A Fantasy Author's Adventures in Fiction & Life

Tag: Aro-Spec

As a nineties kid; I never saw myself in fiction. Never truly connected with characters and didn’t really have role models. I didn’t know why I liked alternating between writing male main characters and female ones. Or why it was so important to me toput friendship groups at the heart of the stories I told, and so hard to include romance (no, I’ve never and may never attempt to write sex!) Reasons of awareness, acknowledgement existence, reference points of aromantic, asexual and nonbinary life, and the importance of writing each identity specifically, to me personally, are all unpacked below.

Growing Up Different

The world assigned ‘female’ as my gender at birth. That was how everyone else saw me. I both did and didn’t see myself that way. I was girl, boy and neither. ‘Androgenous’ resonated with me at fifteen, being the closest term and concept to the reality of me that I was aware of. (Which may be why I chose ‘andro’ as the term for ‘nonbinary’ in Sythe Series.)

My late childhood and early teens were an uncomfortable time. Not, like for many trans people, because of puberty. I was tall, broad shouldered and a late bloomer. I looked a kid/ androgenous, and felt I could act that way when I wanted, so from eleven to fifteen I wasn’t too uncomfortable gender wise.

It was the impact of romantic and sexual attraction, and my peers starting to have boyfriends or girlfriends that opened a giant gulf between us. I wanted to be people’s friends, like I always had. But boys seemed less interested in friendship. If they liked you; they tended to want to be your boyfriend. And as girls I was friends with started having boyfriends, friendship groups, which were still central to my life, became more sidelined to them, as the boyfriend became the centre.

I didn’t know I was aromantic. No one in the 2000’s was using that term! Or asexual! I just accepted that some friends were on different paths, and we were drifting apart. I let a couple of friendships I’d really enjoyed come to an end, as the couples hung out more and more, and the singles drifted away.

Life Without Role Models Or Rep

Aro-Ace

Not having terms or clarity around my disinterest in romantic or sexual partnerships meant I didn’t have the language to navigate those differences with coupled-up friends. Or the language and understanding of differences to pursue those relationships, instead of letting them end. It also meant my friends had no means of understanding where I was coming from.

Because all we’d ever seen as children was Disney films telling us ‘true (romantic) love’ is the most important thing to being happy. We grew up in a generation where it was assumed everyone would marry someone of the opposite sex, have kids, buy a house and that was it!

Neither fiction nor the media presented alternatives. SO much of it had people kissing passionately and pulling off each other’s clothes, and experiencing sexual attraction, again implying that ‘everyone does this.’ And ‘everyone wants this.’ Nothing portrayed people like me. Nothing seemed to explore alternate relationships.

So an important part of writing aro-ace main characters in Ruarnon Trilogy and Sythe Series, was writing the rep I never had. Rep I could have benefited so much from.

Nonbinary

By my early twenties, it took ages to realise I’d presented too feminine, too many days in a row. When I dressed that way, it inclined me to behave feminine, even when I didn’t feel it. People tended to positively reinforce my feminine presentation with compliments. And this became a cycle of presenting more feminine than I felt, not expressing my gender often enough, and so feeling muted/ emotionally flat.

It took a while to realise that I liked running daily, and felt better doing it wearing baggy, androgenous or masculine clothing. And that I needed to wear PANTs (trousers for British readers) sometimes. That was as balanced as my wardrobe got in my twenties, and it skewed towards feminine and not quite comfortable.

I also felt like I had to speak with a higher pitched, more feminine voice. Like speaking in the deeper tone natural to my height could be seen as ‘hostile’ or unfriendly. Again, subtle ways people around me responded, probably subconsciously, likely influenced this. And me feeling I had to behave the way the world showed people of my biological sex behaving.

I didn’t question any of it much, or explore it, or know anyone who did. Or didn’t read stories or see books about gender nonconformity beyond the occasional ‘tomboy’. I was blundering around, being myself through sheer trial and error, too little self reflection. (Though luckily, with a strong sense of adventure, willingness to take risks and autistic tendency to perceive other people’s expectations as illogical, and therefore dismissible.)

