Akse Flag (smilepilled)

smilepilled:

Image Description: A extremely complex stripe-heavy flag, with lots of cloudy, wavy and round stripes. It has a total of thirteen stripes, counting the middle one, and has stars in the very middle stripe. It almost has a "tie-dye" vibe to it, but not strictly. Its colours are soft lighter orange, soft chalk red, soft vibrant purple, darker soft purple-ish blue, plain white and light grey.

In the middle of the flag, a icon/vector of a person can be seen. It is a very minimalistic rendering of a bust shot, and the head is completely round — there are no distinguishable features. It has many outlines that serve as some sort of "aura", in the same colours as the flag itself.ALT
Image Description: A extremely complex stripe-heavy flag, with lots of cloudy, wavy and round stripes. It has a total of thirteen stripes, counting the middle one, and has stars in the very middle stripe. It almost has a "tie-dye" vibe to it, but not strictly. Its colours are soft lighter orange, soft chalk red, soft vibrant purple, darker soft purple-ish blue, plain white and light grey.ALT
Image Description: A flag with seven stripes, where the top and bottom are thickest and the middle are the thinnest — the second and sixth are thinner, and the third and fifth are even thinner. The colours of the stripes are as following, from top to bottom: soft chalk red, soft lighter orange, pale lemon-ish yellow, plain white, light blushy pink, soft vibrant purple and darker purple-ish blue.

In the middle of the flag, a symbol/vector of a person can be seen. It is a very minimalistic rendering of a bust shot, and the head is completely round — there are no distinguishable features. It has a few stripes that act somewhat similarly as an "aura", and these stripes are in the same colour as the flag itself (with exclusion of the light pink, pale yellow, and addition of a light grey).ALT
Image Description: A flag with seven stripes, where the top and bottom are thickest and the middle are the thinnest — the second and sixth are thinner, and the third and fifth are even thinner. The colours of the stripes are as following, from top to bottom: soft chalk red, soft lighter orange, pale lemon-ish yellow, plain white, light blushy pink, soft vibrant purple and darker purple-ish blue.ALT

Flag image descriptions can be found in ALT text.

AKSE—; a term under the Akse— system revolving around accepting yourself and XYZ, accepting yourself being XYZ, accepting the very idea/possibility of you being XYZ — this, optionally, also may have to do accepting XYZ in other people’s lives, accepting other people who are XYZ, accepting that others may be XYZ and the way XYZ may be preesent in other scenarios and lives.

General themes/ideas surrounding self-love, wonder, discovery, understanding & finding peace within oneself (in general and/or regarding XYZ) are also included. The flag colour meanings are directly based off from the Gilbert Baker pride flag; red means life, orange means healing, purple means spirit, blue means serenity — additionally, white is supposed to represent wholeness && light grey is supposed to represent the relieving aftermath of struggle through a fog (hence why its light grey, and not dark grey).

⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀【 LAYERS: 】

[Plain Text: Bracket, LAYERS, bracket /End of Plain Text]

Plain stripes go on top of their respective stripe outlines, background (STRIPE SIX) goes under all layers, star layers go on top of all the previous layers, and the symbol layers go on top of all aforementioned — minimal flag symbol only has the seven first outlines. Please, feel free to send stripe links to the wayback machine/internet archive, if you’d like.

This term isn’t and will NEVER be in favor of abuse, (self) harm, overly negative actions && thoughts, hateful ideas && sentiments, exclusionism of authentic harmless existences, policing what should/shouldn’t be, enforced normativity && the promotion, glorification/fetishization/romantization of the aforementioned — however, it may have to do with RECOVERING from such.

This term may be used without strict ties to gender, meaning it can be AKSE[XYZ] instead of AKSE[GENDER] — it may be used as a general identity term, nonhuman term, mad pride/disabled pride term, a recovery/ex‐‐[community] term, and much more. Of course, it may also be used as a gender term as well!

Tagging: @radiomogai, @lovesse, @lunentity, @rwuffles, @kiruliom, @gorefix, @melanchollica, @inknoidd, @fwus, @riamuverse / @v-rtue, @gender-mailman, @hypnosiacon, @losergendered, @rabidbatboy, @acronym-chaos, @daybreakthing. Please feel free to ask to be removed or added!