Moronic_Laughter
Student
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2007
- Messages
- 27
I have on occasion met some who have identified as less desireable creatures but you might even interpret that as being cool by going against the grain. The reason this happens will be explained differently depending on what their beliefs about the nature of kin and therian identities are. Someone with magical or reincarnation type beliefs (and why is it always past lives, rarely simultaneous and never future... I mean, for most how could you know?), would explain that the memories or experiences of a goldfish or a worm would be too simplistic, primitive or alien to be parsed at all.
For a naturalist like myself, I view it the same way as you do... its about how the individual feels about that creature, it's acknowledged either to be a purely psychological phenomenon (as one otherkin told me many years ago, "Whatever it takes to keep me from drinking draino in the morning.") of some kind or no comment is given at all since the magical beliefs are nonfalsifiable and no one has really studied the psychology. This has lead to arguments (there was even a thread on Tumblr with a supernaturalist otherkin claiming that stating otherkin as a psychological phenomenon is pseudoscience since no studies have been done).
But many people come at it from different angles. For some people it is escapism, for some it has been with them for so long they couldn't tell you how it developed, some try to ignore it and can't, and some grow out of it. Some people seem like they really did just come from some alien planet, and others clearly have some more mundane problems. Some are mentally ill, some aren't some are really religious or spiritual and others are hardcore skeptics. The only thing that binds us together is for whatever reason there's this persistent identification with some other kind of creature.
Now, as for "would you have been this creature if you never heard of it before." I think it kind of speaks for itself to see that no one really imagines a creature totally outside the realm of human experience. Even if the creature is alien in nature its still constructed in human ideas and mythology and Earth biology. Of course, perhaps it could be speculated that across the universe and in so called magical dimensions that creatures are all very similar from physical necessity, no way to know at this time.
As for "how are you sure that you aren't identifying as something that is only similar to the creature." Many otherkin (not all) do acknowledge this point, and state that they only call themselves whatever it is they are calling themselves because it simplifies the explanation.
For a naturalist like myself, I view it the same way as you do... its about how the individual feels about that creature, it's acknowledged either to be a purely psychological phenomenon (as one otherkin told me many years ago, "Whatever it takes to keep me from drinking draino in the morning.") of some kind or no comment is given at all since the magical beliefs are nonfalsifiable and no one has really studied the psychology. This has lead to arguments (there was even a thread on Tumblr with a supernaturalist otherkin claiming that stating otherkin as a psychological phenomenon is pseudoscience since no studies have been done).
But many people come at it from different angles. For some people it is escapism, for some it has been with them for so long they couldn't tell you how it developed, some try to ignore it and can't, and some grow out of it. Some people seem like they really did just come from some alien planet, and others clearly have some more mundane problems. Some are mentally ill, some aren't some are really religious or spiritual and others are hardcore skeptics. The only thing that binds us together is for whatever reason there's this persistent identification with some other kind of creature.
Now, as for "would you have been this creature if you never heard of it before." I think it kind of speaks for itself to see that no one really imagines a creature totally outside the realm of human experience. Even if the creature is alien in nature its still constructed in human ideas and mythology and Earth biology. Of course, perhaps it could be speculated that across the universe and in so called magical dimensions that creatures are all very similar from physical necessity, no way to know at this time.
As for "how are you sure that you aren't identifying as something that is only similar to the creature." Many otherkin (not all) do acknowledge this point, and state that they only call themselves whatever it is they are calling themselves because it simplifies the explanation.