Aro-Ace and Nonbinary Reference Points

In writing aromantic, asexual characters, whose experiences are similar too, and in some ways diverge from my own, I hope to give readers the point of reference my generation didn’t have. To allow other people who feel different, but don’t understand how or why, points of comparison. And give them the chance to see and reflect upon themself. To develop a clearer understanding of who they are. Or the chance to recognise traits of people they know, to understand that person better.

Having been in many queer and neurodivergent conversations online, discussing our traits has helped SO MANY of us realise who we are. Comparing differences and similarities can help you know for eg; yes I am aromantic, but not asexual, etc. The more you see of people like and unlike yourself, the more chances you have to notice and better understand yourself, and or other people.

Wait, I’m Queer & My Main Characters Are Too?

Having had the above online interactions, found my labels, identities and claimed my place in the queer community in my early thirties; it was my characters’ turn. I got to understand why Ruarnon was ‘a different, nebulous kind of masculine’ -because they’re actually nonbinary!

And while I didn’t understand that Linh was fiercely, independently and happily single, because she’s the kind of aro-ace whose disinterested in romance and sex, I had fun writing her. Writing someone who went about living her own life, undefined by her relationship to others (something I’ve since learnt some women find challenging). And I enjoyed writing Ruarnon, to whom platonic friendships are dear.

In writing two aro-ace, romantic and sexual relationship disinterested characters, I had the chance to develop a whole friendship group. To let those friends get to know each other well, so well they could predict how the other would solve problems (something I played with in War in Sorcery’s Shadow). In other words; to show that for some people a friendship group is all the companionship, understanding and fulfilment they need. That no, everyone DOES NOT need a romantic or sexual relationship to be happy.

Left Image: Ruarnon of Ruarnon trilogy wearing bronze armour, leaving on a spear and holding a helmet, aromantic, aro-ace and nonbinary flags displayed below them.Ruarnon Portrait by GlintOfMischief.Right Image: The middle of the cover of SciFi-Fantasy book, Countering the Hands of Crime, Sythe Series 2.Image: Amon (they/them -queer questioning flag), Rarkin (he/him -queer questioning flag), Miona (she/her) (lesbian and demisexual flags) and Rinth (he/him) (aromantic and asexual flags), stand before the high metal gate and stone fence of Monster Containment, a multicolour magic shield rising across the sky behind them.
They wear green Monster Containment Uniforms, Amon carries a long range gun, Rarkin holds a hand gun, Miona and Rinth wear protective gloves.Sythe Series Art by Lawrence Mann.

Breaking Allo Romantic & Allo Sexual Molds

The ‘everyone will fall in love and get married and have kids line’ that gen Y and earlier were sold created PROBLEMS for many aromantic and asexual people. I knew that when I felt some form of attraction to boys; it was different. Because I was never as ‘into’ them as they were into me. I hesitated to date anyone, for fear of breaking their hearts. And I wanted to (and did) dedicate my time to things I was interested in; writing SFF, travel, teaching etc.

But having spoken to many aro and ace people online, I suspect I’m an exception, not the norm. Many aro and ace people did date. They did (and some still do) have relationships. And don’t feel the same way their partners feel or behave in the romantically attracted, sexually attracted, interested in both of relationships way society portrays as ‘normal’. And that’s led plenty of aro and ace people to feel ‘broken’ or like something is ‘wrong’ with them or they don’t ‘love properly’. In an aro and ace representation void; that’s a too easy conclusion to draw.

You CAN be Aromantic or Asexual, Happy & Whole!

I think it’s important that I’ve portrayed Linh as a whole, happy person, while being a happily single girl. That I’ve portrayed Ruarnon feeling complete and content in their platonic friendships. That despite both not experiencing romantic love; their love for platonic friends and care for others throughout Ruarnon Trilogy is clear, dispelling the misconception that aro people are ‘unloving’ or ‘uncaring.’

