(2021-11-09 23:15)DustWolf Wrote: In principle, therianthropy is supposed to just make sense if it applies to you. Therianthropy is an explanation for things we've always experienced.
If you have to search within yourself to figure it out, you're probably overthinking it.
I am very much agreeing with this statement made. What I sometimes see people in the community doing is saying they sort of "decided" to question a theriotype again, almost as if it's a hobby. Or they decide to meditate to sort of dig for a new identity, like a treasure hunt. Of course, there are those who say their experiences are the result of this constant questioning, but sometimes people even ask me: "Kyra, have you been wanting to question any animal lately?" I do not want anything, and I am not supposed to want to question anything. Questioning is what you decide to do based on experiences only. Therewith of course also come my experiences of people saying they want to "become" a therian and all that jazz.
Furthermore, I agree with the fact that some say "I identify as" to show they know they are not physically an animal and that they do not identify with it either. The first part, in my opinion, doesn't sound all that unhealthy to the community. If we were to throw around that we are animals instead of identifying as one, it only strengthens the assumptions people have about us: that we think we are entirely non-human.
On the "identifying with" part, I am personally not a fan of having such strict terminology and the whole "you either are a therian or not" concept, because therianthropy can be a very fluid experience and varies greatly per person. But I assume we sort of have to say it like this, to prevent people from claiming they are therians while they are not (moreso than now).
It just seems like the best way to say it, and people have adopted this way of saying it to be the clearest we can be. I feel like younger people have a good sense for this type of stuff, so that might be why mostly young therians say this. But in my opinion, it doesn't have to be a bad thing.