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Episode 282 - Quickie

Southpaws - Mon 25 May 2015 - 18:30
Savrin gives a brief update to the world of KnotCast. Also included, the retail story sample of Summerhill. Got $4 a month to spare? Support the show! www.patreon.com/knotcast Episode 282 - Quickie
Categories: Podcasts

so im kinda new to this whole furry thing in general, but I made my first fursona!

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 18:21

honestly I really only started to get involved in this furdom because my girlfriend is a Massive Furry and encouraged me to be more confident and actually draw out my fursona.

so here she is!! she's a 5'1" bunny and she's awful and I'm awful. And uncreative! her name is just Angel. I only really started working on her today, so I just wanted to see what you guys think about what I have so far!

the quality is kind of bad, sorry! both in the art and picture sense. http://imgur.com/2ZiHW48

submitted by jessicasangita
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Categories: News

Mongrels

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 17:00
Categories: News

The Interview

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 16:22
Categories: News

I am having a slight problem and could use your help!

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 14:15

Hello All! I am currently in a situation that I have little information about and would like to seek out your assistance. My (29F) youngest brother (16M) recently admitted to me that he is homosexual and a furry. Now, we come from an extremely conservative family and I am the only one he has admitted this to. I love my brother and do not judge him in any way, if he is happy then I am happy for him.

My question is, what exactly does being a furry entail? What are some things I need to know so that I can be more understanding of what he is going through? I expect that once anyone else in the family finds out, there will be a shitstorm. I want to be able to defend my brother and both help him to be comfortable with who he is while attempting to stop the hatred and ignorance that will come his way.

Any advice and knowledge would be helpful. I want to add that my concern is more for understanding what being a furry means. As far as him admitted he is homosexual - that is not a concern as my best friend is gay and has provided me with a great deal of assistance in that department. Thank you for your time and help.

tl;dr: My little brother admitted to me that he is both homosexual and a furry. I would like to be more supportive but am unsure how to go about doing so. Advice needed.

Edit Thank you to all of you who have helped me to understand this unique situation with my little brother. You guys/gals are amazing people and so understanding. I wish all of you the best and hope that you find the support and love you need. If you don't have that, consider me one of your biggest supporters!! Thank you so much.

submitted by ApatheticPamp
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Categories: News

How are Ya'll fuzzbutts doing? [Intro post]

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 13:42

Hey everybody! I've been a furry for a very long time now, and just recently I started posting on this subreddit, but I haven't ever made it official I guess. I just wanted to thank everyone for being so awesome. Maybe it's just my own skewed personal experience, but I've never met a mean furry in here. This is quickly becoming like a second home to me, and a second family. I love you all :D.

submitted by scratch741
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Categories: News

May I ask y'all something about me uploading my character's bios on here?

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 13:30

Does it bug you guys that I upload them here? I've noticed they keep getting down voted. Do you guys like them or are they kinda spammy to you?

EDIT: So, keep them farther apart as to not clutter up things in the consensus I'm getting.

Will do guys, thanks for the feedback!

submitted by LeatherHog
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Categories: News

The Furry Identity & Career Choice

[adjective][species] - Mon 25 May 2015 - 13:00

At what age do furries start to be furries?

We can be confident that furry must have its genesis in environment, not genetics, because furry is a modern phenomenon. It’s probably fair to guess that exposure to some aspect of culture during childhood is important, likely cartoon animals. Furry might well come about during adolescence, in transition from childhood to adulthood, as an artefact of certain childhood experiences.

This places furry as something which is first experienced, from a personal point of view, as a young teenager. This is the time we start high school, and learn about the social horrors that can lurk within if you don’t “fit in”. Furry would count, in most high school social hierarchies, as a Bad Thing, and therefore probably as something that requires management or concealment.

This makes furry a “concealable stigma”, a phrase sometimes applied to the condition of being LGBT. Someone with a concealable stigma has a different social experience: they learn to be careful about disclosure unless they are confident in the reaction they will receive. Someone with a concealable stigma may tend to be socially withdrawn, and simultaneously closely attuned to the reactions of others. These coping mechanisms can have a significant impact on decisions in adult life, including career choices.

