RE: A simple theory
I'd say that examining behaviors is a shaky way to study whether or not someone is a Therian. It's based on identity, not behaviors, and considering the fact that anyone can act like an animal or feel they understand them through exposure or actually knowing a lot about them, it's better to ask someone about how they feel about themselves in terms of what, perhaps, they are (not in literal terms but in their self-image).
My old best friend and I acted like horses a lot in our youth and very strongly pretend to be horses because it was so freeing from human life. We loved them to death, but she's not a horse Therian and neither am I.
I also want to say that trauma-induced Therianthropy is, in my opinion, a very likely thing. People manifest coping mechanisms to trauma in many ways, and sometimes they aren't conscious. Sometimes the brain takes over to protect itself without warning. It happened with me and the death of my last cat. I started getting extremely attached to cat things, even things like wrappers or packaging with cats on them. I felt awful throwing them away, and it wasn't for five years that I realized it was all because, at the time of her passing, I couldn't really cope with it. Her death never sunk in, and I acted like it didn't bother me.
It still does. Sometimes talking about it gets me choked up, I take pictures of stuff that has cats on them, I sometimes kiss the cats on packaging before I throw it away (and I typically don't look when I do), I still have extreme attachments to all my cat stuff, and it's why I'm so terrified of thinking about my current cat dying, I wasn't even particularly close to my old cat like I am Temari now, and Temari's death is going to wreck me. My old cat went out into the woods to die and now I yell at my parents if my cat gets outside because I flat out do NOT want her out there. I never want to own another cat after her because I'm afraid to deal with the loss again. I haven't even had to deal with my dog's death yet, and I promise you, she's walking up to death's doorstep.
The idea that someone might wind up forming a nonhuman identity purely out of trauma and trying to cope with it, but not intentionally choosing said identity, isn't out of the question for me. I identified as a feline before my old cat died, which is why I don't believe my identity has anything to do with it, though it does make me more sensitive to topics involving harm to cats and whatnot.
Anyway sorry for my super personal ramble.
(This post was last modified: 2015-08-07 10:21 by Neon Rosettes.)
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