Oh, he's itching | source š
talking about my fictionkintype these days is... well, "difficult" isn't the right word for it, but i'm blanking on a better one.
the fandom aspect is the biggest part. this isn't fandom for me - it's a part of my identity, and i don't want people outside the alt-h community getting misled or twisting it into a roleplay thing. it's difficult to talk about a fictionkintype if you're censoring every other word and name to avoid the fandom.
but also...
that life isn't a happy one. many of the noemata i have for it are of being afraid, sad, or lost. it ends young. it's a tragedy retold as a heroic adventure.
there's a part of me that says i should just move on. this 'type is a part of me, of course, but not a part i need to dwell on.
maybe it's better this way.
Written by Max on August 12th, 2024.
So I was at Othercon 2024 this past weekend - and like many who attended, I came out the other side with a new piece of my identity to chew over. This essay is me chewing over my thoughts on archaeosapience, as it connects to my velociraptor paleotheriotype, and why I genuinely donāt feel like I fit the label.
One of the panels I attended and thoroughly enjoyed was āNot Humans, Still People: How Inhumanity Interacts with Personhood,ā by Goratrix bani Tremere of the Draconic Wizard Workshop and Chaiya Askari-Vykos of the Treehouse System. During the panel, Goratrix and Chaiya argue that personhood is different from humanity, defining personhood as, essentially, sapience - the ability to understand oneself, to make rational choices, to comprehend the world in not only physical ways, but also the abstract and symbolic. All humans are people, but not all people are humans - nonhuman personhood is experienced by many, many alterhumans, and this is an important distinction to keep in mind.
Another panel I adored, presented by Sivaan of Candlekeep, was āArchaeosapience: To Awaken as Ancient in a Modern Age,ā in which he discusses the label and the intricacies of his own experience as an archaeosapien. Once again, nonhuman sapience is a key feature here - as Sivaan writes in xyr coining essay, ā[t]he āsapienceā in archaeosapience exclusively refers to our awareness of our existence as ancient beings,ā as opposed to an inherent connection with the species Homo sapiens. Archaeosapience does not require one to be human.
An archaeosapien is defined as āan individual whose alterhuman or nonhuman identity is intrinsically rooted in prehistory, antiquity or mythic accounts of history.ā And funnily enough, here lies my personal disconnect with the term, even though I identify as a velociraptor - a prehistoric animal well known to be extinct. To experience archaeosapience requires personhood, requires sapience, an understanding of oneself as an ancient being. And this is one thing that my theriotype utterly lacks.
Now, Iām not saying that I lack sapience. I am a person, one who reads and writes and learns about the world around me. I also identify as human, separate but intertwined with my personhood, and my humanity is as important to me as my animality. Both of these core parts of myself contribute to where I stand today - as a prehistoric animal person who is, somehow, completely at home in modernity.
Throughout this essay, Iām going to refer to my raptor self in the third person - it thinks this, it wants that. I separate myself from my theriotype in this way because I do not feel like Iām myself in a mental shift. My raptorial mind is not a person, but an animal. It is incapable of understanding abstract concepts or philosophical thought, living in the physical world where it gets food, water, rest, shelter, and enrichment. This does not make it any lesser than my sapient mind - it does mean that it has a different way of understanding the world.
My raptor brain, the instinctual animal side, does not feel like itās an animal from another era. It doesnāt even know what time is, beyond the regular cycles of day and night. It doesnāt understand common features of modern human society, like computers or elevators or money - not because those things didnāt exist back in prehistoric Asia, 75 million years ago, but because itās an animal. I could be a gecko from the modern day and still feel the same mentally shifted apathy and confusion about the things I need to live day to day as a human being. The raptor doesnāt know or care about its status as a long-extinct relic, because as far as itās concerned, it is alive and well, healthy and fed and comfortable in a house with people it knows.
In fact, my raptor brain doesnāt even feel attached to a habitat. Early on in my awakening, as someone who knows where velociraptors used to live in the spacetime continuum, I felt a sort of connection with deserts - Iād look at them and think, thatās like the place my species lived! This was the part of me whoās a person, putting a label to a place that Iāve never been, thinking fondly of it despite never having lived there.
The part of me thatās not a person, that knows nothing but pavement and grass and many-walled shelters keeping out the wind, looks at the desert and bristles with distaste. It doesnāt like the idea of being somewhere it doesnāt know, with sand and scorching sun and no food it knows how to catch. It knows its home territory, a place with cooling wooden floorboards and a comfortable nest of mattress and blankets and a cache of good food that never runs out, and it likes its territory. It doesnāt like the desert or understand the significance of it. It canāt comprehend the idea of wilderness enough to miss it. It doesnāt want to be wild and free, it wants to live in a building with air conditioning and clean freshwater from the sink.
As you can see, my raptor self is perfectly content to be a modern animal. How about my human self, the part of me that can think about my theriotype and know that itās a prehistoric animal? Do I long for ancient deserts, grieve and yearn for a world I never experienced because I know it might have once been home?
Well⦠no. I donāt. For better or worse, my humanity feels inexorably linked to modernity, to cities, to technology. I canāt go anywhere or do anything without running into electronics. I use the internet every day of my life to learn, entertain, engage with the world around me. I couldnāt imagine living a life where I didnāt have it. Thereās no disconnect from the modern day for me, no longing for the past - only the sense that Iām right where I want to be.
As a person, Iām content with where I am today. As an animal, a raptor canāt yearn for a time it has never lived.
Do you miss all your old selves?
no they are inside of me i hug them everyday and say u did such a good job
unhinged thirty days of otherkin challenge, day 20: describe your kintype's skin texture in great detail.
the skin of the faun's face is soft, but not smooth. sun freckles and flecks of dirt lend an uneven texture. the palms of the hands are rougher, the thick skin smudged with dirt and grass stains.
nights/hollow | he/they/it | alterhuman sideblog of nightbody | icon from antiqueanimals
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