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Why Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week matters Favious /Shutterstock Society often romanticizes the idea that a person’s life is incomplete without romantic love. This can leave aromantic ...
Aromantic people have little or no romantic attraction to others. They may or may not feel sexual attraction. An aromantic person can fall into one of two groups: aromantic sexual people or ...
Aromantic is an important term, but it’s still fairly unknown compared to other LGBTQIA+ labels. There’s a serious lack of aromantic representation (though this is improving, thanks to ...
Aromantic asexuality means that a person does not experience romantic or sexual attraction. People who identify with these orientations may call themselves “aro,” for aromantic, and “ace ...
It is important to recognize that the circles representing either “aromantic” or “asexual” people are not concentric: “Asexual people can experience romantic attraction and can have ...
If any of this sounds familiar, you might be aromantic. That said, aromantic folks can still be in relationships, but they’ll connect with their partner sexually, spiritually, intellectually ...
But what happens when someone’s unconventional feelings hijack that plan? For many people identifying as aromantic — that question is something they have to navigate on a daily basis.
Just like the rainbow in the pride flag, each color in the aromantic flag is meaningful, too. Read on to learn more about the aromantic flag, its many versions over the years, and the meaning of ...
If you have never heard of Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week (ASAW), we’ve got you covered. ASAW is being observed from Feb.
“Aromantic” means a person feels little or no romantic attraction to others or has little or no desire for romantic relationships. It is a spectrum that encompasses various orientations ...