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RE: About Therian Gear |
Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: JAX - 2023-05-12 14:27
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(2017-06-10 18:11)DustWolf Wrote: Hey,
I wear very functional clothing and kinda hate kitsch, which is exactly what most of this stuff is. So I would never wear it, not the least because I don't want people getting strange ideas about my therianthropy because of it.
As far as it allowing me to experience my therianthropy better, I think the only thing that'd work for me would be wolf ears or a wolf tail I could actually consciously move. You know, for expression. As far as I know, nothing such exists today.
LP,
Dusty
dusty there's the tail company if you want an animatronic tail
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RE: copinglink questions (not sure what threat to put it in) |
Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: WolfWisp - 2023-04-01 15:39
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(2023-03-31 14:58)Tdae Wrote: I believe therianthropy could develop (or become more pronounced) from a coping mechanism during childhood, but if this is the case I feel it's more correct to call it an adaptation. I experienced attachment trauma which led to the development of a wolf in my psyche, but I think calling it a coping mechanism kind of trivializes it. In my perception of my experience, it's because trauma shuts down higher brain functions such as having a sense of "self." As the brain neural network was attempting to get the self back "online," I (unconsciously) found it impossible to be associated with my human identity. So a dissociated wolf self was created with a lot of symbolic meanings.
Adaption sounds better to me as well, I think referring to therianthropy as a coping mechanism does trivialise it, though I would also understand why people would refer to it as such. The disassociate aspect also makes a ton of sense to me.
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RE: copinglink questions (not sure what threat to put it in) |
Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: crowheather - 2023-03-31 15:10
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(2023-03-31 14:58)Tdae Wrote: It is my understanding that a copinglink is a deliberate coping mechanism. On the other hand a coping mechanism is not necessarily under conscious control. One time I did a little experiment by inviting my unconscious mind to create a "copinglink" when I was feeling stressed. I just tried to focus on the sensations that came and allow them to take the form they did. It turned into some sort of prehistoric reptilian with plates and spines that felt "safe." It helped me feel better that time but I've not been able to repeat it.
I believe therianthropy could develop (or become more pronounced) from a coping mechanism during childhood, but if this is the case I feel it's more correct to call it an adaptation. I experienced attachment trauma which led to the development of a wolf in my psyche, but I think calling it a coping mechanism kind of trivializes it. In my perception of my experience, it's because trauma shuts down higher brain functions such as having a sense of "self." As the brain neural network was attempting to get the self back "online," I (unconsciously) found it impossible to be associated with my human identity. So a dissociated wolf self was created with a lot of symbolic meanings.
i agree
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RE: copinglink questions (not sure what threat to put it in) |
Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: Tdae - 2023-03-31 14:58
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It is my understanding that a copinglink is a deliberate coping mechanism. On the other hand a coping mechanism is not necessarily under conscious control. One time I did a little experiment by inviting my unconscious mind to create a "copinglink" when I was feeling stressed. I just tried to focus on the sensations that came and allow them to take the form they did. It turned into some sort of prehistoric reptilian with plates and spines that felt "safe." It helped me feel better that time but I've not been able to repeat it.
I believe therianthropy could develop (or become more pronounced) from a coping mechanism during childhood, but if this is the case I feel it's more correct to call it an adaptation. I experienced attachment trauma which led to the development of a wolf in my psyche, but I think calling it a coping mechanism kind of trivializes it. In my perception of my experience, it's because trauma shuts down higher brain functions such as having a sense of "self." As the brain neural network was attempting to get the self back "online," I (unconsciously) found it impossible to be associated with my human identity. So a dissociated wolf self was created with a lot of symbolic meanings.
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RE: copinglink questions (not sure what threat to put it in) |
Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: Kotuko - 2023-03-31 14:39
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(2023-03-31 12:47)DustWolf Wrote: TL;TR: Copinglink is basically a misunderstanding of what therianthropy is. And that is all.
LP,
Dusty
Yess thank you Dusty, I agree. Everybody's experiences are unique and personal. Trying to stuff everything into labeled boxes all the time, especially when dealing with something as diverse as therianthropy, seems taxing and frankly, quite pointless. Don't get me wrong, I respect everybody's identify and the words they may use to describe it but I feel going to extremes might tangle one up into a narrow-minded standpoint, whereas places like TG were designed for having open-minded conversations
In short I believe that we should just live and let live To try and not to pay too much attention to words and labels, and focus more on shared experiences and community instead
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RE: copinglink questions (not sure what threat to put it in) |
Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: crowheather - 2023-03-31 14:02
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(2023-03-31 10:45)WolfWisp Wrote: Is copinglink a fairly new term? I'm not sure I've come across it before. I was therian before the major trauma in my life, but it also acted as a coping mechanism during it, though I would not say it was caused by it. It's a bit confusing.
copinglink also used to be called copingkin
(2023-03-31 12:47)DustWolf Wrote: As @BearX would say... Some people struggle with their therianthropy. If therianthropy was a coping mechanism, they'd need a coping mechanism for their coping mechanism.
TL;TR: Copinglink is basically a misunderstanding of what therianthropy is. And that is all.
LP,
Dusty
i would say that for some reason it can be used as a coping mechanism to kind of revert back to not having to worry about things maybe or because animals don’t have to worry about human things so if the person who is using therianthropy as a coping mechanism could be using it because when they see animals they feel that the animal doesn’t have to worry about the same thing they have to (just a theory not my personal experience)
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RE: copinglink questions (not sure what threat to put it in) |
Posted in: Introduction to Therianthropy Posted by: crowheather - 2023-03-31 1:01
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(2023-03-30 23:47)Kotuko Wrote: From what I understand it stands on its own, but depending on what 'type one takes on as a coping mechanism it can fall into those categories
I believe they can link without meaning to or realizing, although the official definition claims otherwise. Then again I believe most of my theriotypes stemmed from a survival instinct, but my dragonkin self is the one most predominantly linked to trauma, and therefore I call it a coping mechanism. Also keep in mind that somebody coined this term themselves, and though I respect what they've contributed it doesn't necessarily mean they did or didn't do extensive research into their own phenomenon. Phycology is crazy, and our brains do lots of fascinating things
okay thanks!
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