Column: “A” stands for asexuals and not allies
September 4, 2013
While channel-surfing one night, I landed on Kathy Griffin’s talk show where she discussed her involvement in the LGBTQIA community – or, as she said, the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and ally community.
I like to pretend that last one was a joke.
That “A” is not for allies. That “A” is for asexuals. That “A” is for every person who does not experience sexual attraction. That “A” is for me. And quite frankly I do not want to share my space under the LGBT umbrella with allies.
It may seem harsh to say, “Hey, get out of my space!” Allies are people who support me and everyone else who falls outside the cisgendered heterosexual norm – shouldn’t I be thankful? Well, try having your minority sexual orientation erased because apparently people want gold stars for not being bigots. Then let’s talk about harsh.
Much like bisexuality, asexuality suffers from erasure. This erasure tends to render us downright invisible. Sometimes, this erasure is blatant. I have friends whose asexuality has been denied as an orientation, attributed to mental illness, deemed not queer enough to count and regarded as infantile, robotic and unnatural, if acknowledged at all. In the Huffington Post, asexual blogger Julie Decker talks about the night her male friend attempted to correct her asexuality by kissing her even when she had rejected his advance. As she walked away, he stated, “I just want to help you.”
Other times, this erasure is subtler. It’s the look this woman gave me when I declined going to a student program on dating, because who wouldn’t be interested in that? It’s being assumed straight – or at least interested. It’s bringing up asexuality in a class about sexuality since none of the materials mention it. It’s family, friends, psychiatrists and doctors hand waving an asexual person’s orientation as a traumatic response if they were raped. It’s Dan Savage asking in his advice column why an asexual would dare think about “inflicting” themselves on a non-asexual person, as if we are undeserving of love. It’s books, movies and television shows all bombarding us with the message that everybody needs somebody. It’s writer Steven Moffat’s claim in The Guardian that there would be “no fun” in having the title character of BBC’s “Sherlock” be asexual since the only tension worth writing about must be sexual tension.
It’s the fact that I have to say that the A stands for asexuals, not allies.
Much of this erasure, I hope, is due to ignorance, not malice. I don’t think that Kathy Griffin isn’t trying to be hurtful when she claims the “A” for allies. I think she is merely ignorant. Teenagers posting on Tumblr how they are done with love and will somehow become asexual just know not what they type. People confusing asexuals with celibates are simply mistaken: the latter is a chosen lack of sexual activity while the former is simply a lack of sexual attraction but not necessarily arousal or activity. Asexuality, like all sexualities, is a spectrum.
Ignorance is understandable but not acceptable. Ignorance reduces visibility for asexuality and contributes to asexual erasure. Though studies by Psychology Today have been published on asexuality and discrimination against asexuals, asexuality still lacks research. The asexual community is primarily online via sites such as The Asexual Visibility and Education Network, but if you do not know what to search for, how will you find it? In order to combat this ignorance and erasure, we need visibility.
So when you say “A” is for ally, you keep asexuality from the public eye. When you say “A” is for ally, you contribute to others’ ignorance. When you say “A” is for ally, you ignore us, you erase us and you tell us that we’re not wanted.
I’m asexual and I’d like my letter, thanks.
Katherine Richard is an English writing junior and can be reached at [email protected]
In My Opinion is a regular column open to all Loyola students. Those interested can contact [email protected]
Emily • Jun 27, 2021 at 8:52 pm
1) I’d like to say that I really enjoyed this article, and I use it to educate other quite often.
2) To the other negative commenters, just why? We are just as much a part of the LGBTQ+ community as you, and although some asexuals may be heteroromantic (which doesn’t make them any less valid), many of us are not. It’s not the oppression olympics and we shouldn’t be left out simply because you won’t acknowledge our identities. I am both asexual and homoromantic. I constantly get hate for both aspects of my identity, and it hurts a lot to get bigoted things said at me not just by straight people, but also from within what is supposed to be a welcoming community for anyone who is not cishet. Even heteroromantic aces are valid and you are a prime example of why we are oppressed. We still face corrective rape, conversion therapy, infantilization, and much more. If you want to say something about an identity that is not your own, take some time to understand it and be right. All identities are valid.
Katie • Jan 24, 2019 at 7:49 am
The A is for ally because not everyone is safe to come out. It allows them to support the community while maintaining a sense of safety and security. Cishet aces are not oppressed. Getting weird looks and being told you’re not LGBT is not oppression. I literally fear walking down the street holding hands with my partner because people could hurl slurs, beat me up, or even kill me. The gay panic law is still in effect in many states. Nobody cares that you don’t fuck. Get over yourself.
Hayden Follett • Dec 25, 2016 at 2:10 am
normally i cannot stand str8s but in this case i’ll make an exception for the eagerly supportive straight girl, rather than the boring homophobic ace girl that probably whines about LGBT groups talking about safe sex
Proy • Feb 14, 2018 at 1:04 am
Y’know, after I felt really happy, nodding and reading this article, it really turned sour when I saw this comment. Not only are you saying that it’s ‘boring’ for her to defend her sexuality and validity as an asexual, but you’re making negative assumptions because she’s presenting this in an intelligent, rational way, showing this problem that needs to be solved and providing a solution to it. Some aces can sex-repulsed, but lots of others aren’t, and most generalizations are very harmful.
This isn’t to say that one of these girls are better than the other, of course. I’m sure that, if the ally knew about asexuality, then they would be just as supportive of asexuality as the other sexualities she mentioned, and instead of using the A to represent allies like her to support asexuality.
Also, why are you even commenting? It’s not like this affects you, and even if it didn’t and you cared at least a little, then you wouldn’t call this lovely and very cool ace ‘boring.’
tl;dr: shut up and mind your own business instead of nosing into others’ and making rude comments.
Katherine, you deserve some cake for this article.