How is polarisal kenochoric?

any space-related gender can be kenochoric.

so can any null, empty, void, or liminal gender experience. so can, quite literally, any uingender [obscurian is one of the first big kenochoric umbrellas i ever made, and it’s pretty much a synonym to uingender.] any darkness or obscurity / “unknown”-related genders. vague genders. distorted or “wrong” genders. i could continue on. if you can feasibly tie the thing into some kind of concept that feels kenous to you, then it can be a kenochord, from gendervoid to polarisal to hadalic to obscurian. this is why i always scream “it’s vibes-based” from the rooftops.

saying “space is big” feels like an insult with how much of an understatement it is. it’s confusing. vast. unknown, directionless. makes you feel tiny, contains things so gargantuan we can’t comprehend them. unfathomably dark and empty. we even have a whole word to describe things that are so incredibly huge: “astronomical.” space is so, soooo kenous.

keep in mind that just because someone uses a kenochord does not mean they must identify with the term kenochoric itself, or experience it in a kenoine way. it just means “hey, this term fits the vibe of kenochoric, so it can be a kenochord.” things coined to be kenochords should be… well, kenochords, definitionally speaking, but there’s a big difference between that and how you as an individual will relate to or use it.

this is why i am some terms that were obviously coined to be xenogenders, but still don’t consider myself to be xenogender. i do not experience xeninity, even when i’m using what’s supposed to be a xenogender. instead, i experience them as kenochords. they fit the vibe, so they count. i don’t experience a tangible “xenicness,” so i don’t consider them “xenogenders” for me, personally. they should still be categorized as such, but broad categories vs. personal usage will never be a perfect match.