frameacloud: A white dragon with its tail in a knot. (Heraldry transparent)

Jewelfox on being otherkin, fictive

Content warnings: For this article, none. The linked articles give their own content warnings.

August: An otherkin named Jewelfox wrote several essays about being otherkin and fictive. These are:

Jewelfox, "Realizing that you're a fictive." 2013-08-14. http://jewelfox.dreamwidth.org/76281.html
A personal awakening story.

Jewelfox, "When I say I'm fictive / median / otherkin." 2013-08-11. http://jewelfox.dreamwidth.org/2013/08/11/when-i-say-im-fictive-median-otherkin.html
On how other people misinterpret those self-descriptions.

Jewelfox, "Are therians, otherkin, and fictives real?" 2013-08-16. http://jewelfox.dreamwidth.org/2013/08/16/are-therians-otherkin-and-fictives-real.html
Observations and advice on the balance of one's inner and outer world.

I linked to these articles with Jewelfox's permission.
frameacloud: A white dragon with its tail in a knot. (Heraldry transparent)

Essay on why people with unusual identities disparage one another

(The linked article lists its own trigger warnings.)

August: A trans woman and otherkin in the otherkin community named Jewelfox wrote an essay titled "Why trans* people hate otherkin (and otherkin hate fictives)." Jewelfox explains that why people who have unusual identities tend to disparage other kinds of unusual identities, and why that doesn't help them the way they think it does. She argues that although they're trying to defend their own legitimacy, they're unknowingly supporting the system that oppresses them, in vain hope to get mercy from it.

You can read the whole article. There are good insights in the comments, and on this other post about the essay.



Source


Jewelfox, "Why trans* people hate otherkin (and otherkin hate fictives)." 2013-08-07. Jewelfox. http://jewelfox.dreamwidth.org/2013/08/07/why-trans-people-hate-otherkin.html
frameacloud: A white dragon with its tail in a knot. (Heraldry transparent)

Jewelfox: What does it mean to be otherkin?

Trigger warnings: For this article, none. The linked article lists its own trigger warnings in its introduction.

August: An otherkin in our community, named Jewelfox, wrote an article this month titled "What does it mean to be otherkin?" Other authors have had difficulty trying to write a definition for otherkin (people who identify as mythological creatures), therianthropes (people who identify as animals), and/or fictives (people who identify as characters from fiction), because these self-identifications are individualistic and have surprisingly few beliefs in common with one another. Rather than attempting a definition based on spirituality or behavior, Jewelfox isolates three traits that she thinks are held in common by otherkin, therianthropes, and fictives alike. These three traits aren't spiritual beliefs or behaviors, but are aspects of a process: identification, explanation, and expression. Read Jewelfox's article to learn more about the reasoning behind this, and its impact on the social acceptance of these people.



Source


Jewelfox, "What does it mean to be otherkin?" 2013-08-05. Jewelfox (personal blog). http://jewelfox.dreamwidth.org/74778.html
I linked to this with Jewelfox's permission.