is already a full and complete person in himself before the viewer learns why he single and does not want to change that. in both cases, it seems like the writers really informed themselves and did everything to write a realistic and round character. i've never seen one! Lilith from The Owl House! Technically, it isn’t ever directly stated in the show, but there’s promotional material that confirms she’s aro/ace. I love Lilith, her redemption arc, and her entire character. She’s nerdy, charming, and cares fiercely for the people she loves. To be honest, though, I couldn’t think of any other ace and/or aro characters in the media thay I watch! Currently Olivia from HelluvaBoss Georgia in Loveless. Even though she is kiss and sex repulsed, which I'm not, overall her experiences were highly relatable. On one hand, she loves love, so she's highly into romance films and books and just the general idea of love while still being aromantic. She tries to force herself to meet societal expectations in relationships and kissing, etc. But this only made her realize her differences even further. Even so, her hardships were deeply validated by those around her while still holding her accountable for some of her not-so-great actions. technically a game, but i like siffrin form 'in stars and time', but moreso for their character instead of their asexuality I’ll be honest I don’t actually know any off the top of my head. I don't know any. I don’t get to see many ace/aro-spec characters in media. Peridot from Steven Universe is the main example that comes to mind. I like that she could still be a hero while still not participating in fusion, which allegorically represents different sorts of intimacy and relationships. She still got to help save the day in the end, and everyone was ultimately respectful of her boundaries, which I think is very sweet. I struggle to think of any sort of positive/non-token representation, but Isaac from the webcomic Val and Isaac is a pretty good example; he just exudes asexuality even when it isn't made explicit through the text, and he's just super into things and is great at making friendships even without having any sexual interest in anyone else. Probably Todd Chavez, because he's a weird interesting guy in general and the asexuality was a side plot. A lot of us come to the conclusion we're aro/ace as an afterthought, so it doesn't need to be part of an origin story. Elsa, I love the idea that she doesn't need anyone but also doesn't really want anyone. In a TV show, Todd Chavez from Bojack Horseman. I love how happy-go-lucky he is, and how he truly has his own arc of calling people out, setting his own boundaries: -ok with pretending to be someone’s bf/fiance to help someone but not ok with pretending for the rest of his life in a marriage -ok with dating but not ok with forcing himself to be sexual -ok with dating aces who ask him out but not ok with pushing through if the only thing they have in common is being asexual -still willing to be “more than not friends” with a toxic friend, not ok with being treated badly/manipulated/taken for granted in a friendship, etc. He loves to help people with all his free time, but his biggest arc is being able to prioritize and protect himself, and then help people from there. It’s just such a hugely relatable arc that many of us 20-somethings need. I love that in a particularly raunchy world, when he comes out as asexual it is immediately respected, and it’s normalized. He seems to be obliviously part of the movement, as asexuality becomes more of a normal word around him. I love that he has his own personality besides his asexuality; it’s not that his personality is an absence of something nor a list of identities he recites robotically. He has his own adventures, quirks, humor, creativity, optimism, ADHD wacky ideas and ways of thinking, and ways he shows friendship (like making up an emergency to get his friend to leave a party to see fireworks outside because “oh you seemed overwhelmed, so I had to get you out of there.” He also does have his shortcomings and struggles—he wants to get his parents off his back because “I’m happy! why can’t you be happy for me?” when he has a job he enjoys and life he loves. His stepdad is a person of color who witnesses firsthand that Todd indeed has the privilege to be so quirky and wacky without life-threatening consequence. Narratively we empathize with Todd and then also see where he may be shortsighted or flawed. Tv show: Ca$h from Heartbreak High. It felt super realistic and grounded in reality, especially as he also identified as gay as well. The complications with him dating an allosexual person and both of them adapting. His asexuality never felt like it was in the process of erasing. It’s by far the most fleshed out storyline of an ace person I’ve ever seen. Book: Georgia and Sunil from Loveless (by Alice Oseman) Not aro myself but the struggles that Georgia went through with not having sexual attractions and the internalised acephobia felt real. As a gay-ace Asian man, Sunil was basically written for me so I felt so seen and validated. My favorite right now is the main character of Shelley Parker Chan's She who Became the Sun and He who Drowned the World. It's not an important focal point of the character, but it's very explicitly explained that she loves pleasing her wife, but is not interested in the return. Nor is she interested in sex with anyone else. It's simply not a factor in her calculations. The idea of a sexindifferent ace in a historical fiction is very compelling, especially since, in the context of the story, it makes very little difference. It's just a part of who she is. The ones I write :) Because for my characters, their identities are part of a wider, mutually uplifting and beautiful puzzle of who they are. Honestly in the media I consume, there isn’t one. I’m not too sure if it counts, but I have a soft spot for Saiki Kusuo from ‘The Disastrous Life of Saiki K’. I have only seen the anime, but he is heavily implied to be asexual, while the aromanticism is slightly more ambiguous (but still implied). He was the first representation I saw in media while I was still figuring myself out, so of course I love him. (Also the show is funny as hell so) Felicity Montague- The Lady's Guide to Petticoats and Piracy While she does not mention she's aroace, the author confirmed it. She was my first aroace character portrayed in a book in a way that felt relatable as the book focuses on friendship and working on your goals. She's ambitious and her story is not focused on her romantic life or lack of it, it is just part of her. Georgia Warr and Sunil Jha - Loveless I wish this book had existed when I was a teen haha. Several of the experiences and thoughts of Georgia were mine when younger and before I discovered asexuality was a thing. For me the importance of Sunil compared to other characters out there is that he KNOWS what he is, he is a comfort and not a character going through discovering his type of attraction. He doesn't hide it and talks about it which I feel most characters out there is just a passing by comment. Tori Spring - Solitaire/ Heartstopper I think is the way she's on the spectrum but she shows her love for her brother and care for others and in general is not an innocent/naive character. However, I while I'm thankful her sexuality is not central to the stories I wish it was explored a little bit more or embraced~ Can't think of any this is just one of my favorites but izutsumi from dungeon meshi. because she's part monster the succubi can't affect her as well, and she wonders if she still has a heart. because of amatonormativity there are aroace ppl that wonder if they're somehow broken bc of their lack of sexual/romantic attraction Todd from Bojack Horseman. I love the way they gradually introduced his aceness, it wasn't a defining part of his character, although later there's a whole episode about his brief relationship with an out and proud ace girlfriend. He says at one point, 'I'm not gay, I'm not straight, I think I might be...nothing?' and I found that relatable. He just seems not interested - including in the labelling of it. I barely know any. You’ll probably get this one a lot but Todd from Bojack Horseman was a great intro to asexuality. They actually explored the ace spectrum and put an ace relationship on screen. And when their relationship ended, it had nothing to do with their sexual orientations. I honestly don’t consume much media that features aro/ace characters. The only two that come to mind are Todd Chavez from Bojack Horseman and Ekundayo from Jordan Ifueko’s “Raybearer.” I specifically remember feeling Todd’s exploration as being deeply relatable, especially as his asexuality was not conflated with aromanticism, as often happens. Amm from Friend Zone 2 Dangerous Area. It's a Thai show and I have loved Thai dramas since I was 13 so it was a huge