If anyone figured out the asexual variant of this, I’d love to know, too.
Alas, asexuality among humans is notorious for making it difficult to form long-term romantic relationships.
(Gender shouldn’t matter that much.)
When it comes to following protocol it is matters more what it is than what it should be. The various permutations of gender and romantic preference do matter that much. (And looking at things as they are instead of how they ‘should be’ is probably step one.)
It sounded to me like muflax was asking about making friends, not asexual romantic relationships. It’s true though that when making friends gender matters quite a bit more than it seems like it should, at least in some social circles.
If I’m wrong and that’s not what muflax was asking about, I’ll ask it myself: how does an adult make friends with other adults?
What works for me is engaging in group activities that interest me (in my case that’s mostly community theatre), and spending time talking with other adults engaging in that same activity, and from time to time inviting them to hang out together away from that activity. (The latter is useful for identifying people who aren’t actually interested in being friends with me, just in the group activity.)
At the very least, they share an interest with me, which is a plausible place for a friendship to start.
If anyone figured out the asexual variant of this, I’d love to know, too. (Gender shouldn’t matter that much.)
Alas, asexuality among humans is notorious for making it difficult to form long-term romantic relationships.
When it comes to following protocol it is matters more what it is than what it should be. The various permutations of gender and romantic preference do matter that much. (And looking at things as they are instead of how they ‘should be’ is probably step one.)
It sounded to me like muflax was asking about making friends, not asexual romantic relationships. It’s true though that when making friends gender matters quite a bit more than it seems like it should, at least in some social circles.
If I’m wrong and that’s not what muflax was asking about, I’ll ask it myself: how does an adult make friends with other adults?
What works for me is engaging in group activities that interest me (in my case that’s mostly community theatre), and spending time talking with other adults engaging in that same activity, and from time to time inviting them to hang out together away from that activity. (The latter is useful for identifying people who aren’t actually interested in being friends with me, just in the group activity.)
At the very least, they share an interest with me, which is a plausible place for a friendship to start.