For me, aro and ace rep isn’t just a case of; guess what humans, some of us do not experience romantic or sexual attraction! And some of them are not even interested in romantic and sexual relationships. And that’s ok! (Yeah, fundamentalist Christians can stick their sexist, misogynist expectations up their arses. Tell them I said so if you like!) It’s also that writing aro and ace characters is a chance to portray how aro and ace people can lead whole and happy lives. To counter misconceptions and self doubt. I hope I do both well!

Queer Platonic Relationships

I wanted to go further. Because romantic relationships and platonic friendships/ family relationships aren’t the only ones that exist. There’s also queer platonic relationships. In my new series, Rarkin isn’t sexually attracted or romantically attracted to another character. But why does he always notice how that character smiles? What are these feelings? What kind of relationship does he want?!

These were themes I also wanted to explore, so Sythe Series, by book 2, Countering the Hands of Crime, dives into a queer platonic relationship (alongside completing a rogue crime boss arc). Again, its about writing a more complete view of the human experience of relationships. Of letting people of lesser known, poorer understood identities see their relationships on the page. Of giving readers who do experience sexual and romantic attraction, and possibly don’t understand or are unfamiliar with queer platonic relationships, some insight into relationships beyond their lived experience.

(I qualify that with the fact VERY neurodivergent communication is just as much a defining feature of said relationship, so it isn’t just aro-ace and gay; it’s also very neurodivergent.)

Writing Nonbinary Rep

I published Manipulator’s War in April 2022, within memory of some cis people replying to my tweet about preferring to be referred to as they/them with polite confusion. Writing a nonbinary main character mattered to me from a general awareness of gender diversity perspective. Again, giving cis readers the chance to perceive the world through nonbinary eyes, and nonbinary readers the chance to see themselves on the pages of books was important to me. Giving people examples and reference points to understand themselves and others mattered.

I still treasure reviews like this one from Bookbub: Okay, first and foremost, I have to say thank you for this book. In all honesty, while there are some books that have queer representation, and more are coming, it’s rare that there are characters that are like me. Watching this non-binary human take on their challenges was so inspiring and kept me completely hooked.

And reviews in which the (cis) reader was interested in reading a book written from a nonbinary perspective.

But with the hysteria about trans women in the UK and US, the two governments having chosen to make trans women scapegoats for anger about end stage capitalism, democracy and each government’s shitfuckery (a term borrowed from Juice Media)… you’d be forgiven for forgetting that trans masc and nonbinary people exist. That we’re still here, queer, and like trans women; we aren’t going anywhere!

So in 2026, promoting Ruarnon Trilogy with its nonbinary main character Ruarnon, and writing a nonbinary pov character in Sythe Series is also an act of protest, and resistance.

Move Over; We’re Taking Centre Stage!

There’s one more important point about writing aromantic, asexual, nonbinary characters, as an author who shares all three of those identities. With forty years of lived experience, I don’t have the confines of a cis gender, alloromantic, allosexual author merely wishing to include these characters. I have the knowledge, understanding and insight to put these characters on centre stage. To centre their lived experiences, including their romantic and sexual orientations and gender identity, and how these impact other areas of their lives. (And their autistic and ADHD-ness too.)

In Ruarnon Trilogy in particular, Ruarnon being Tarlah’s first nonbinary heir influences the way they approach plot problems; navigating war, diplomacy and peace. Their refusal to pay heed to binary gender norms influences who they take advice from, and appoint to high office. It helps them to navigate and avoid mistakes (male) rulers before them have made.

Meanwhile, the fact they aren’t besotted with or distracted by the romantic love of their life (and likely their strong autistic sense of social justice), is a big influence on Linh, Ruarnon and Rarkin. The fact you mainly see the former two, and still frequently see the latter interact with friends, acquaintances and strangers showcases their independence, care and compassion for others. How better to make it clear that aromantic, asexual and nonbinary people exist, and can be happy and whole humans, than by writing them as main characters of the stories I tell?!

[Neurodivergent and Disability Note: while I’m also passionate about autism and ADHD rep and have included such main characters in Ruarnon Trilogy and Sythe Series, I’ve only been chronically ill for four years. Writing Fantasy and SciFi Fantasy has been my escape from fatigue and chronic pain in real life, so I’m not yet ready to write a chronically ill main character. But I hope to do so in my third series, which I hope to begin publishing in 2029, after finishing Sythe Series in 2028.]