deal. She falls in love with a girl and realizes she's asexual. It's a wlw relationship so yeah, I WANT THAT FOR ME. I pretty much only watch anime. I haven't seen anyone claim this. Ellie from Kiss her once for me. This book was really comforting for me as it showed the kind of relationship I crave regularly. It follows Ellie a woman who identifies as a Demisexual lesbian as she falls in love, has her heart broken and enters into a fake relationship. Overall I love it because it doesn't fully focus on her sexuality since it is not an issue for the person she is falling in love with. I think this tactic of not focusing on her sexuality really is comforting when dealing with Aspec characters as so much of our romantic lives (at leas in my case) focuses on if someone will accept my identity. Im not familiar with any I really love Gerry (Geraldine) in Sarah Wallace’s Meddle & Mend series. She is demiromantic (not said in the text, due to the Regency England-inspired setting, but confirmed by the author). She is a multi-faceted character living a full life, having a career, friends, family, hobbies, etc. Demiromanticism is a definite part of her life, but not her only characteristic. She is affectionate and kind to everyone (except when they really don’t deserve it), which is nice to see due to the stereotype that aroace people are always cold and unfriendly. I don't know if I have one at the moment because they all fall into certain tropes. The closest one would be Georgia from Loveless cuz I can relate to her but that's a personal thing not something I necessarily think we need more of. I just read Dear Wendy and both main characters Jo and Sophie are aroace and I haven't read many (if any) books with characters who are both asexual and aromantic and I could relate so much to both of them. The main characters in His Quiet Agent, MM asexual romance book. Sulvain from Novae. I don't really know of many... he's the only one I can think of, but I like him because he is affectionate and in a sexual relationship, but it takes him a while to warm up and he has to do the awkward explaining of it all to his partner. But outside of those explicit scenarios, it doesn't change him at all. Todd from Bojack horseman. His experiences were very relatable. Its also nice to see male asexual characters since it doesn't feel common. Women are told we aren't asexual, that's it's just part of how women feel attraction. But men are told they can't be asexual or they are less manly. So in my opinion it's nice to see men have asexual characters. That it's ok to be a man and asexual and it's not some woman trait. Its a valid orientation for everyone. You know, I don't think I've ever come across a canon one. This is so sad because I literally do not know any. I've not felt represented in any of the media I've known. But I will make a shoutout to the character Sal in Sal and Gabi Breaks the Universe by Carlos Hernandez. I don't have the quote pulled up, but there's a moment where the adults are saying something to him about oh, is that your girlfriend or something like that, and he clearly shuts them down with a clever remark about not having that kind of thing on his radar at all and they all just honor and accept it. Unfortunately none spring to mind to me except for the pretty small character from one of the early seasons of Sex Education. But having a sex therapist validate someone as asexual is still noteworthy because I’ve had a lot of concerns about how discussing my asexuality with medical providers could be tricky (“Oh, why do you need PrEP then?” or “We can check your hormones” and things like that) I don't have one. honestly I don't think about it too much. I feel like a lot of the aroace characters represent a specific group of people. I'm still trying to find a character on the spectrum that makes me feel a little more seen I can't think of any self labelled ace characters in any of my media. That's definitely Todd Chavez from BoJack Horseman! He's not perfect, but I love that while he had storylines that revolved around his asexuality (See: The ace dating app), he also had storylines that had nothing to do with his orientation. It wasn't his whole identity, just one part of it. I like Isaac from the TV version of 'Heartstopper' - I watched his scenes and felt like I could relate to them, although he's also aromantic while I'm ace but biromantic. I cannot think of a compelling specifically labeled ace character from media. Question 4 Who is a character you interpreted as aro/ace/aroacespec in a tv show, film or book and why? Many, mostly because sexual tension doesn't really click in my mind. Because I just recently watched Haikyuu movie, Kenma Neil Josten in the All For The Game series my Nora Sakavic. He often says “I don’t swing” when people ask him if he’s gay ir straight. His character is obviously on the asexual spectrum but I don’t think it’s ever mentioned on the page. But him saying that was one of the things that helped me realize I was ace. I’m going to say Reyna from The Heroes of Olympus (an Trials of Apollo) by Rick Riordan. I think in canon she’s supposed to be hetero-romantic ace, but I think she reads as aromantic too. I’m not really sure Riordan was really thinking this, but, as I see it, her reasoning behind why she wanted to be both with Jason and Percy was merely logical. It was about how usually the two camp leaders tend to couple up, so it had to do with societal expectations and power moves. When Jason returns as Piper’s boyfriend, I’ve always read Reyna’s hurt as feeling betrayed and bruised ego, because they were close before he left and moving towards becoming a couple; to me she doesn’t come off as heartbroken. On the other hand, I don’t really see explicitly the ace part of the character, because they are middle grade books and the description of feelings tends to be very PG. I actually feel that she was written with “aroace” in mind (and not even necessarily since her first appearance), but muddling the terminology with simply “asexual”. Newt Scamander, he’s lovely, but never seems interest in kissing. Wednesday Addams from Wednesday. I love how relationships were just not something of interest to her and the one person that kept trying to push it on her ended up being evil so it was seen as a bad thing that he was always trying to push her rather than romantic like in some shows. I hate when characters push another into something they clearly don't want and it is seen as such a beautiful love story when in reality it is super toxic (the Notebook in my unpopular take). todd from bojack horseman is a very good depiction of the struggles one might face as an aspec person Michael from The Good Place. There's this great quote he has about kissing=gross (just mashing foodholes together). He is able to build deep and meaningful relationships but its never about attractions or romance. And yeah, so he's technically a fire-squid in a human suit, but in the end he becomes human! And he doesn't seek romance or sex but gets himself a dog. If you're a gamer, I also personally interpret Aloy from the Horizon series as aroace spec. *note a lot of people in the community say Katniss Everdeen is ace/ code her that way. I personally don't. It's a good example of where sometimes views can diverge* I'm going to give you two: Ria Khan from Polite Society and Hobie Brown from Across the Spiderverse. For Ria, when I look at her focus on her career prospects and exactly how far she went to stop her sister's marriage it kind of screamed Aro at me, because I don't really relate to romance that much and I only kind of understand it, but it's also really clear that it came from a place of love for her sister and not wanting to be left behind, both of which are extremely relatable feelings. In the case of Hobie, they did this thing where they tried to make it seem like Hobie and Gwen could have been a thing in order to make Miles jealous, but it's really obvious that Hobie wasn't feeling or even paying attention to whatever those implications were. He was just really into helping and hanging out with his friends, and overthrowing oppressive regimes. If your Aro-spec character is not the main main character, I think Hobie is a good example of an Aro side character. 1. Francesca and Eloise Bridgerton Francesca has fallen in love (and will do so again) so I read her more as demi. Eloise still comes across as gloriously ace to me - she just seems completely uninterested in relationships, and seems content to be who she is. I like how both of these characters are written. Francesca seems to represent the internal conflict that comes with being expected by society to put the search for a suitor above all else. 2. Moana. I read Moana as ace simply because she is fiercely independent and never seems to show any interest whatsoever in finding a partner (let's see how the second movie pans out!!) This is my favourite kind of ace rep (even if it isn't official!) I like seeing people thrive without romantic love. 3. Elsa from Frozen. There has been some debate around this. Elsa has been forced into isolation by her powers, but I like how she eventually becomes content with who she is and embraces her independence. 