How do you feel in your body? Do you accept yourself — your shape, your skin, your scent, your weight? Do you enjoy touching yourself? Do you like what you see in the mirror?
How much do you feel like yourself — not the version you're "supposed to be," but truly yourself? How freely can you show up, without shame, without fear?
How well do you know your own boundaries — and can you protect them?
How well do you know what brings you pleasure — and can you show the way to it?
These are not rhetorical questions. I ask because I spent a long time unable to answer them honestly. I spent a long time claiming my own life back from myself. My "no" was trampled and ignored by the person closest to me at the time. There was no room for pleasure. There was no room to show up at all.

The taboo on the female body
There are so many taboos around feminine expression in this world that I want to speak about it louder.
The female body is sexualised. Shamed. Judged. Made into an object — of someone else's gaze, someone else's verdict, someone else's desire or disgust. And in all that noise, it's very hard to hear yourself. Very hard to look at yourself and see not what others see — but what is actually there. And to embrace your own beautiful feminine nature.
Because the female body is a work of art. A divine vessel. Something capable of generating extraordinary energy from within — giving life, creating love, filling spaces with power.
This is not vulgarity. This is not provocation. This is not an object without boundaries.
On the comments
I regularly encounter the sexualisation of my content. I receive comments — mostly from men — that carry exactly that gaze: objectifying, possessive, boundaryless.
I usually ignore them. Not from weakness — from understanding. Each person fills the world with what they carry inside. That is not my story.
My story is different.
I want to show the female body as beauty. As art. As a source of magnetism and inspiration — not for someone else's gaze, but first and foremost for herself.
Because a woman who lives in contact with her body has the power to change the world.
"A woman without shame in her expression, without fear of being herself. Alive, passionate, and free."
