I agree with Classicaltea
The definition of Fluffy on this site is someone: "Pretending to be the following- A Vampire, A Mermaid, A Werewolf, A Demon, A Fairy, A Half this and that Hybrid, or anything mythological or legendary in nature.
By lacking the ability or willingness to understand and accept common and basic concepts, the resistance or ability to complete tasks or answer questions without credible or accepted sources, and by not using or listening to reason, logic, reality even when a multitude of people agree or have concluded the same result.
By displaying excessive amounts of overconfidence, being blatantly annoying, exuding supremacy or acting like you are better than someone else (especially when you don't know each other beyond a certain limit considering this is cyberspace)."
I am very fed up of being called fluffy despite being kind, and accepting other peoples opinions. I do not try to be annoying (if I am) and I believe I am able to accept many different basic concepts yet I am still called fluffy.
I agree that I have met some of the younger members who use the site as a roleplay site, but other than roleplay I don't see anything wrong or "fluffy" about my beliefs.
I can relate. I too was a child drawn in from the blasphemy of Hollywood's portrayal of magick. This doesn't make our interest a burden; if as a child, we are genuinely interested, the truth will remain in the backs of our minds until they are ready to understand the difference between Hollywood magick and real spiritual magick. As long as those children who grow up with the truth don't continue to consciously convince themselves that fantasy is real, then I feel those people shouldn't be talked down upon. If they still haven't wanted to release their childhood fantasies from the truth, educating them is an option. For me, I've been known to escape in fantasy. So in my early years, I had a glimpse of an idea of the truth. Yet I still continued to "play" fantasy spells out until I was abnormally like 13. For me, I had psychological reasons to do that from coping with a bad childhood experience. But I finally grew out of it and a dear friend I made here (FallonRogue) helped me to gain the confidence I needed to drop the fantasy concepts and to embrace what I knew had some sort of odd truth. I knew that fantasy was not real, but I convinced myself to hope in it merely as a distraction from my life. So everyone, please consider this when dealing with fluffs. Tea, I will message you!