4. Sherlock Holmes (although this is a slightly problematic portrayal) Sherlock Holmes!!! (esp. the B. Cumberbatch version). I *hated* that everyone did M/M fic of him and Watson. Hated it. Sherlock Holmes is not a sexual creature at all in my headcanon. Leave him alone, let him be weird!!! Let him have friends (or foes, in the case of Irene Adler eg) that give him intellectual stimulation but don't take his clothes off. hahahaha SO MANY! I'm very good at interpreting characters as a-spec, and in fact could come up with a way of looking at just about any character that would fit with them being a-spec. Some easy gimmes include Little Ash and the angel from When the Angels Left the Old Country, the Doctor from Doctor Who, Aziraphale and Crowley from the book Good Omens, Sherlock Holmes from the Arthur Conan Doyle stories, and Ling Wen from Heaven Official's Blessing, all of whom are characters who arrange their lives to not involve romantic/sexual partners and find fulfillment in other kinds of relationships (chevrusa, companion, colleague, roommate, friends) and in the things they devote their energy to (studying Torah, exploring the universe, avoiding the politics of heaven/hell to hang out with humans, solving mysteries, knowing everything). But honestly I can't help but accidentally read everyone as aroace unless there's explicit canon evidence of them saying/showing them experiencing regular sexual and romantic attraction. The Doctor from Doctor Who (specifically the 12th Doctor). Just felt right for their characterisation of Capaldi’s lack of any sexual-ness (even his relationship with River feels like a soul connection rather than a flirtatious sexually-charged relationship as it did with 11). Crowly and Azeraphel in Good Omens (maybe romantic... maybe... but not so much with the sexual), The Doctor in Doctor Who (some of the iterations of the Doctor may be a little romantic but in general they all seems at least asexual) Obi-Wan Kenobi. Fun fact many SW fans consider him bisexual (being bi is canon for him) but I see him as biromantic. Sure, being a Jedi limits him on physical and romantic relationships. But, I just love the idea that a protector of the galaxy can be a strong, multifaceted character, AND not get bogged down with sex and romance. He gets to be himself and travel galaxies. You gotta admit that’s super cool. Plus LIGHTSABERS I really like Riz Gukgak from Fantasy High (even though he's not canon aroace as far as I know, but that's a headcanon I like a lot since I really relate to him). I related to him with his struggle to fit in, and making up a fake partner in season two to fit in with his friends who have all had some kind of relationship. Errr. The only character I’ve ever really interpreted as ace/aro was Octavia Goetia from Helluva Boss, but she’s recently been confirmed as ace anyway. And I don’t really know why I saw her as that... just vibes I guess. I really liked to imagine the Angels in Good Omens as Ace, although it's probably not the right label since an allosexual Angel would be doing something their species was not designed for. But I did like the idea of a whole class of people with no reason to experience sexual attraction. I have not interpreted any character as aro/ace-spec. no one comes to mind right now, but even at sixteen / seventeen, i enjoy watching children's movies because they explore other forms of love that are really important to me: friendship and family. these forms of love are often shifted to the side when movies have an older target audience. i think gideon jura from magic the gathering is acespec! he's a classic swordand- sandals hero who has women constantly throwing themselves at him, and he always turns them down very politely so he can go back to giving his friends the best hugs they've ever experienced. Kaz, from Six of Crows/Crooked Kingdom, as well as the tv show adaptation, Shadow and Bone. Kaz is shown to be touch averse, struggle with forming a romantic relationship with Inej (who he clearly cares deeply about), and finds a lot of romantic things uninteresting. Obviously, this doesn’t automatically make him asexual, and a lot of his traits can be attributed to trauma, but in a lot of his behaviors I felt seen and understood. I don’t think he was intended to be read that way, but that’s how I read him. He’s also flawed, and shows that being ace and/or aro isn’t always sunshine and rainbows and totally perfect. This may sound silly but Frank Castle from the Netflix Punisher show. He never shows interest in relationships or sex or people even tho he cares. The Twelfth Doctor in Doctor Who. He seemed to be surrounded by people engaging in more overt forms of romanticism and asexuality while being oblivious to it or not fully getting it. At the same time, he had very deep connections with others and cared profoundly for them. Even with River Song, which he does kiss and has a more romantic relationship to, it stays in that realm with deep connection. She is a more sexual character yet he doesn't change his ways while still responding to her cues. When kissing Missy in his first season, nit also felt like he demonstrated arousal but completely independent from sexual attraction which is more of a first encounter type thing. can't think of any. sorry My answers may differ from some people here simply because I don’t actually like this aspect of myself very much, so if I see it in characters I have to confront it in myself as well. It’s hard for me to visualize it in characters, I think, because of this lack of acceptance for myself. Saiki K! He knows what he wants and doesn't change his mind. He finds fulfillment in ways other than sex/romance. Yuri Katsuki from Yuri! on Ice. Because he's shown to have passing romantic attraction to one of his friends, that fizzled down with time, and not much more. And he's portrayed not knowing how to connect with his sexuality because he has never put thought to it, but he's not portrayed as innocent and naive about it either. It's just something he never thought about. It’s difficult for me to pick just one. I often find myself projecting my asexuality onto characters because I struggle to imagine what being allosexual would be like (#AutismMoment). If I had to pick one… maybe Naoto Shirogane from Persona 4, a game which has also been adapted to anime and manga. During her Social Link, Naoto has this to say about a love letter in her locker: “I have no time to be dilly-dallying with callow love affairs… Saying they love me without even knowing me… Ludicrous.” It’s a sentiment that resonates with me a lot. The way most people become attracted to people they don’t really know, or become fixated on attraction when they have so much else going on in their lives, is very alien to me. Even when I experience romantic attraction, it’s in the context of a pre-existing bond, and I’m still thinking about other things! Elsa as stated above and maybe Merida. She was also very set on not wanting a man but that could mean nothing. Wednesday Addams, because her priorities are elsewhere. She is in contrast to her very passionate allosexual parents. In the latest show Wednesday, she protects her brother fiercely and later her parents, though she shows her love differently than anyone would expect, and her arc is NOT about changing how she expresses it. The show subverts a lot of tropes about the tough, sworn-off-men girl who “learns to love.” She says a lot of lines like “I should have been with you” or “you opened my eyes” but they are subversions because she’s either speaking platonically to the kid who reminds her of her brother; or convicting a murderer before she smashes his kneecaps with a hammer. Sure she gives kissing boys a try—aces can experiment. But her arc isn’t about learning to love like that—she learns something else instead. Her apologies aren’t to boys for not returning attraction sooner—her apologies are for the way she treated her friends. Usually in media this type of character finally smiles or finally cries bc they’ve finally got a crush. Not Wednesday. The time we see her genuinely brighten up is when she sees Uncle Fester; the time we see her genuinely scream and cry in grief it’s when trying to save Thing from dying (“Thing, if you die, I will KILL YOU.”) The time we see her quietly let someone care about her, it’s with Enid who’s tried so hard all this time to be her friend. The time we see her visit the hospital and speak to an unconscious person, it’s the kid that reminds her of her brother. All of her arc for how she does show love and care for people has nothing to do with her “learning