Left side: images of all 3 Ruarnon Trilogy (epic fantasy) covers; Manipulator's War, Secrets of the Sorcery War and War in Sorcery's Shadow.Trilogy blurb: 4 lost Aussies + One nonbinary Heir.
Defying a kingdom's traditions of survival for a continent to live.
Mysterious enemies
Evolving monsters.
Forgotten weapons.
Save a mind, save the world.Right Side: Sythe Series (SciFi-Fantasy) covers for 4 books; Walking the Knife's Edge, Countering the Hands of Crime, Skirting the Fires of Revolution (out in 2027) and Waging Wars Beyond all We Knew (out in 2028).Series blurb: At Monster Containment, Rarkin’s got;
trauma to heal from
trust & self worth issues to overcome
queer friends to make.When a crime boss goes rogue. Rarkin proves too capable and finds himself at the centre of a revolution.Background: close up of rainbow magic shield protecting Bellaria across the sky, from Sythe Series Book 2's cover.Art Credits: Lawrence Mann for Sythe Series covers, Glint of Mischief for Ruarnon Trilogy covers.

‘Aromantic’ and ‘aro’ weren’t words people used, nor identities whose existence was acknowledged when I was a kid, or a teenager. I don’t think I heard either term till I was in my early thirties. I grew up in a world where it was assumed everyone experienced romantic (and sexual) attraction to the opposite (or maybe the same) sex, and that everyone wanted a partner. In recent years, I’ve still seen people surprised that anyone could not be interested in romance (which doesn’t cover all aros, but is certainly me.) So working out that I was aro, and forging my aro life in contradiction with and defiance of societal expectations (as I have done with MANY areas), was a PROCESS.

How Do You Know You’re Aro/ Aromantic?

Like my primary school and early high school friends, I too had crushes. I liked the way he looked, the way he made people laugh. I especially liked when he didn’t give a damn what anyone else thought of him, and lived life to the fullest. As an (at the time), tall, thin, blonde, fem presenting person, I attracted attention, both sexual and romantic. But even when I liked a boy who liked me; it wasn’t the same.

There was some kind of intensity, something about the way that boy felt that I didn’t feel. Initially, I wasn’t dating in part because I had some issues to work out. But it was also like I was waiting to feel strongly enough about him to want to date him. To want to hold his hand. And I just… never got to that point.

I felt more strongly about boys I was friends with. Probably because with friendship there was no stumbling over the awkwardness of romantic feelings. And I wasn’t discomfited by seeing sexual desire in his gaze (I’m also asexual, as I blogged about here.) With male friends, I could just chat with them and be myself and our personalities could just connect. And I was happy with that.

But Surely You Want To Find That Special Someone?

I was probably aware of the above by around age 16. But ‘true love’ Disney cartoons were in vogue when I was a kid. And romance was EVERYWHERE. Fiction was saturated with it. By my final year of high school, many of my friends had paired up with boyfriends. And the couples hung out a lot. I just wanted to hang out with my friends. The rare boyfriend who could talk to friends as well, and become another friend was great. But some couples were just joined at the hip and functioned like one person. My feelings about that have always been; BLERK!

The expectation that I would want and find a boyfriend [it wouldn’t be a girlfriend, because it was only early 2000’s. It also couldn’t be a themby because ‘nonbinary people didn’t exist yet’ -I write as one of them ;)]. So at high school, my best friend and I decided we were ‘focusing on our studies’ and not having boyfriends at this time. Then I got to Uni, and I was still studying, right?

By this time it was clear I didn’t reciprocate boy’s feelings towards me, and I was wary of leading them on. And while I’d had a few crushes in high school, they just kind of stopped at Uni. By this time; the couples were couple friendship groups, and my friends were all single.

Then I graduated, and as a first year primary school teacher, renting my own house in the countryside, far from friends and family, my hands were FULL.

What About Online Dating?

