my life 🎀

No title available
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Product Placement

PR's Tumblrdome
No title available
Keni

Kaledo Art
NASA

pixel skylines

roma★
trying on a metaphor
will byers stan first human second
DEAR READER
Game of Thrones Daily

No title available
dirt enthusiast

titsay

if i look back, i am lost

ellievsbear

izzy's playlists!
seen from Australia
seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from Bangladesh
seen from Malaysia

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Bulgaria

seen from T1
seen from Japan

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Belgium

seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
@drhpic
my life 🎀
ꨄ︎
I record dozens of videos of myself a day, not for performance or vanity, but for archive + devotion. I admire myself deeply… always in awe of who I’ve been crafted to be.
For me, this is erotic self-gaze: a form of auto-erotic embodiment that honors femininity as sacred power. A refusal to let others define how I should be seen. The mirror, the selfie, the video, all become technologies of my own authorship.
Desire doesn’t have to be mediated by another. I am both source and witness. Every video is altar.
ꨄ︎Assignment for you: practice self-imaging todayꨄ︎
(1) Mirror first. Watch yourself breathe.
(2) Record a short video. Don’t perform, just be.
(3) Admire yourself as subject + object. Take a photo that feels devotional, whatever makes you feel like your own muse.
That’s it! That’s all.
8.12.2025
On the Nicki Minajs and the Cardi Bs
Some women are loved because they leave room for others to step into them, like a dress that’s just loose enough to fit anyone. Their flaws are familiar, their humor disarming, their presence comfortable. Cardi moves in that space: relatable, open, unguarded. She is safe for projection.
But then there are women like Nicki, who stand in the fullness of themselves like a cathedral built on sacred ground. Every brick is intentional. Every word is deliberate. She does not hollow herself out so others can live inside her. She is not a vessel for projection; she is the altar itself.
And that unsettles people. We have been taught to love women only when they bend, when they round their edges, when they dim their own brilliance so we can bear to look at them. Nicki refuses to do this. She stands as both mirror and light, and for many, that reflection is too sharp to hold.
It is easier to call her arrogant or a “mean girl” (despite others’ actions actually living into that stereotype) than to ask ourselves why a woman’s certainty feels like an attack. It is easier to call her mean than to reckon with the truth: we were never taught to feel safe in our own bigness, so hers feels like a threat.
But maybe the lesson isn’t about her at all. Maybe it’s about us… about the parts of ourselves still waiting for permission to stand as tall, to speak without apology, to inhabit our own names with the same weight.
Because the women we resent for taking up too much space are often the ones showing us how much space was always ours to claim.
Simone de Beauvoir, from a letter to Sylvie Le Bon-de Beauvoir quoted in Simone de Beauvoir: A Biography
Christa Wolf, from her essay collection titled "One Day a Year: 1960–2000," originally published in 2003
Black Sex
Charles Baudelaire, “Head Of Hair”
“Real sex is worship, not just physical performance.”
― Lebo Grand, Sensual Lifestyle