to love” romantically and sexually. She hates people (and vampires) fanging in front of her. She finds flirting an “emotional morse code” and waste of time. But if you break her friend’s heart, she’ll destroy you. If you attack her brother, she’ll drop piranhas and make sure you never repopulate. She doesn’t become romantic. She just shows her care all the more fiercely. Peridot from Steven Universe. She’s the only character in the show who has no interest in fusing (equivalent to having relationships in the SU world both sexual and romantic) and is clearly very okay with that. I'm not often given to headcanonization, but I've recently heard the reading of Batman as asexual, and it filled me with joy. After all, he's resistant to supernatural agents affecting attraction, and he rarely gets distracted by what might otherwise be played up as sexual tension, but he does have romantic attachments, and clearly sex within them. I like to think he's demi like me. This is an odd answer but here goes - Elsa in Frozen. I read her as aroace because she demonstrates how being an effective, driven and selfless leader really means being devoted to the people you are bound to protect at any cost. That devotion mirrors more traditional romantic relationships, but it is driven by a different set of impulses and different aspects of one's character. I guess Elsa from Frozen. John Wick, heteroromantic Ace king There is a character named Shu Yanyan from ‘Devil Venerable Also Wants to Know’. She is a demonic cultivator, specifically of the dual cultivation path (iykyk.. if not, it’s basically sex). She has intimate relations with many characters for her own power and motivations, yet she herself says she has no interest in people romantically. My headcanons for her switch around from lesbian asexual to aroace to demisexual to aromantic hypersexual, I can honestly see her as any of those. And she’s all for consent so she’s a queen in my books. Sherlock Holmes - Holmes (BBC) He is minding his business and having adventures without showing interest on romance or sexual desires per se. In a world with tons of stories focused on romance and hypersexualization we need stories where you can have a break and are a breath of fresh air that does not make you miss that part. I know he is supposed to repress his desires but that could be only him repressing his libido which is quite different from feeling attraction. Dr. Spencer Reid - Criminal minds Super smart and attractive because of that and being kind. His lack of romantic interest most of the time just shows you can have a life doing your job and caring about your team or have romantic feelings without the sex you know? Jo March - Little Women (2019) Her monologue and saying she can't love Laurie the way he wants to, made me cry so much and was so relatable. She was ambitious and focused her energy in her dreams and family and showed that was OK but that monologue still makes me cry whenever I watch it. Eloise Bridgerton - Bridgerton she could be an amazing ace representation but I know I'm asking for too much in a franchise focused on romance and sex lol. However so far, I feel she is relatable by her zero interest and only finding someone romantically interesting after connecting with him, and still not showing sexual interest or curiosity on the topic. Some of Ali Hazelwood characters being on the spectrum is nice and relatable as a cis woman and demisexual but wish they were openly ace and mentioned more than just being a possibly ace since I can relate up to certain point. Sherlock Homes is the epitome of aroace. People love to interpret him as gay and ship him with Watson, but the guy was Just Not Interested. He had a big emotional attachment to Watson, but he wasn't attracted to him. Likewise, he had a great respect for Irene Addler, but he was not attracted to her. the 10th doctor from doctor who. Hear me out guys. a GIGANTIC part of his character arc deals with how because he's a near immortal alien he can't be a proper romantic partner to rose, and his platonic friends will always in some way find a romantic partner that they will care about more than him. i say 10 specifically bc in the show's history aroace-coding was just a shorthand for making the doctor more weird and alien, but 10 is essentially a version of the doctor with a human heart - he loves with one heart and not two. which makes the aroace-coding he was given resonate harder with me Hermione from HP, for a long time. I was annoyed when she eventually got it together with Ron as I thought it wasn't her nature. Katness [bleeping] Everdeen!!! Demi af. All of her romantic scenes felt in service to the love interests or other external factors. She *did* love them—they were massively important people to her. But you can’t convince me that she loved them the way they loved her. She molded her love to match theirs because she didn’t want to hurt/lose them. And the few moments she has that would “indicate” otherwise wouldn’t invalidate her as being demi. I haven’t read the books since I was a teenager so I was probably projecting to an extent. But adult me will die on this hill Maybe a little unexpected, but Bilbo Baggins. No mention of sex/sexuality at all throughout The Hobbit, and yet…There’s something about Bilbo that makes me nod sagely and go “Yes, he is me.” The comfortable life, wanting of nothing. He doesn’t need (nor want, it seems) a partner. Perhaps this was a function of the narrative, to make him more likeable in that if he had a partner/family he would have to essentially abandon them (or Gandalf wouldn’t have chosen him at all). But I suspect, given Tolkien’s descriptions and writing of “romance” in the Lord of the Rings trilogy (look at Goldberry, look at the budding love between Faramir and Èowyn, tell me you don’t see it!), that Tolkien might have been on the aro/ace spectrum, and that would make more sense for Bilbo as well. Really drawing a blank. But I think Kongthap from My Love Mix Up is demiromantic and demisexual maybe. He just fits well with it. Sunakawa Makoto in My Love Story. I head canon him as at least aro. He has no push to date, despite having hundreds of women confess their undying love to him. He has stated thinking about romance just makes him tired. (Same, bro. Same.) The first character I remember interpreting as Aspec was (and still is) Castiel from Supernatural. He was and remains one of my favourite characters in media, his rather oblivious and naive nature was something I identified with and through the many season never seemed to show outright sexual feelings to anyone. He is loving and compassionate however when contrasted with the other leads of the show he was always shown confused by sexual acts and saw them more as experiments. I interpret Twyla Boogeyman from monster high as demiromantic due to her requiring a connection before she has crushes on people It’s been a long time since I watched it, and I didn’t watch every season, but I remember thinking the school counselor in Glee was very much coded as on the asexual spectrum. She showed a lot of sex-repulsion or sex-aversion, and assured students that they never “had” to have sex, even after they were married. To be clear, her saying that to students seemed to go beyond allusions to SA, coming across as very sex-repulsed asexual. Despite The Doctor having various romantic relationships, I've always read them as queer and on the aroace spectrum. Also for obvious reasons Elsa from Frozen due to her lack of focus on romantic relationships and her focus on family and community. Spencer reid from Criminal Minds. I've seen him as ace because he doesn't seem to be sexually attracted to anyone but he does seem to want a romantic relationship. No one comes to mind right now. I'm sure there's been many, but I can't think of any right now :( The first character I saw that looked asexual was Dexter. The serial killer TV show. He felt like he had similar experience with love and sex in the season one. Even later in the seasons, feeling a bond with someone later he could possibly be demisexual. As much as I liked the ace experiences, it's unfortunate the character is considered an anti hero/ villain. I always felt Daryl from the Walking Dead came across as ace until the last season happened. He seemed so much more interested in platonic relationships. I honestly generally end up interpreting most characters as aro/ace/aroacespec unless they are shown specifically to be allo via their own words or thoughts, because I don't have a frame of mind that would interpret any specific actions as being romantic or implying sexual interaction. Alex Truelove from the 2018 Netflix Romantic Comedy “Alex Strangelove” like yes on one hand the whole “Young boy is nervous about having sex with his high school sweetheart” story is a little trite but like, the signs were going towards an asexual biromantic self discovery moment where he