Seeking and Finding Connections in Fanfiction
I grew up in a very conservative family that went to church 2-3 times a week, and while the people around me werenât outright hateful toward LGBTQ people, they definitely didnât approve. The most common phrase I heard on the subject when I was growing up, was something along the lines of âWe donât agree with them, but itâs not our place to judge them (itâs Godâs).â Insert eyeroll here. After I graduated high school, I moved away for college and grew away from religion and the conservative rhetoric I grew up hearing. With this upbringing, itâs not surprising to me that I didnât even consider that I might not be straight until I was well into my 20s.Â
For me, coming to terms with my sexuality has been a very hard and confusing process. I identify as an aromantic asexual, meaning I experience no romantic or sexual attraction. This also made it difficult for me to realize I was not straight: how are you supposed to know you donât feel any sexual attraction if youâve never felt it before? Blogs and websites helped a lot, but for me, fanfiction was a place of comfort.Â
I started reading fanfiction when I was in high school. Like a lot of other fans, I started my fan life with Harry Potter. Harry Potter has led to many other fandoms over the years, but Harry Potter will always be my first fandom. Being a fan means a lot to me. It is one of my defining characteristics as a person, and it is how I often connect with other people. In fact, my love of fanfiction and online fan communities led me to where I am today â working on my PhD and researching fanfiction communities online.Â
Iâve seen articles and posts about fanfiction and how character driven a lot of these works are. I think that is what draws a lot of us to fanfiction in the first place â we crave that connection with the characters. Especially if we see something of the characters in ourselves. In my experience, writing fanfiction also includes putting a little bit of your self in your stories, and if not yourself, at least your world.Â
I donât do a lot of writing fanfiction, but I do a lot of reading, and having this little âwindowâ into otherâs worlds has been incredibly useful to my growth as a person and understanding myself. By reading fanfiction, I get to see otherâs views of the world. And for a small town girl like me, it was my first experience with LGBTQ relationships and trans stories. Reading about these relationships and experiences normalized them and made them something that isnât bad, or unnatural, or wrong. Which was the first step in coming to terms with my own sexuality.Â
As previously mentioned, I struggled a lot with being aromantic and asexual, but reading stories with asexual characters really helped me understand my identity. Thereâs this one fic that I absolutely adore and reread every few months. The story is about two friends who slowly over the years form a deep connection and the fic is dedicated to them exploring their relationship, defining what they are and what they arenât, and how they deal with their other friendsâ perceptions of their relationship. Throughout the fic, they make it clear that they are more than friends -- that they love each other, but they are not in love with each other. This fic is especially important to me because it is the first time I was exposed to what I consider my ideal relationship. In most romance fics or stories in general, I appreciate the fantasy of the relationship, but in this fic I found something that was attainable (and desirable) in my own life.Â
Reading fanfiction about asexual characters (and less often aromantic characters) has made me feel less alone in my identity. Not only am I able to connect to the characters and see myself represented in their thoughts and actions, but I can also connect to the authors of the fic. If the authors are putting themselves in the fic (as I believe the are), then the thoughts and actions of their characters are reflections of their own thoughts and actions. To me, this connection makes us a community that goes beyond fandom interactions and can easily transfer to our daily lives. Which I think is pretty great.
â@choc-o-late-wings











