hellohello! is it ok to ask what made you leave soulbonding and fromfiction behind? are you happier now that you’re not running them? going from that to being a popular person in the proship comm just seems like a big change and while i’m all for changes, i’m also rly curious about if anything caused it ^^
We haven’t really left fromfiction (the blog) behind– we still occasionally answer questions there. Soulbonding (the blog) has been kinda dead for a long time, and most of those questions ended up being rolled into fromfiction for the last few years.
We still maintain fictionkin.org as a resource as well.
As for what changed, the fictionkin community changed.
The fictionkin community changed in a way that made me (😼🔪) particularly, who has been primarily running fromfiction since 2007, feel like our input was not really needed any longer.
There are so many more fictionkin in the community, with so many more diverse opinions on what being fictionkin means to them, than when I started fromfiction.
when I started fromfiction, the original iteration, in 2007, I could count the number of fictionkin on the internet on both hands, and I knew them personally and spoke to them daily.
Now there are hundreds, if not thousands of fictionkin.
And I’m really glad when some of those fictionkin turn to my writing for answers, or look to me for my opinion.
But at the same time– I’ve been writing about being fictionkin since 2007.
Now, by 2023, I feel like there really isn’t much about it that I haven’t already said 100 times.
I don’t feel like I was making any kind of positive difference as a voice in the fictionkin community any more.
But I really feel like I and we ARE making a positive difference in the proship community.
And the freedom to create and enjoy any fiction you want is and has always been just as important to me as the spiritual side of my fiction connection.
Does that make sense, anon? I’m happy to answer more questions if you have them.
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