clearly has romantic interest in his girlfriend, and then another boy, but still seems unsure about sex, and then it turned out he was gay and repressed due to a moment of childhood bullying?? Like, damn, not only is he not ace but he’s also closeted due to trauma? Like, nobody wins there. I think barbie felt like an homoromantic asexual character. But again it also felt like they were depicting this side of her very robotic and non-human like. It felt like she couldn't be sexual because she was a doll, a plaything and she didn't have genitals. This usually what happens when we see an asexual representation. Somehow it almost always fails. Darius from the jurassic world series. he seems so connected to the world that he doesn't give signs of any romantic or sexual interest No one in particular though I often feel disappointed when characters loop towards sex/romance. I'd like to say maybe Mako Mori from Pacific Rim? I love the way she's focused and still has a connection to those around her that's strong but not sexual. Also - I like the interpretation of Jessica Rabbit as ace a lot. Y'know, despite being in fandom for half of my life, I genuinely can't think of any. Media is just so sex-oriented these days! It's honestly super disheartening. Oddly enough, two Disney princesses - Merida from 'Brave' and Elsa from 'Frozen'. Neither shows an interest in getting a prince, just in living their best life. Dozens. Maybe hundreds. But this is incidentally done by way of an author removing sexuality from a situation which is also diminishing. Asexual is not a lack of orientation, it is one in and of itself. Question 5. What is your least favourite cliche, stereotype or trope for aro/ace/aroace-spec character? That they are robotic/have no emotions I guess? My least favorite thing is when shows, usually doesn’t happen in books, say an asexual character is the least sexual being in existence or something to that effect. I know it’s ignorance but it grates That they (any character, actually) talk like encyclopedias when explaining the terminology and the forms of attraction. That we are frigid. That someone ace can't have a fulfilling relationship or someone aro can't have a fulfilling sex life. And if someone is aroace they won't have a fulfilling life in general within their friendship and life goals. Anything saying they are fundamentally missing out on something in life is just a form of homophobia and an attempt to force someone into a box of what that person believes life is based on their own assumptions. It's very harmful. -being called prude/immature/stuck up -you havent found the right one yet but please do include insiders such as the black ring, garlic bread, cake and dragons somehow :) ah yes, the cold standoffish ace. in the case of Elsa, the literal ice queen. The one who struggles with all relationships and connections. the entire story revolving around a panic of not wanting sex That being Ace or Aro is boring. It's not necessarily a stereotype, bit because of how big romance is in media, Aro and Ace Characters tend to get relegated to the background, are not properly explored and are kind of forgotten. But we have complicated relationships too with our friends and with our families, or for those of us who choose to try and date that's a really scary journey. We're not quiet, at least not all of us all the time, we can be loud and opinionated and the life of the party. Do not make us robots, or the quiet friend, or forgotten, have us engage with people. I love people! Just not like that. I don't mind the bookish introvert ace, but we've seen a lot of it. I don't like when asexuality is conflated with loneliness or some kind of 'lack'. That being ace means you never have sex, obviously. Or that aromantic means you don't *understand* what romance is. I get it, I just don't care for it. Aro/ace characters don't have to be emotionally stunted, socially awkward or antisocial. They can be warm and friendly and funny and well-rounded in every way, they're just not trying to get into everyone's pants all the time. They also don't have to be harshly outspoken against other ppl's relationships! I don't care about what other people do! You do you. Stop painting us a bitter loners with no joy in our lives. Hate, hate, hate when characters try to convert an unwilling character to be less ace, it always turns into coercion and SA-adjacent things. The whole you just haven't me the right person yet! thing is fucking exhausting. Hate grand displays of affection in public. Romantic comedies are horrible. I hate how sex is portrayed as some kind of goal or milestone that says something about the closeness or intimacy of a relationship. Like you're not a real couple if you haven't had sex yet. any given stereotype or trope is, tbh, something that SOMEONE out there on the a-spectrum finds resonates with them. The important thing, I think, is for there to be a variety of representation out there in the world so none of us feels like one particular vision of what it means to be aro/ace/aroace is taking up all the airspace at our expense. Which means that what we need is more a-spec characters, of a wide variety of types! though for me personally what I'm not into reading is the kind of character who makes their identity their whole personality and who is ready to drop everything to give ace 101 speeches at a moment's notice. I'd rather read about characters who are too busy doing the things that they ARE interested in, to bother thinking about the things they're not. Sheldon Cooper type characters. When asexual type tendencies are lumped in with making a character ‘weird’. Ace is robotic and unemotional and/or naive and infantilized. Aro is promiscuous and unfulfilled in some way seeking meaningless sex to cope with other issues. That asexuals have to live their lives alone and without love. Always portraying aroace characters as these cold, sarcastic people. Of course, it's fine since people are diverse but it gets tiring when it's done so much. That we’re childish or immature and need to be fixed, I hate that so much. This is not something I need to grow out of, and there’s nothing wrong with me. Aro/Ace is kind of an inchoate identity or family of identities, because it's about not having this drive, or not having *enough* of it to meet society's expectations. When an ace person comes out to someone they trust, just saying I'm Ace is probably going to give the person a pretty flat idea of their situation. Also, when writing an ace person in a relationship with an allo, I'd like to see this treated as an opportunity for creativity, rather than a problem to be overcome. That we're emotionless and unhappy people who aren't fulfilled unless we find a way to be in a sexual/romantic relationship. an aro/ace/aroace-spec character being portrayed as incomplete, unsexy and/ or sad! i am robot! i have no emotions! what is this thing you call love? i only love The Mathematics. I hate when ace/aro people are infantilized or treated like a totally sexless robot. There was a controversy on Twitter where an aro/ace woman (Yasmin Benoit) announced that she was leading the London Pride parade. She wore a “revealing” outfit, and there was a lot of hate direct towards her because of it. But aro and/or ace people can wear revealing clothes, or have sex, or engage in other types of intimacy! In general, I hate the trope of the “pure” aro/ace character who doesn’t get sex jokes and/or is “anti-sex”. That they’re robotic. Showing characters as emotionless and child-like. On a personal basis, I don't usually think of romance/sex out of arousal or immediate attraction regularly but I have spend more time than anyone I know researching, trying to understand attraction, analyzing how it works with characters and people around me and such. I am not clueless as to how it works for other people, it just doesn't work that way for me. Just avoid infantilization. Also do not like the finding the one tropes who change it all. The capacity for those deep connections is present from the get-go and also present with friends. using aro people can still be in romantic relationships (and the same for ace) as an excuse to have a relationship completely indistinguishbale from an allo one Probably that being ace inherently means you’re completely barriered from the desire for sex. I think like anything there’s a spectrum to it, but the only times I can recall seeing it on screen is when it’s the ace person forming a boundary with sex and then the other character having to grapple with that and decide how to proceed. I don’t want to be something to grapple with because of that when I already have a hard enough time finding myself worthy of that sort of affection in general. That it's a choice! When they are portrayed as unfeeling or apathetic; or when they're portrayed as looking or trying to fix themselves because there's something wrong with them I