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| RE: Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: StormyPica - 2025-11-26 19:07
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(2025-11-26 16:59)gillman Wrote: I have issues with MOGAI in regards to myself, but have multiple IRL friends who love the MOGAI community because the terms and labels act as ways for them to communicate how they feel. They're almost used like communication cards but for internal experiences and self expression. I know that isn't the case for everyone who partakes in microlabel communities, but I thought it might be an interesting addition in the conversation.
I, personally, had a hard time navigating my aromanticism before I discovered aspec microlabels. I don't feel the need to define myself as demiquoiromantic anymore, aromantic will do, but without the demiquoiromantic label, I'd have had no clue that there was space for my strange experience in the aro community. So I am thankful to microlabels for helping me with that.
When it comes to my nonhumanity, I have a few personal microlabels that I made and use specifically for myself. They're shorthand for these complex interactions that I have between 'types. They're very useful and let me talk about my experiences without having to rehash what and how I feel every time I bring a topic up. I can just link to a post that defines it and carry on with what I'd like to say. I have no desire to make others use them, even though a few folks have by now. I just wanted to be able to talk about myself.
I think that the nature of introspective communities breeds microlabels naturally. We're all familiar with the broad strokes of the therian experience, but I do think there is a natural desire in a lot of us to identify and name important aspects and specifics of that experience. Paratype comes to mind. It was, at one point, a term created to help someone talk about a specific experience they had. The only difference between it and some others is that paratype resonated with enough folks for it to become well-known. I have little to say about redundant or reductive microlabels, as I believe they'll just fade out of use.
Anyway, that's long but I have a lot of thoughts on it all. Introspection breeds more specific labels, which in turn breeds a community built upon coining hyperspecific microlabels. Any community can cause harm in large doses, but this specific one has lent itself some use to me and others. It's largely neutral in my mind.
I actually agree so much with this. Finding microlabels that fit me has helped me figure myself out a lot on the past. My brain doesn’t always understand that I can have an experience that’s not already labeled (rigid thinking yada yada), or even what my experience is, and microlabels have helped a lot with that, even though I personally don’t identify with any of them.
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| RE: Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: Cygnus - 2025-11-26 18:38
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I don't find most of them intuitive or helpful in general conversation. Everyone already covered the points I was going to write, so I'll just emphasize that it's better to just explain your experiences..that's the only way to really communicate (you'll end up having to do this anyway when nobody knows what your niche label means), and I don't think anyone should be looking for shortcuts.
The community needs to foster an ethic of better communication if any of us are to understand anything.
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| RE: Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: gillman - 2025-11-26 16:59
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I have issues with MOGAI in regards to myself, but have multiple IRL friends who love the MOGAI community because the terms and labels act as ways for them to communicate how they feel. They're almost used like communication cards but for internal experiences and self expression. I know that isn't the case for everyone who partakes in microlabel communities, but I thought it might be an interesting addition in the conversation.
I, personally, had a hard time navigating my aromanticism before I discovered aspec microlabels. I don't feel the need to define myself as demiquoiromantic anymore, aromantic will do, but without the demiquoiromantic label, I'd have had no clue that there was space for my strange experience in the aro community. So I am thankful to microlabels for helping me with that.
When it comes to my nonhumanity, I have a few personal microlabels that I made and use specifically for myself. They're shorthand for these complex interactions that I have between 'types. They're very useful and let me talk about my experiences without having to rehash what and how I feel every time I bring a topic up. I can just link to a post that defines it and carry on with what I'd like to say. I have no desire to make others use them, even though a few folks have by now. I just wanted to be able to talk about myself.
I think that the nature of introspective communities breeds microlabels naturally. We're all familiar with the broad strokes of the therian experience, but I do think there is a natural desire in a lot of us to identify and name important aspects and specifics of that experience. Paratype comes to mind. It was, at one point, a term created to help someone talk about a specific experience they had. The only difference between it and some others is that paratype resonated with enough folks for it to become well-known. I have little to say about redundant or reductive microlabels, as I believe they'll just fade out of use.