There are positive and negative aspects to such learned behaviours. Being socially withdrawn helps people gain personal independence, but also means that social confidence can lag behind. Being attuned to the reactions of others may make people appear socially anxious, but also means that some interpersonal skills may be unusually advanced.

We can broadly see these personality traits in the furry population. We are a pretty geeky group, which may indicate a certain combination of personal independence and social anxiety. There are also a lot of artistic furs, who might be seen to have unusually intuitive connections to others, tempered by a predisposition to self-doubt. It’s possible that these personality traits are not innate: they could have developed during adolescence, as furries learned coping strategies for their concealable stigma.

Of course, when we look at furry and see the preponderance of geeks and artists, it’s easy to conclude that geeks and artists are simply more likely to identify as furs. It’s counterintuitive to suggest that people might become geeky or artistic as an outcome of furry. Yet there is evidence this may be the case, as outlined by a paper published earlier this year (Ref 1) looking at favoured occupations of groups with a concealable stigma, specifically gay and lesbian groups.

Just as furs are over-represented in IT and in the artistic professional worlds, there are some jobs in which gay men and lesbian women stereotypically congregate. Gay and lesbian professional occupations are often judged, like furries, to be a natural outcome of the “the sort of person” that gay/lesbian people are. So gay men are thought to be feminine and therefore likely to perform “women’s” jobs (like flight attendants or hairdressers), and lesbian women are thought to perform “men’s” jobs (like probation officers or mechanics). And while it is true in all the examples that I’ve given, gay men and lesbian women also congregate in other jobs that can’t be similarly, lazily dropped into a gender basket. For example, gay men are much more likely to be news reporters than straight men, and lesbian women are much more likely to be sociologists. Overall, the majority of gay men and lesbian women work in occupations where the majority of workers are the same sex, i.e. male-dominated and female-dominated jobs respectively (Ref 2).

The paper provides evidence that the professions of gay men and lesbian women has nothing to do with gender roles. In its way, it add to the growing body of evidence that gender roles (in general) are at worst imaginary and at best lazy stereotypes. It certainly demonstrates that to categorize all gay men as “feminine” and all lesbian women as “masculine” is wrong.

It’s equally lazy to stereotype furries as geeks (or artists). Furry certainly has plenty of geeks (and artists), but furry itself is neither a geek phenomenon nor an artistic one. We have our origins in geek fandom groups, and there is still plenty of crossover with modern-day fandoms. (And we are remarkably prolific from an artistic point of view, the act of creation being a key feature of furry culture.) But neither geekdom nor artistic output is required to identify as a furry or to participate in furry’s animal-person roleplay.

Being a furry in high school can be socially stigmatic. The stigma is concealable, in that it’s possible to hide furriness from others (just like it’s possible to hide non-heterosexuality). However this comes at a personal cost, because it means that you cannot fully express yourself. The challenge for someone with a concealable stigma, then, is to manage the sharing of information to allow personal expression without unduly risking social status.

This challenge goes beyond high school, and includes other social situations where being furry might be stigmatized (perhaps a family environment or the workplace). It’s common for furs to present edited versions of themselves, not being false but not being completely open either. It’s the same trade-off, between a desire for honest self-expression and the need to be seen as socially appropriate.

This challenge may well inform furry professional choices. There are two drivers, supply-side and demand-side:-

The supply-side driver is the wants of the prospective employee, in this case a furry. Because expressions of furriness are potentially stigmatic, furries may be driven to work in occupations where there is less interaction with peers. These are job with high “task independence”; a role where little interaction with others is required to perform a task (Ref 3). A simple example of a job with task independence is a bus driver: while the driver doesn’t have any control over his route, she can perform her job with very little peer interaction.

As it turns out, programming scores highly for task independence. While some peer interaction is required, and varies depending on the actual job, the bulk of the professional work is performed alone. It makes sense that furries would be attracted to programming roles, because there is less identity management required than many other jobs.

