common origins of suffering, euphoria, and ferret
substack

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common origins of suffering, euphoria, and ferret
substack
Karl Marx was disabled, and relied on Engels for rent.
A Hidden Cove on the Costa Brava (read more on Substack) 🤍
there is a level of seduction that exists beyond the body. something less tangible, and perhaps more potent. anais nin understood this idea about how desire does not begin with touch but with language, perception, and the sharp electric pull of a mind that challenges and excites you. in her journals, desire is not just a physical hunger but a hunger of the intellect, an unraveling of thought before an unraveling of the body. to be drawn into someone’s mind, to feel their thoughts press against your own, can be more intoxicating than any physical closeness.
—Caitlyn Richardson, 'can intellectual intimacy replace physical desire?', in milk fed
link to the article
siraj's tumblr blog
siraj's gofundme
via Colton Brown-Underwood
The quiet negotiations. The restraint. The cost of belonging. I wrote about why that kind of recognition matters…and what it can shift in culture when stories get the interior right. Full piece is live on Substack.