really dislike when being ace/aro-spec is treated as something “lesser” about a character. It also sometimes bothers me in explicit fiction when asexuality is basically hand-waved away in a sexual relationship. While we can still have sex, our relationship with sex is often different to allosexual people. We might not have as high a libido, or we may have different boundaries around what acts we do and don’t want to participate in. It makes me sad seeing these things ignored. That we're broken and can be cured (fuck that episode of House, M.D. in particular). Naive, easily repulsed, undesirable They are innocent and are oblivious to the world around them That it's an illness that can be cured That a single adult (maybe aroace) character just needs to learn to get over whatever trauma/insecurity/ego keeps them single, and fix that. That friends of different genders just need to learn to get over whatever denial/ prudishness/ego keeps them “just friends,” and admit they’re meant to be romantic partners or else they lose each other forever. (Any of those people could have been queer or aro/ace) And any use of “asexual” as an insult to mean prude, virgin, or unattractive. I know that may have been a use historically when men were trying to insult the feminist movement, but it’s not an insult now. Asexual doesn’t mean WE’RE unattractive, it means *everyone else* is! (jk) - we can be “fixed” or cured” -“you’re just confused” - we are prudes - we are all neurodivergent - childlike/innocent - “are you a plant” - we are introverted and have no friends - we are all celibate - not feeling ace enough - “the A in LGBTQIA+ stands for ally!” - the fact we all want to invade Denmark because their military force is outnumbered by aces Hard to pick a least favorite. I hate the 'trauma made me ace' one, though I know it does affect some people that way irl. I hate the 'all aces will NEVER want sex' idea. I especially dislike the assumption that all aces are aro and vice versa, since that is very often untrue. My least favorite stereotypes is aro/ace/aroace-spec people are robotic Someone who is childish, infantile, weak and/or vulnerable. Not saying that ace and aro characters must be invulnerable or always domineering badasses - not at all! But the association of ace and aro identities with immaturity can be really problematic if there is nothing else there filling out a character. You can make a character that is sex repulsed because that’s a valid part of the community. But don’t rely on that for cheap humor or “fish out of water” scenarios I don’t enjoy the stereotype that aroace people are cold, logical, serious, and apathetic people. Going hand in hand with that would be the how the clothing is often incredibly modest or baggy. I don’t know how to best describe it, so apologies if my explanation doesn’t make sense. But the best way I can describe it is in comparison with gay men’s stereotypes, how media portrayal and even real life views will believe gay men to be effeminate, almost “dainty”. And when gay men aren’t that stereotype, they can hear things like “oh you don’t look/act gay”. It’s a similar premise there. There was some twitter acephobia that went on just a little bit ago when an asexual person lead a pride parade wearing “sexual/revealing” clothing. It is harmful and invalidating, to be told you “cannot be aro/ace” because of the way you dress or the way you act. People are allowed to wear what they want, it is not a reflection on their sexualities or gender identities. Again, apologies if they didn’t make any sense. At work while filling this out, so I’m a little brain dead haha. Being naive or innocent on sexual topics. Often portrayed as loners or side characters because they are boring or weirdos. If they are sex favorable it feels like the story is focused on the moment they find a person and have sex, implying they are fixed. Aces not being able to be attractive physically because we are not supposed to get that type of attention. Being pretty or popular or dressing in some way does not have to be linked to be allosexual all the time. That they're all sex-repulsed. Some are, sure, but that usually is the result of childhood trauma of being raised in a society that places a huge amount of your personal value on how fuckable you are (especially for women). Sexrepulsion is not inherent to your sexual orientation, and is an entirely separate thing going on in your mental makeup. mentioned this in the previous answer but when being aroace is used as a shorthand to make a character more alien or monstrous - so i LOVE narratives that flip this on its head like izutsumi or the 10th doctor where their humanity is reinforced by the story and it's unquestionable that they care deeply for others Being a prude/hating sex/asexuality is always a result of trauma. That we are all autistic or can't relate to people. I'm very empathetic and caring! That those people all do not have sex. That is untrue. Or that they are all small and shy. That they all wear glasses and dungaress and would be book worms or other nerds. I think the infantilization is legit messed up. No one wants to be treated like a child—especially not for as some thing as none-of-your-buisness as sex and sexuality. Aro/allo doesn’t get enough rep to have a cliche ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Complete celibacy. Many people on the ace spectrum do have (good!) sex, especially in mixed-libido relationships. And many masturbate. Some might enjoy kink/bondage without penetrative sex. Sexual health is part of physical/ mental health, and many people need (or simply enjoy) the release. (Remember: spectrum!) That you have to be both??? Like so many people read Merida or Elsa to be asexual when they mean aromantic. Like these are Disney characters, do you really think these characters are related to sex? NO. They have no romantic interests. We don't feel love because we don't feel romantic love. Or we cannot commit in a relationship. Or that we just like having sex/slut shaming. That we are cold, don't like children. The Ace character that can't be in a relationship. The stick in the mud trope where a character is essentially robotic and a follower of rules because apparently ace folks are boring Most aroace rep are characters are who are both aromantic and asexual and have no interest in ever having sex. There are a lot of people who experience that, so I don’t want that representation to go away at all. I just want to see more diversity in the kinds of aroace characters out there! That we're all bookish quiet nerds. That we're all white. That we all hate sex. That we have no emotions or are like robots. I am incredibly emotional and care very much for my friends and family. Romantic relationships are not the end all be all. Making the character really quirky or odd in some way which seems like the author is trying to make up for something. I want to feel like they’re a normal person. Not Sheldon from Big Bang Theory. Heh, why bother having sex when I can read books all day? Is a pretty tired trope. A stereotype is ace/aro people must have a mental illness, disability or be the villain. I've not come across any ace characters myself so haven't seen any stereotypes, but I guess there must be one out there that people think being ace means you don't know how to love. That they're broken, or that they can be fixed or make an exception for the one. The “robotic and unfeeling person is also asexual/aromantic” reading that applies to people like Sheldon Cooper. Plus the whole “they just need the right person, like Dr. Amy Farrah Fowler, to make them sexual/romantic” corollary to that. I also personally find that media that tries too hard to go in the opposite direction can miss. Like, “oh wow! This person is ace? When they’re so flirtatious and outgoing??” says, to me, that an ace person having those traits is so shocking and abnormal that it goes against type I don't like how they portray us like psychopaths without emotional depth. Like Sherlock for instance. They usually go for that route and it's actually very irritating. probably being 100% sex/romance-repulsed. though I know there's a lot of people out there that feels this way. it's just less appealing to me Ace = Robot or Cold. I don't like the take that for example BBC's Sherlock is ace just because he's quite horrible to the female character that's interested in him. Ace = narcissist/egotistic/ autistic is infuriating to me. The broken I need you to fuck me to fix me ace. We are not broken, and sex will not change who we are. It's really gross, to be honest. Them being naive and / or childlike, and also them automatically dressing modestly - we can wear what we want like anyone else. I mentioned this above, but characters struggling with identity do not find and become gatekeepers of all knowledge. Asexual characters can be just as ignorant of asexuality as they navigate what