Conversely, the demand-side driver is the wants of the prospective employer. Someone with a concealable stigma may develop social coping skills during those formative high school years that place an emphasis on understanding and predicting the social reactions of others (Ref 6, Ref 7). This is a rare skill, and rare skills attract higher demand: more pay, or more attractive working conditions. It makes sense that a group with a concealable stigma, like furries, would excel in roles that require sensitivity towards the reactions of others: “social perceptiveness” (Ref 4).

As you may have guessed, most artistic occupations score highly for social perceptiveness. This requirement probably relates to the social challenges associated with translating the desires of others into art. People who have excellent skills in this area, perhaps furries who learned them as a coping strategy, are more likely to have the necessary aptitude to be successful artists.

There are jobs that have a combination of high task independence and require high social perceptiveness. These include front line IT support, flight attendants, and medicine. These jobs may be natural careers for furries, and indeed for other groups with a similarly concealable stigma.

There is another force at work that is known to have a significant effect on professional choices: dark networks (Ref 5). A dark network is an informal network of people who connect in a way invisible to the normal structures of the workplace. Furry is an unusually strong dark network, because we are a spread-out group that crosses many common social hurdles (age, affluence, race, gender, etc), and we have a particularly close connection with one another. This means that furs will tend to be attracted to jobs that are known to already have a significant furry population.

Dark networks can account for furry hotspots, where certain companies or certain roles are otherwise inexplicably furry-heavy. They can also reinforce the concept that some jobs are a natural furry choice, as is currently the case with IT and related disciplines.

Like everyone, furry and non-furry, our experiences help inform who we are. Furry experiences tend to diverge from the mainstream, either in the way we express ourselves in all-furry environments, or the way we manage our identity in the mundane worlds of school, family, and work. The internal and social skills required to negotiate these environments (as a furry) are often markedly different from those skills required by non-furries when negotiating the mainstream world.

The preponderance of furry in IT and artistic circles may have less to do with what makes us furry, and more to do with what furry makes us.

Refs

  1. A Tilcsik, M Anteby, & CR Knight, Concealable Stigma and Occupational Segregation: Toward a Theory of Gay and Lesbian Occupations, Administrative Science Quarterly 2015
  2. Data from the American Community Survey, where gay and lesbian workers were defined as employed individuals living with an unmarried same-sex partner.
  3. O*Net Online “work values | independence” data (Occupations that satisfy this work value allow employees to work on their own and make decisions.)
  4. O*Net Online “skills | social perceptiveness” data (Being aware of others’ reactions and understanding why they react as they do.)
  5. C Marquis & A Tilcsik, Imprinting: Toward a multilevel theory, Academy of Management Annals 2013
  6. M Radkowsky & LJ Siegel, The Gay Adolescent: Stressors, Adaptations, and Psychosocial Interventions, Clinical Psychology Review, 1997
  7. JE Pachanki, The Psychological Implications of Concealing a Stigma: A Cognitive-affective-behavioral Model, Psychological Bulletin 2007

#The morning after

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 12:56
Categories: News

The lateness of the into : post 1 chapter 1- you guys rock.

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 12:23

Hey there floofballs. I've been hanging around here for a bit now and thought I might go ahead and actually introduce myself. Gale the fluid ferret here. How's it going.

I just have to say that you guys have to be the most amazing people I have ever met. No matter what is going on in my day or in my mind (and trust me from day to day that can be a whole lot of sadness and depression) I know I can always come here and read someone's kind words. Without condition you all seem to accept and understand anyone who opens up to you. Not to get all corny but you guys have helped give me a reason to keep going. A reason to believe there is still good and unconditional love in this messed up, dark world we inhabit.

Thank you so much guys and please, stay floofy.

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Categories: News

All Flairs To Date: 278 Fuzzies!

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 12:13
Categories: News

A moment to appreciate...

Furry Reddit - Mon 25 May 2015 - 12:06

...everything /u/fa_mirror does for this sub. I think he deserves a big thank you! Can we get a round of internet applause?

EDIT: I hereby declare May 25 to be /u/fa_mirror day!

EDIT 2: and on that day, he was gilded by Dragoneer

EDIT 3: but seriously Dragoneer commented on my post holy crap

submitted by 134ShinyVaporeon
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Categories: News