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BPD: The Beauty and Violence of Feeling Everything

 

BPD: The Beauty and Violence of Feeling Everything

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Wikipedia uses “The Brooch” by Edvard Munch as an illustration for Borderline Personality Disorder. A soft and uneasy face surrounded by an imposing amount of dark mass and uncontainable wavering lines, her gaze feels distant like the one of someone who’s finally unwillingly surrendered after fighting for too long. Her brooch at the bottom centre of the painting, a fixed point in the midst of it all, a weak attempt to hold it all together. 

When I was diagnosed with BPD 3 years ago, I felt my heart sink to my guts, I was hit with the realisation that this was my forever. I sat in my psychiatrist’s office as he handed me a prescription  of pills, my vision blurred by all the tears. I asked myself in that moment if it was worth being alive if it meant that I had to be medicated to feel normal. It was a tough and lonely battle for months, trying to keep it together and to appear as stable as possible. It was coincidentally during the first relationship that felt real to me, the first time I think I really fell in love. I was terrified to lose that because of my state, to be seen differently, to be misunderstood.

But when the pills didn’t work and I dragged myself back to that stale office, I was told that it was maybe time to take “a breather”, that I was to expect a call for them to pick me up, so that I can be amongst big trees and by the river, where I’d make friends with people that’ll understand and I would be fed a cocktail of more pills that will allow me to “relax”. Funnily enough, because of the medication I was on, I had really deep sleeps that made me miss the phone call. I never called them back because I didn’t want it to win. It was the first and best step I have taken to growing out of it and although the path has been rocky ever since, I have never hit a low that bad in a very long time. All it took was showing up for myself whenever I could. 

I didn’t tell anyone apart for Ruby, because I have never hid anything from her. I carried that shame for a very long time. 

I have the type that is incredibly concealed and controlled, some call it “quiet BPD”. Externally I am high functioning, I have strong friendships and maintain them well. I hold commitments and am able to keep jobs. I have been told many times that I am a calming presence and complimented me on my emotional intelligence. It takes a lot for me to lose it during arguments, I’d have to be very comfortable or pushed to the limit. Many actually come to me for advice for the matters of the heart or to find guidance in complex relationship dynamics. I listen intently and am careful with my words adjusting them to the person in front of me. From the outside I look like the opposite of it all. 

BPD is constantly portrayed by chaos and volatility, I am none of that. All that external madness that is expected of me is turned inwards, despite the occasional moodiness in front of those I feel most comfortable with, everything happens inside. This happens because I understood from very early on that showing these big emotions and having these big reactions can lead to abandonment and rejection, BPD’s biggest triggers. 

Once triggered, this distress is silently brutal, lonely and dark. Chronic shame and intense self-criticism that if heard out loud would make many fall to their knees and breakdown. Days on end ruminating and over-analysing relationships dynamics, day dreaming about scenarios and coming up with solutions to get ahead if they ever were to come true. Working over time to stop myself from doing insane impulsive decisions to not let the mask fall that leads to such emotional exhaustion that I end up feeling so numb and dissociate for days. Many may not know this but one of the main symptoms of BPD is severe body dysmorphia. I have no idea what I truly look like as a whole. Every mirror feels like a fun house mirror, constantly shape shifting. This is equally true when it comes to my self-worth one instance can take me from one extreme to the other, one moment I am god and the other I do not deserve anything good to happen to me ever. Those who truly know me and have had a glimpse of this often sit there perplexed by this all, asking how is that I cannot see what it is they see in me, why it is so hard for me to be kind to myself. I just tell them that my own brain and the way that I am wired makes it very hard to do so. I wish I was as brave as the people with regular BPD, the way they allow themselves to reveal their true selves despite sometimes being perceived as crazy and unruly. How free they are in their madness, how freeing it must feel to play out impulsions letting it all go and have nothing pent up anymore. But I find peace in knowing that at least I am not hurting others and that I love myself enough to not let this condition rob me from the connections I cherish most and to let make me make irreversible decisions that will harm me later. 

I pride myself on working very hard to finding ways to soothe myself and to heal the effects of the things that happened to me that led me to be the way that I am. I try to give myself grace and reassure myself that it what happened is not my fault. I try my best to not be angry and instead keep it pushing because what happened happened and I can’t reverse it. Those who have harmed me will not be the ones that will fix it, so all I can do is take matters into my own hands. 

And of course, to see beauty in it. There are such beautiful traits in Borderline Personality Disorder. And if you, reading this, have BPD let me remind you of the wonderful things of this condition of ours. 

Never loving halfway.  

I recall having a group conversation with a few people somewhere in Manhattan about girls with BPD. Two young men had opposing views on their experiences dating them. One had a difficult time dealing with the mood swings and outbursts and the other well saw it differently. He said that he had never been loved by someone like this particular girl, sure she may have reacted oddly to certain things and needed more reassurance than most but, there was something pure about the love he experienced with her. She never loved half way.