that means. That might also mean trying on identities. This means authors will need to remember that they know things their characters do not. Question 6. What’s one thing you’d really like to see in an aro/ace/ aroace-spec character? intimacy that does not mean sexual or romantic Acceptance. As ace people we get enough questions from friends and family that can’t possible understand our experience, and growing up I questioned myself and tried to “fix” myself which led to a lot of bad decisions made under the influence of drugs and alcohol just so I could fit in with what everyone else was doing. I would love to see a character that more readily accepts themselves, whether they had a role model or parent that shows them that it’s ok to be just as they are and helps them from a young age to accept themselves. I’d like to see demi characters with well developed bonds and relationships, so the attraction (wether romantic or sexual) is believable. I’d like to see characters with different degrees of interest in sex and desire, so they don’t always fall in the cliché of how the characters can’t their hands off each other. And finally, I’d like to see fully fleshed-out characters who happen to be a-spec (and of course that impacts their life and world perception) but whose main plot line revolves about other aspects of their life. Someone that is accepted as is, and included in friend groups and adventures. Just having a fulfilling life trying to fit in in a world you dont seem to belong into, dealing with confusion about yourself (something must be wrong with me) and slowly accepting that it is not you that is broken, but society's stance on relationships and sex I'd love to see someone comfortable in their own damn skin. I knew who I was from a young age, but I didn't have the words for it. Having a character on the same journey is fantastic, but I also love the character that you can aspire to be, you know. To show that hey, this person is freaking ACE. (in all possible ways) someone who is romantic but asexual. someone who prefers being asexual. someone who prefers being aromantic/asexual as it frees them to do other things with life. a relationship between two asexual people As Ace rep increases Aro rep has not pushed really far beyond niche books. I'd just like to see more of us honestly and get beyond the coming out/discovery phase of queer media that we're currently in. Although, there's so little rep, we could probably use a few more of those too. I think someone exploring what dating is like for Aro/Aces could be interesting because it's not very scary. I think having a lot of us together in a show would be fun, our friendship dynamics our interesting. In general and personally, I'd like to see more diversity in our representation. More Black and POC people, more gender diversity, disabled diversity or all sorts (physical and mental), more body diversity. Normalize us, we could be anyone, conservatives should be scared of that. I want to see aces thriving! I want to see aces enjoying their freedom and embracing their independence. Not sure. I don't really seek it out. I've never felt represented in literature and I have no hope of that ever changing tbh. I do think ace/aro rep in erotic/kink fiction is under-utilised tho. Same for SF/F and other spec fic: If you're creating a whole other world, maybe try making a society less obsessed with physical sex, romantic relationships and procreation? And as mentioned above, make happy, warm, friendly and funny ace characters! Living alone does not make you a sad loser. I just want more! and more variety! I think more BAME representation would be great. Normalization. I would love to see an asexual character get to have a whirlwind romance or a QPR (queer platonic relationship) just like any allosexual characters get! Just normal people who also happen to be aro/ace. (But tbh at the same time, I want aroace people who's identity play a big part in who they are. Just complex people) Now, we’re starting to get more aces and aros in media; I want to see more of the spectrum. I want to see someone acknowledge that asexuals can be horny. There’s this awful thing I’ve come across where sexually active aces get treated like they’re not proper asexuals. Feeling sexual attraction and having a libido are two different things. Aces can experience arousal. Aces can like sex because of the closeness it gives them to their partner. Aces can like sex because it feels good when they do it. Aces can watch porn and masturbate. Aces can engage in BDSM and other fetishes for reasons other than sexual attraction. I'd love more horny aces! (I mean, only if there was a way for this to arise organically. Horny in public is probably not ace rep we need.) For me, asexuality is about not being attracted, not about not having a sex drive. The ace who brings bottled water to the orgy, the ace who spends time alone with a toy, the ace who writes erotica. Character development of them as a person! I'd almost rather them being aro/ ace-spec be clearly and proudly addressed, but not be all that important or character defining. Let the person they are be the most important part of them, the people they love, the things that motivate and inspire them be the center of the story. It is so frustrating to always be presented with sex/romance as the center of an adult life and it would be a missed opportunity to highlight that for some aroace folks, like me, that this just is not an aspect of life that means all that much to me. In fact, I never really think about it. Rather, being aroace only comes to mind in the context of others (ie people inquiring about my partner, people curious about how I have a biological child as an aroace person, wellintentioned people telling me that I'm young and I Neve know what can happen in the future or who I'll meet that will change everything for me). what i like to see is a story line of a full and complete character who has complex character traits. yea they fall under aroace umbrella but that does not make them incomplete. it also should not be too much of their character identity. I’d love to see aro/ace-spec characters be in romantic relationships! I’d like to see them try them out and realize it’s not for them, or stick with it and figure they actually love it. Demi characters falling deeply in love with someone after years of friendship, or an aro person loving someone deeply in a way that isn’t romantic. I especially want to see characters who are asexual but not aromantic, and characters who are aromantic but not asexual. Romantic and sexual attraction are different, and it’s nice to see characters who are one but not the other. One that likes sex! I’m ace flexible and Demi and I love sex. I’d love to see an ace character that still enjoys it too. I'd love to see a character who is some variation of the spec find a relationship (romantic or sexual depending) with a character who isn't aroacespec and how they navigate that, the conversations that need to be had, the agreements etc. Like any other relationship it's not easy work but the beauty of it is it can be done. Aroace people don't always go out with aroace people. Also queer platonic relationships with aroace-aroace couples would be lovely. i'd be interested in some aroallo representation (but i understand that may be tricky to write) A storyline not dependent on acceptance from someone not on this spectrum. Or, similarly, views on the positives of this lifestyle rather than the struggles that come along with it. polyamorous a-spec people! Alloaros! A character happy in their own skin that is capable of loving others and their career and doesn't feel like missing anything. I’d really like more ace/aro-spec characters who are physically affectionate. Characters who are really cuddly or touchy, and crave that contact—just not of a romantic or sexual kind! Unknown contact said: A full, vibrant life in which people like being around them. Shadiness, random knowledge, casual secrecy. A love of garlic bread (for ace) Someone who falls in love and has a happy relationship with an allo I really want to see both of these: 1. Queerplatonic partners as a really happy, healthy relationship. I think the closest we’ve seen is Aziraphale and Crowley in Good Omens (but I have nothing against romantically shipping them too cuz the lines are blurred and they don’t use human labels anyway) 2. An aroace character that does not feel any attraction nor end up in any relationship at all, and is content and happy for it. I feel like a lot of ace rep is dedicated to showing “just because you’re ace doesn’t mean you can’t fall in love!” and that is very true and valid to many people’s experiences. However, it’s hard for me to find aroace representation that leans into the aromantic aspect specifically, particularly in which a character does not have a romantic partner at all but lives a meaningful life. Because