My mother and her partner met online. So they were kind of biased towards it. And my mum wanted me to be happy, and like many people in this world, she assumed I needed to have a partner to be happy. By the time I trialled internet dating, age 27, it was sheer intellectual curiosity. I’d seen people hype up romance for 27 years and I personally had yet to see what any of the fuss was about.

I joined an online dating app, and the introduction to it included a woman gushing about how excited she was to see her suggested matches each morning. She checked them daily? Who the hell cares enough or has time for that?! I found match suggestions mildly interesting, at best. And then you had to bother messaging them, or waving, or whatever silly functions the site had enabled. And see if they replied, or wait for them to contact you.

The main thing I noticed about it was how it wasted time I could have spent writing epic fantasy novels, or gardening, or baking or doing any of many things I would rather spend my time on. That was the final revelation; I didn’t care enough about having a partner to invest time in it. Should I happen to meet the right person, well great! If not? I had an epic fantasy trilogy to publish! Countries to travel to! Many moves of house to come! Ultimately -my own life to live, with zero need for a partner.

Displays of Affection?

I did end up dating a guy via online dating. We messaged because he was overseas initially. We went on a few dates. I found out what chemistry was and went; well, this is nice. I can see how it sweeps people away. And I like him and I respect his brain. But its the same old problem; I don’t reciprocate how he feels about me. Not emotionally. Not sexually. Sure, making out is nice but I was happy to draw the line there. And that’s all it was to me; nice.

I can’t connect with you if I can’t see your face/ feelings. I can’t deepen my understanding of you and feel closer to you if we aren’t talking and connecting by similar lived experiences, feelings about life or ideas. It really highlighted to me that I don’t need all this romantic feeling and affection stuff. I want company and a meeting of minds. I can get that from ANY person I meet, in any context. Family can be great. Friends are great for that.

I Can Do It Solo Or With Friends

I’ve never understood couples who are joined at the hip. If they go to the beach, the movies, a restaurant; they do MOST, if not ALL of it with their partner (and sometimes other couples.) I don’t know if its my aro-ness or being autistic, but to me that’s suffocating. My mind cannot unwind, I cannot relax with that much contact or constant contact with anyone. To me being joined at the hip is a prison sentence.

I took up walking solo in my teens because my friends weren’t fussed about exercise. Joining a basketball team at age 12 was similar; I wanted to, and I knew no one else who did. I’ve always gone to the movies with a friend or family, or swum at the beach with family or solo. I’ve eaten meals in restaurants, even been to the movies by myself. (I got some weird looks going to The Hobbit: Battle of Five Armies solo on Christmas Day, but travel tours weren’t running, and I didn’t know anyone in that part of Canada, so what else was there to do?)

I first travelled to Europe solo when a friend pulled out. Later the year I tried online dating, I moved to England solo. I can and am happy doing LOADs of things by myself. I’ve also travelled Portugal with my mother and the east coast of Canada and the US with friends. Being single gives me more time to do things I want, and more choice of who to do anything with.

What Do I Need A Partner For?

True, there are things a partner can help with, like looking after you when you’re sick. Bro, I nursed myself through Long Covid for SIX MONTHS. I’ve got this! A partner to help lift things, and with my mobility issues when my fibro fatigue is bad would be nice. But I manage fairly well. (I’m also autistic and have ADHD. So I’ve been overcoming the obstacles of a world that doesn’t meet my needs my whole life, making me stubborn, fiercely independent and good at it.)

It would be great to share cooking with someone. That takes effort and with fibro fatigue I don’t always have the energy. But I sometimes cook when I shouldn’t, and when I’m not up to it; take away delivers!

Yes, it would be great to have someone help me afford a house, furnish it and pay off a home loan. But I’ve spent recent years splitting rent and bills with housemates in share houses. And second hand furniture (I love antiques and vintage stuff anyway) was CHEAP because it was out of fashion. I’ll likely end up buying a home and sharing a mortgage with a housemate. There are alternatives that don’t necessitate having a partner. (For me. Some people are more disabled than I am and cannot manage without a carer. I’m extremely fortunate.)

Ok, You’re Happily Single.
But You Like Romance Right?

