You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience and security.

Skip to main
Blog

Celebrating International Asexuality Day

BY: Trevor News
Donate

As we celebrate International Asexuality Day during this first week of April, this is a great time to support those in our lives who are asexual and try to better understand what asexuality is.

First and foremost, it’s important to recognize that asexual folks have been nearly erased from conversations around identity and sexuality. This week is about affirming their existence, validity, and experiences. 

Asexuality is a sexual orientation characterized by a lack of sexual attraction to others. This differs from aromanticism, a romantic orientation that describes people who do not experience romantic attraction. However, it’s important to remember that asexuality is an umbrella term, and there are a wide variety of ways to express asexuality. Asexual people — also known as “Ace” or “Aces” — may have little interest in having sex, even though they may desire emotionally intimate relationships. Some asexual people do have intimate relationships and experience sexual desire, even if they don’t experience sexual attraction.

Asexuality Isn't - Sexual repression, aversion, or dysfunction. Aces might - Want friendship, understanding, and emotional connection; Be of any gender, age, or background. Have a spouse and/or children; Fall in love.

Here are just a few common terms to explore:

Demisexual: People who only experience sexual attraction once they form a strong emotional connection with another person.

Grey-A or Gray-Ace: People who identify somewhere between sexual and asexual.

Queerplatonic: People who experience a type of non-romantic relationship where there is an intense emotional connection that goes beyond a traditional friendship.

Aces commonly use hetero-, homo-, bi-, and pan- in front of the word romantic to describe who they experience romantic attraction to. For example, a person who is hetero-romantic might be attracted to people of a different sex or gender, but not in a sexual way.

It is important to note that asexuality is a spectrum and individuals may experience different levels of sexual attraction. Additionally, asexuality is not the same as celibacy or abstinence, which are personal choices to abstain from sexual activity.This International Asexuality Day, we encourage everyone to take the time to learn more about asexuality and aromanticism, and to show support and acceptance for ace folks. We also encourage asexual and aromantic young people to seek out communities and resources like TrevorSpace that can provide them with understanding and validation. Talk about your experiences — that is how people learn and grow in their understanding and raise awareness of asexual people around the world.

Read more from
Blog

Blog

Spencer Liff on Changing Hearts and Minds in Drag: the Musical

Spencer Liff’s past Broadway credits include “Head Over Heels”, with music by the Go-Go’s, The Lincoln Center revival of “Falsetto's”, the Tony Award-winning revival of “Hedwig And The Angry Inch” starring Neil Patrick Harris, and the critically acclaimed and Tony-nominated revival of “Spring Awakening.” Spencer has earned two Emmy Nominations for Outstanding Choreography for his work on the hit FOX TV series “So You Think You Can Dance,” where he has been a resident choreographer for the past 10 seasons. Highlights of his other TV credits include Dancing with the Stars, B Positive, One Day At A Time, Parks and…
Blog

Authors Making a Difference: Celebrating Women’s History Month with a Panel of Women and Gender-Expansive Authors

Seeing ourselves in stories can be incredibly powerful. The Trevor Project’s editorial team invited three authors — Lamya H, Sarah Cypher, and Becky Albertalli — to talk about the importance of seeing women’s and LGBTQ+ experiences in books, and how they can help us better understand ourselves and be better allies to each other. Considering recent bans of LGBTQ+ books in school libraries, these authors show us why sharing authentic stories can help affirm young people and why reading mainstream LGBTQ+ books can be an act of resistance. Lamya H (she/they) is a queer Muslim writer and organizer living in…