Also it's worth pointing out that "shipping" is a mentality. It's more than just a piece of the fandom, it's "everything". It's "the way of life". You have fans in which is this is all they do, is "ship it". Raye is a shipper, she's open about it, and she's never left that mentality, and that's obviously affected how she approaches her personal identity, and her work because she just wants to "ship it" a.k.a. jill to it. Shippers can find each other and cater to their own, and the more militant ones have the damaging "for us or against us" mindset that isolates more than unites. There's a reason a big stereotype among shippers is about how immature and inexperienced they are about relationships, including friendships. It's a fact a lot of shippers tend to be loners, whether because of their autism or something else.
I'm open about being a shipper (ffs the shipping community thread is still one of my favs on this site), so I can get into her head better than I really like to, and it's really astounding just how easily one gets lost in and remains in that state of mind well into adulthood. Call it arrested development or what-have-you, but if someone's still a big shipper well into life, that's a sign they have it
way too comfortably made and just have nothing better to do with their life, or are just that addicted to the Internet, either-or. I'm honestly surprised Raye still continues to ship so late into her life because she actually
was once in a relationship in college. She may or may not have fucked her boyfriend for all I know, but she
did have a love life at one point. I say this because at the start of the decade, I was still active in shipping, and then I found myself dating, and then getting married, and so shipping had to take a backseat in everything, if not just be shelved in general.
So on top of life getting busier, my mentality towards it changed, and I stopped getting involved with shipping. I still have my favorites, of course, but I haven't developed attractions to newer ships in years, partly because I just stopped getting involved in newer fandoms, and partly because I have shifted my approach to "shipping". I have stopped saying I write "shipfics" and instead say I write "romance", which I would say has been accurate for a long time. There's an actual difference between "romance" and "shipping" when you get down to it. "Shipping" is the mentality where you take two (or more) characters and think they look cute together, and so you put them into random cute scenarios in art, writing, or whatever it is you want. "Romance" is an actual genre of storytelling in which you're exploring the relationship between two (or more) characters and seeing the how the characters are proactive and reactive to it. It's a perspective change that legitimately puts a story on a whole 'nother level from your typical shipfic, and savvy readers and writers notice this.
Now I'm only still rubbing elbows with shipping because lol Internet and my husband still likes shipping and I'm pretty much the only one who gets him so I humor him because I love and dote on him, so by extension, I still get how someone like Raye continues to be into it. However, this is clearly hurting her ability to progress as a creator, and she needs to realize this sooner than later. The sooner she stops obsessing over having to literally ship anyone and anything together to "appease" the Tumblr masses, the better she'll present her characters as three-dimensional so that way it really wouldn't fucking matter if the characters were lesbians with each other or not. The problem is, she had surrounded herself with other like-minded people, so no one is there to say "Hey, shouldn't we work on flaws and traits first?" before going on about how "cute" lesbians totally are.
TL;DR Raye literally fails as a creator because she doesn't know how to
people.