What have people told you you’re too much of? I’ll go first: too emotional and too loud. This teaser from my podcast @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally titled Always Anxious) is for anyone who’s been labeled too loud, too sensitive, too ambitious, too quiet, too complicated, too confident, too soft. Let’s name it. Comment yours below — I’m really curious.
Just now realizing that I got to be a part of a cultural reset on @euphoria. I really have lived so many lives. Absolutely maximizing my time on this planet to the fullest. Also considering feeling a sense of accomplishment in the near future. I’ll let you know how it goes. What’s your toxic trait?
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
In honor of girlhood and the latest @alwaysanxious pod episode. Choose your fighter and share to claim. ily 🫶🏻 💋
8 years, in 10 seconds, transcribed into my very first personal essay and episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast. Delivered (accidentally) to the world on the final day of my Saturn Return. It’s been a crazy decade and a wild 24 hours to say the least. Thank you for sharing your honesty and authenticity with me. I feel truly free to be and create what I want with no self inflicted limitations now. It feels so good. 😊 ♥️
What’s your dream bag? I’ve never dropped money on a purse because my true love is shoes but I feel like it’s time! Also can we please bring back long form content? I want a 20 minute video of your makeup collection so we can be codependent while doing tasks together.
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?
What happens when girlhood ends before you’re ready and womanhood begins on someone else’s terms? In this deeply personal episode of @theunreliablenarratorpodcast (formally known as Always Anxious, I unpack the invisible pressures women face to grow up at the “right” time, in the “right” way, and why no matter what path we take it never seems to please anyone. While writing my essay The Quiet Collapse of Girlhood, I sat down with two of my close friends Tallulah Willis and Sara Coates to have honest conversations about growing up, body image, public scrutiny, identity, and the quiet grief that often comes with leaving girlhood behind. From generational trauma to societal timelines to the aching nostalgia of innocence lost, this episode dives deep into the pain, the power, and the personal reclamation of becoming a woman on your own terms. I asked everyone through the interview process what their internal age was, the answer always surprised me. I would love to know how old you are and what your internal age is and why?