Thank you for adding that! Josephine’s status as a queer woman of color even more specifically adds layers to her storyline that are equally as important to discuss. Especially as a bi woman of color to have a romance that doesn’t emphasize sex (which isn’t to say it isn’t there, depending on your interpretation, but that regardless it refuses to show it) … it’s really amazing to see her narrative focus on an idealized romance, the likes of which we see a looooot more often with straight, white women. I’m really grateful that we’re able to have these conversations—and, heck, that I get to witness people having these conversations rather than just rolling around on my floor being excited about the intersectional implications of the things I was recording.