ACE Post-Sexuality is a space to think, talk, and breathe around asexuality, post-sexuality , and the broader ACE world—without pressure, without slogans, and without the need to fit into ready-made boxes. This blog is where I share reflections, essays, personal notes, and cultural commentary related to ACE experiences: how desire changes, how it fades, how it transforms, or how it was never really there to begin with—and what comes after that. Not as a diagnosis, not as a manifesto, but as an ongoing conversation. Here you’ll find articles of different kinds and tones. Some are reflective, others more practical, others simply exploratory. Many of them also appear in Loto Negro magazine , where these topics are approached from a more essay-driven and critical perspective. All of them are written with care, curiosity, and respect for complexity. At its core, this blog revolves around two closely related ideas: Asexuality , as Julie Sondra Decker explains, is usually defined as the exper...
“ We’re all stars, and we deserve to twinkle. ” —Marilyn Monroe. Does the ACE community have representation in cinema and television series? This is not a new question; but it is certainly a recurring one. It is not unusual to find conversations on this topic in forums such as AVEN or on social media. The interest of any person or collective in having representation in the audiovisual medium is evident and natural. All of us, in one way or another, encounter this question at some point in our lives or during our process of self-recognition as ACE individuals. My case was no different. On one occasion, I was browsing posts in an asexual Facebook group. By chance, I came across a post by someone who had asked this very question. They commented that, apart from Sherlock Holmes —a recurring figure within the community— and a few others, they had not found many fictional characters —clearly or hypothetically— who were asexual. That question resonated in my mind fo...