(2026-03-21 6:41)Cygnus Wrote: Firstly, I don't agree that these are the things that give rise to therianthropy, or that shifts alone are directly the therianthropic experience (this is backwards from how I remember things originally being understood). There is a focus issue with arguments like this where people conflate secondary signs and symptoms with the phenomena thought to be originating them; a purely-syndromal view that I feel displaces the core idea these communities formed around. This has led to therianthropy being described directly as behaviors, urges, sensations and indistinct feelings alone--as well as it sometimes being described as nothing more than an action of identification, rather than the possession of intrinsic animal nature by the experiencer that subsequently gives rise to those shifts.
You're right in that there should be an emphasis on the embodied experience of feeling "animal." I've since refined the definition of zoesthesia for clarity - as something that applies to every form of alterhumanity and can be translated clearly to other languages with just a single term. Observe:
"Zoesthesia ("zo-esthesia") is the experience of sensations, perceptions, and behaviors belonging to a species, form of consciousness, or concept not typical of one's own biological species. Interpretations and identities arising from these experiences are subjective and personal; zoesthesia can be present without either, especially at early ages, but is often experienced as an embodied identity.
Zoesthetes have a wide spectrum of experiences, often leading to unique endeavors and forms of expression in social, artistic, literary, and professional contexts.
The experience of zoesthesia involves:
- Sensations, perceptions, behaviors, social cues, and/or involuntary urges not typically seen in one's own biological species,
- A state of consciousness akin to that of a non-human animal, mythological creature, fictional character, or concept (such as the internal state of an operating system or characteristics of an environment),
- Presence of experiences before adulthood, which may become stronger after one becomes conscious of them (what some might call a "spiritual awakening"),
- Persistence in a lifelong way,
And can involve any number of the following:
- The feeling of phantom limbs or sensations belonging to something other than one's own biological species,
- Feelings, urges, and sensations that may vary in form and intensity, remain at a stable baseline, or become triggered by internal or external stimuli,
- An identity or overarching sensation that embodies these experiences,
- Dysphoria regarding the incongruence between one's physical body and perceived embodied experience,
- Altered states of consciousness (such as dreams and trance-like states) that are experienced through the lens of something incongruent to one's biology,
- And/or a personal interpretation of these experiences through psychological or spiritual means."
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As a side note, the "Feelings, urges, and sensations that may vary in form and intensity, remain at a stable baseline, or become triggered by internal or external stimuli" part could replace several paragraphs describing contherianthropy, suntherianthropy, non-shifting therianthropy, and etc. on TG's own website. All of these extra terms are cumbersome and will lead to fatigue to laypeople and researchers alike. It's not intuitive.
If y'all think that's fine but aren't cool with the term itself, consider that the point of this is to translate it into languages in which "therianthropy," "otherkin," alterhuman," and etc. are not usable terms. "Zoesthesia" probably won't even be on the menu. What we see as "the way things are" in our culture is very centered on English. Unless you'd like to advocate for English as the master language, there needs to be some consensus on what makes up our embodied identities as alterhumans so that the community's extremities aren't left behind.