Anyway, that's long but I have a lot of thoughts on it all. Introspection breeds more specific labels, which in turn breeds a community built upon coining hyperspecific microlabels. Any community can cause harm in large doses, but this specific one has lent itself some use to me and others. It's largely neutral in my mind.
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| RE: Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: FoxSky - 2025-11-26 16:38
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I personally only feel they do good when they name a specific experience someone wants to find others with. Like, if someone identifies as a robot dinosaur, they can go into the robotkin tags on social media and find all kinds of robots, but they'd have to get lucky or search forever to find someone like them. In that instance, having a microlabel that you can look up specifically and find exactly what you're looking for can be super helpful.
Though, I do think that's the limit. I've seen three labels get coined for the exact same thing across different sites, and none of them are intuitive, so if I didn't see the coining post, I'd have to go and look up what each of these labels mean. On certain sites, I legitimately can't figure out what someone is because their intro post is all microlabels that don't have a clear or set definition. I understand the desire to have a specific label for niche experiences in order to find others, but there's little to no organization or guidelines on how they should be made and used to make any potential benefits actually work, so I don't like them myself.
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| RE: Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: Neon Rosettes - 2025-11-26 1:10
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Short answer: ew gross, no lol.
Long answer: they exist to make people feel more unique but do nothing to actually convey anything meaningful about one’s experience. If you’re so inclined, you can use microlabels in small, personal communities if it’s fun I guess, but the moment you step outside that bubble, you’d best be prepared to explain your experiences with normal words. We don’t need to be coming up with esoteric words for no reason, it doesn’t make things easier to talk about lmao.
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| RE: Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: NervousHound - 2025-11-26 0:49
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I have always been super meh on incredibly specific labels (like, ones that might only apply to a handful of people), but I get their reasoning for existing. They help people put a name to a specific experience, as well as help those people find each other. Unfortunately, most of the time these micro-labels are so niche to a particular side of a community, that they mean nothing to the greater community at large, rendering them almost useless. They can also be a weird way to harbor misinformation, which I have seen in communities outside of Therianthropy (such as online queer spaces). In the end, I think it's up to every individual to decide how they feel about such things, and use them if desired. But even if I found the perfect niche label that fit me to a T, I probably wouldn't use it because having to explain what it means defeats the purpose of the label. I would just explain my experiences outright.
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| RE: Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: KeweyTanuki - 2025-11-25 22:40
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I'm not a fan. Left unchecked, they create an in-groupy culture where it's seemingly more important to know the terminology than experience the therianthropy itself, and it's just a breeding ground for know-it-alls.
I know pigeonholes feel cosy for some but people seem to make a bee-line for those microlabels so quickly. Is it to feel validated, maybe? I don't know.
I don't even use the word "therian" if I'm discussing that aspect of myself with other people outside particular circles.
Also I feel stared at.
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| Your opinions on microlabels? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: Elli_ - 2025-11-25 20:38
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As the title says.
I sometimes feel like some of the therian microlabels exist just for the sake of existing. Like I get that some alterhumans like having everything labeled out but what’s the point of doing so if the term is so obscure that most people will either have to google it or ask you to explain what it means? Wouldn’t it be easier to just explain your experience at this point? Especially when the label fits the basic therianthropy definition and is something fairly common among therians
What do y’all think?
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| RE: To what extent must you feel animalistic to be a therian? |
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Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: little wolf - 2025-11-19 19:09
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Your question about what it means to be human is one that philosophers have debated for millennia, and still, there is no true answer. The majority of my philosophy classes in college centered around that question, which was interesting for me as a deeply integrated therian, and it got me thinking about my own experience.
That said, here's the thing that has been touched on many times here: humans and animals are not as far removed and separate as most think. Humans are animals and thus share core instincts with other living creatures, even if those instincts may seem dulled in the human world. So, how did I determine I was a therian in light of this? I look at all my instincts, urges, experiences, etc. and compared them to what I learned over time is typical of most humans. I was born a therian, so certain things I thought were normal in my early life I quickly learned were not typical at all for humans.
Also, I looked at my experiences and compared them to my knowledge of other animals: do I share this trait with a wolf that humans don't share or don't experience in the same way? Plus, the phantom tail I feel on a constant basis is a bit of an easy giveaway.
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