No. Some aro people do. I don’t. Maybe its my autism questioning why our society puts this one form of relationship on such a pedestal, to the point it assumes you can’t be happy unless you have a partner, when for personally me that’s bullshit. Likely, it is in part because my experience of anything a couple in fiction is feeling is a secondary response to their feelings. Its not based on my lived experiences, and that likely means I don’t connect as deeply with romance as people who’ve lived romantic relationships. (Or who desire them.)

Romance can focus SO MUCH on the couple. It can portray their lives outside of being half of that couple as incidental. Romance is not a central plot I find interesting. I don’t care how many different ways people can fall in love, or how many variations of tension or conflict they may need to overcome to make it work. If that’s the main focus; its rarely enough for me to properly enjoy the story. (I have ADHD. The more plot, genres, forms of conflict, types of relationships, world building/ STIMULATION etc the BETTER!)

No, I like Fantasy & Friendship!

Give me a world where physics itself is altering! Give me a world where time is in flux! I love conflicts where speculative fiction and its flexibility beyond the limits of what is physically possible on Earth is at the centre. The more imagination a story requires to tell, and its world requires to build; the more I like it!

The idea that everyone likes romance is a myth. Its as true as claiming everyone likes playing and watching sports. Some people like one and not the other. Some people don’t like either. Romance is not a sacred pillar of human society (even though it seems to me to be almost idealised as such.) Its a thing. Like many other things. And like all things; people’s level of interest in it will vary.

But How Do You Write Series
Without Romance?/ Aro Books?

There does seem to be a tendency, especially across series, to start pairing characters up romantically. I felt it with early drafts of Ruarnon trilogy, and attempted it, and it wasn’t great because I didn’t know what I was doing and my heart wasn’t in it. I probably tried to write it because I’d had too much exposure to romance. I was writing at a time where if there’s a single guy and a single girl, and they spend lots of time together in the story; they usually get together.

They say you can’t be what you can’t see, but my lived experience says that’s not true. I never saw any examples of nonbinary people growing up, yet I’ve still managed to live and identify as one! (Blogged about here.) So I had a go at not pairing up many characters as Ruarnon Trilogy developed. And what happened instead was friends spent more time together, understood each other better and deepened their friendships. The friendships grew, friends experienced tensions, overcame them and friendships were strengthened.

Friendship Benefits

The other thing that happened in Ruarnon Trilogy, and is happening now as I edit Sythe Series book 2, is that the main character spent more seeking and learning from mentors. Friends and platonic relationships had more impact on the main characters personal development, and secondary characters influenced each other’s growth. And a ‘friendship’ took a turn in what is likely a queer platonic direction; a close partnership between two characters who may not be romantic or sexual partners, but a more intimate relationship than friendship. I’m sure this relationship is something I’ll continue to explore in book 3.

And in this case, I’m sure the fiction I write reflects my lived experience of friendship as an aro person (somewhat disrupted by my ADHD and moving cities/ countries regularly, so my fictional characters likely are likely to know each other better and longer than my irl friends and I.)

Queer and Neurodiverse led, Epic SFF
Request at your library. Direct from author. On Non-Zon stores.Background: countryside hills painted by Lawrence MannLeft: ebook and paperback covers of Ruarnon Trilogy books, all of which are framed by stone archways with glowing glyphs.
1; Manipulator's War (bronze armour clad soldier leans on spear beneath fire arrows raining down through the night.
2; Secrets of the Sorcery War (a sailing ships sails across bright blue waters towards sunlight, shining from between two high cliffs.
3; War in Sorcery's Shadow (lightening strikes from black storm clouds, down onto a magic shield around a brown crystal castle.) (Covers by Glint of Mischief)Right: paperback and ebook covers of Sythe Series book 1; Walking the Knife's Edge (Rarkin raise a hand gun, standing beside Miona raising glove fists, on a grassy hillside in the countryside.)#2; Countering the Hands of Crime. (Amon holds long range gun, Rarkin a hand gun, Miona and Rinth wear protective gloves as all stand in a row and green baggy Monster Containment uniforms.
(Covers by Lawrence Mann).

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