Being Aroflux & Black

By Kimberly Butler

I think the most confusing thing about me right now is explaining how I’m both Aromantic and Bi(romantic) at the same time. Explaining Aroflux is much harder.

                Aroflux, by definition, is an orientation comprised of fluctuating parts of a romantic identity. To many being Aroflux means fluctuating from different orientations on the Aromantic spectrum alone but never outside of Aromanticism (ex. Going from Demiromantic to Cupioromantic to Aromantic, etc). To others, Aroflux means fluctuating from the Aromantic spectrum to the Alloromantic spectrum meaning to some extent they do experience romantic attraction (ex. Being any aromantic orientation and then finding comfort in an orientation outside of the Aromantic spectrum).

                In the beginning I was convinced I was completely Aromantic. I showed most of the signs and I left it at that. The terms felt too restrictive in a way, the lacking romantic attraction, it felt like I had to forsake a part of myself because to some extent I knew that being Bi was a big part of my identity as well, but I did not know how to fit it in with my being Aromantic. I held onto the label for a while anyway and went with it. For someone who knew a load of terms (because of my YouTube channel The Asexual Goddess where I talk about multiple Aro and Ace identities), it sure took me a while to grasp onto the Aroflux label. In some ways I was already convinced that me being Aro was odd as it wasn’t something you’d typically see in black communities, so to go farther down the rabbit hole and identify as something no one had heard of was absurd. 

                Being black and Aromantic is an experience. When I came out through social media my family felt the need to drill me with questions about my past romantic relationships and why now all a sudden, I’d chosen to go by Aro. I remember talks of bandwagons, even though I can count the number of aro-spec black people I’ve met on one hand with like three fingers. In church when my oldest sister led the prayer, she alluded to how younger kids had so many demons they had to fight, and I instantly knew what she meant. Subsequently, my being Aro had become a thing to pray off and use as a talking point in Sunday school rather than being discussed on a deeper and serious level with just myself. But when we did speak about it the conversations felt like an interrogation. It always felt like black culture couldn’t align much with Aromanticism, especially cause growing up I was taught that marriage was the end goal and that’s what I should want but I don’t think marriage was in my plans. I would dream of having dogs and living alone in a big house instead of having a romantic partner.

                For me being Aro and black is an interesting intersection because romance is very much portrayed in black narratives in both good and bad ways, but it’s never talked about in the capacity to which I experience alloromanticism. Alloromanticism is never ‘the decline of romantic attraction’ or ‘the strong romantic attraction to people only when I know them just as well as I know myself’. With my demiromantic identity people don’t understand the difference it has from regular attraction . My attraction is fluid so in the case of when I feel more Demi I’m glued to one person and one person only for a really long time. Attraction like that is what I wish was shown on TV and not just packaged as someone who's got an obsession and needs to get over someone. They could be Demiromantic. A thing I love about being Aro-spec is how comfortable it feels. Like I don’t feel this overwhelming need to perform. If my partner knows I’m on the Aro-spec they know it’s best not to try to force romantic gestures or even be offended by my lack of attraction at times.

                I will say that being on the Aro spectrum has been a quiet experience for me for the most part, seeing that after my initial coming out I’ve rarely spoken on the matter of being Aroflux outside of someone asking me about it. I think ignorance scares me out of talking about it in a sense. Explaining it and people attributing it to something white people made up and that I’m trying to appease to. As I’ve seen growing up, some black people think black LGBTQIA+ people in general are just Gay, Bi, Lesbian or Pan because “white people” have put it in our minds to be that way. And being a black woman, I’m supposed to idealize a life of romance the same way I see it on TV. 

                How come black women just can’t experience attraction a bit differently from how everyone says we should. So many black and brown men and women probably have to repress the way they feel and run the risk of being the bad guy because no one would understand or want to navigate the ways in which they experience Aromanticism. They bottle it up and when things go wrong probably find it easier to just blame themselves for not being enough or their partner when really, they just have to look into themselves and their orientation. I think black women could feel more assertive in themselves if they realized that they can be Aromantic and not pushed into this box where they have to play a role they don’t want to play. Black women deserve to explore romantic orientations as well as sexual ones and have a deep dive into how they feel. And that should be respected. 

                To black Aromantic people I say keep pushing the odds, keep daring to form a new mold for black kids to come because we’re drowned in content and media that tells us we’re overly sexualized and romanticized and that can change with us. Our families and friends may not understand, the world may not even understand, but as long as you get who you are that’s honestly all that matters. As a collective we can help each other learn and grow, we can push each other in our advocacy and know it’s not a competition. All our efforts should be us trying to get Aromanticism to be taken as seriously as any other orientation. 

Papo Aromanticasaw