that is also a valid, lived experience that sticks out more, that more people need to know can be good. - more sex positive characters, and more POC ace characters, and the connection between their family and their identity I'd love to see a character embrace their asexuality while exploring other elements of interpersonal relationships. I'd like to see a character of color Honestly, I want to see all kinds of aro and ace characters - ones that are like me and ones that are barely like me at all. That's what's great about being part of a spectrum within the queer spectrum itself: we are all so different from one another, and I want to see a wide range of ace and aro characters too. I really just want one to be a main character that exists in a story that reaches a wide audience. A lot of the main stream characters are relegated to side characters. Just want more eyes on the Ace experience I’d encourage more people to write the more “uncommon” sides of aro/ace identities. Like asexual people who are hypersexual, the aromantic people who fall under the cupioromantic and lithromantic labels, the asexual people who still enjoy having sex, and so on. There is never enough representation, but most of the representation we have are aro/ace characters who are always serious and apathetic. Aro/ace people are just the same as everyone else! We have our ups and downs and explore our sexualities the same as most. So I would love to see the “in between”s of the spectrum, and I’d love to also see a character going through the journey of discovering themselves, being in denial over it and all. But on the opposite side of that, I’d also love to see a character mentioning their sexuality casually. There doesn’t always need to be a big coming out scene or discovery scene, sometimes it’s nice just to have a character laugh at a sex joke and then say something along the lines of “not me tho, stay safe yall”. - Embracing their sexuality openly without being a walking flag all the time. - A main character that is ace without being borderline psychopath - Also most of the time characters are both aro-ace we need representation that separates them. - cis heteroromantic or biromantic demisexuals being embraced as queer (this took me soooo long to come to terms since I didn't count as queer enough) - portraying aphobia because it is very much real and it hurts us (ie all the comments and attacks Yasmin Benoit suffers), people think we are not discriminated or suffer The active thought process of why they might choose to have sex (and perhaps even enjoy it) with a person who they're just not attractive to. There are many reasons: to have children, to make a partner happy (this is different from people who get sexual gratification out of pleasing a partner), to feel special and valued (not quite a healthy reason, but we live in a society), for money, and many other reasons. more aroace characters that struggle with loneliness and alienation!! being aroace does not inherently make someone lonely, but the surrounding amatonormative society that we live in does make it isolating knowing that a majority of society prioritizes romantic/sexual relationships over platonic ones As I said, I'd love to see someone like me who doesn't fully understand their own identity. Also, sex-positive/neutral aces who just don‘t feel attraction. Aromantic people who love romance in media. Male ace characters are interesting, esp if they don't fall into the trope of being autistic / spectrumy savants (like Sheldon from the Big Bang Theory). I think there might be a lot more women who are like me, and maybe more who don't even let on to their partners. Secret aces. Exploring that would be interesting. A secret ace society? a bold character. outgoing, extroverted. Maybe tall. I’d like to see valid aro/allo rep. Someone who identifies as, understands, and navigates the world intentionally as aromantic and allosexual. Communicating with partners, turning down advances, processing the relationships around you —gimme!! I’d love to see more accurate diversity. Oftentimes it feels like authors are ticking boxes for diverse characters, or just labeling X character as aro/ace without having it do any work in the story. I want aro/ace spectrum characters who behave like real aro/ace spectrum people, and that means considering what other factors/identities play into individual lives and relationships. Asexuals happy and in love. We can have love without sex. When I write these characters, I try to show how their relationships are important to counter act the idea that they are unfeeling. I also show them as being embodied. Even though I'm not asexual, I've been in relationships with asexuals, and the idea that they all hate physical platonic/sensual touch is bizarre to me. More healthy relationships! Whether that is platonic, romantic, sexual, or anything. It is really annoying to see characters endlessly pressure Ace/Aro characters to be someone they aren't and it happens far too often in real life and in media. I would like to see characters who are not happy to realise they are aromantic. Id like to see the journey of acceptance and going from a negative place to a positive place in regards to queerness Extroversion! For lack of a better word. People on the aroace spectrum can be affectionate, outgoing, friendly, warm, and kind. There is a stereotype that we’re unfeeling or emotionally clueless, but that’s often not the case. I’d also like to see how it can be hurtful when someone misinterprets friendliness for flirtation and accuses us of leading them on or giving mixed signals. That last one is also often the case for Autistics. A lot of aroace people, but not all, are neurodivergent. I'd love to see a complex aroace character that loves hookup culture! I just want to see friendships treated the same as other relationships. I’d like to see more communication between ace characters and their allosexual partners. Whether they have sex or not, ace people often place a different value on sex. There’s the joke that we prefer cake to sex, but seriously that often comes into play in real life. I’d like to see that explored in fiction. Them perhaps not understanding sexual attraction, or asking people about it a lot. Not necessarily being repulsed, but genuinely... confused. An asexual character who likes sex, who might be traumatized by past experiences and wants to have a lot of sex. A asexual character who might explore poly relationships. A asexual character who explores queer platonic partners. A asexual character who feels ace their entire life but might meet someone who makes them question if they might be demisexual. An ace character who may be bisexual/pansexual but realize they are asexual. Not being considered weird by the characters around them and just being accepted for who they are. Unapologetic confidence in their identity. I think a lot of characters that get read as ace/aro still wind up in seemingly heterosexual relationships, when someone can be ace and homoromantic for example (it’s me, i’m the example). I would love to see an asexual character who's very emotionally intelligent and very in touch with their dark feminine energy. Kind of like a seductive character because being sexy has nothing to do with experiencing sexual attraction and people need to understand that. emphasis on other types of love, other than romantic. someone that live so deeply it knows no lables. love is whatever your feeling, do we really have to classify it so much? An ace character like me that finds out about being ace later on after trying to navigate the world would be great. I love the idea of an ace character that is supporting of their friends and can demonstrate love beyond the sexual attraction. I'd like to see them not infantilized or branded a freak for their orientation. Let it be a part of them and not their whole personality! Someone who is body confident, wears whatever they like to suit their mood at the time, and who is still happy even if they aren't coupled up. Asexuals are just as flawed as allosexuals. A disinterest in sex may indeed lead to easier comfort in commodifying or exchanging sex for favors or attention. I would be interested in approaching this in a story. I’d also love to explore situational asexuality (sub typology like demisexual where sex requires deeper connection). Many thanks to Dr Emily Garside for helping me shape the questions before they went out. @EmiGarside Thanks also to those who took part in this survey which include: Spacemermaidgab @mvwrite @Squeak_208 dorothynyc89 @lunaesolis @Edward_the_Deer @rookthebird @ang_lovestheday LauLanau @Im_Your_Al_Pal @nocturnalxlight @edgarandrewpoe @AndreaMariana89 @luna3ther @little_owl9 @elisaintime @BG_Cane @Leigh_Ann_Cowan @mon_fia_carat @AceOnFire77 BridgetKBrule @jxbooksandmusic @MegMassa @bookofgrey gh05t_girl Hamsterpranks @uareinadream @MellVegano King_Reinhardt @tattooedselkie