They conversed about this not knowing about my condition yet it was interesting to see an outside perspective on the matter. I have always wondered if people felt the intensity that we as BPD people, feel. When we love, admire, or trust someone, it can feel consuming, immersive, and emotionally total. I sometimes even have strong physical reactions to feelings for others. It feels like I am about to burst open. It resembles child like adoration, curiosity arises and I find the need to understand the ins and outs of the person. Everything about them matters. Deep questions about them may feel like probing but it is just just genuine interest, I feel the need to know it all. And after observing them so much, I find myself loving things that they have not even noticed about themselves. I may have just met you but if I like you already I will have no trouble giving you anything, people close to me tell me all the time that some moments are not appropriate and some are not deserving however it feels like second nature. And when well received, I know that I can make anyone’s life better and it will never feel like work, my heart is big enough. And I personally think that’s an awesome skill. 

This is something that I show even more in my friendships, there is nothing more important to me than making those around me feel special, heard and seen. I have been blessed with friends that understand me and have big enough hearts to receive all this love I have for them. 

Now that I know I am capable of loving this deeply, I’ve had to learn not to cross my own boundaries in the process. Just because I can give the world to someone does not mean I should. That kind of care should be earned too; just because devotion comes easily to me does not mean everyone deserves access to it. I had to fight the quiet panic that told me I had to give everything of myself in order to be worthy of staying for, as if abandonment could only be avoided through self-sacrifice. But I am learning that people leaving will never kill me, because I will always have my own back. I am beginning to understand that love was never meant to feel like the slow exhaustion of oneself. It is also meant to feel peaceful. Gentle. Easy.

You are not too much, you may have just been giving your love and care to someone that is not able to receive it. It may feel tiring that it seems to always feel one sided, but you probably have just been pouring it all  in the wrong places. When done right, I promise it will be cherished and reciprocated. 

Deep Empathy and Emotional Insight.  

Because relationships to others can feel emotionally high stakes, we become extremely skilled at catching things that other’s don’t—micro expressions, minor shifts in demeanour and tone, body language etc. And because we have feel everything so intensely this has led us to feel deeper empathy for others. This means if anyone is going to clock you are feeling unwell or uneasy it is a person diagnosed with BPD and on top of that we are going to work overtime to fix it. I have found myself unable to enjoy a social gathering because I can feel that someone feels left out of uncomfortable and try my best to fix that. Someone with BPD may feel like home in a new space and will know how to make sure you are okay and feel seen.

Everything and more. 

I always say that having Borderline Personality Disorder is, in some ways, the most intense form of experiencing life to its fullest. Every emotion feels amplified, every feeling on steroids, and it’s difficult to fully put into words. There have been times when I’ve dreaded being this way, times when I’ve grown exhausted by the intensity of it all, but with a shift in perspective, I often find myself feeling grateful for it too. When even the smallest things go right, it can feel like heaven exists on Earth. A day spent rotting in bed with my friends or sharing a good meal with my mum can suddenly become something overwhelmingly beautiful, almost painfully wonderful in its intensity. And the bad feelings can feel just as consuming, like they might physically destroy me, sharp pains in the chest, a heaviness that makes everything seem dark even on the most beautiful day. It becomes difficult not to spiral into oblivion, difficult to believe there is any way out of something that, objectively, was never that deep to begin with. Yet despite it all, those moments also remind me how profoundly alive I am. They are proof that I am capable of feeling everything in its fullest form, even when it hurts. But maybe the best part is that when everything feels like it has burned down and the dust has finally settled, I somehow bloom back to life through the ashes. Each time, I return a little stronger, carrying a kind of peace that I imagine some people only ever experience in death.

Vahine Blaise, Bali, Indonesia,

May 2026

On the Run

 

On the Run

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Sometimes it gets to me, the sheer loneliness of always being away. It is an odd concoction of feelings, this feeling of deep gratitude for the opportunities I have been given and the deep guilt of feeling unsettled and bad. My eyes have been fed with unbelievable beauty that the world has to offer, I have tasted such a colourful array of flavours, learned the subtleties of many cultures. I have gotten to know certain places intimately and have been lucky enough to visit some cities over and over again to the point that I feel the same familiarity and ease as I do at home. Homesickness is a rare occurrence, however when it hits, it absolutely destroys. I am inconsolable for a few hours, as the tears run down my face and I silently sob. I do not care to hide my face because I am in a city that is not mine and the faces I am met with, I will never see again. 

I have trouble declining opportunities, no matter how tired or afraid I am, I never say no. Because, there is no worse feeling to me than never knowing what could be. So I’ll hop on those planes, my knees may ache on the crammed economy seat and I maybe have landed from somewhere else just a few days ago before taking off again but I know that now I will know what could be. 

As I wait in an airport, dragging my feet and luggage across these sanitised super buildings from gate to gate, I watch friends, and couples and families traveling together, sharing the journey, something so dull and boring, becoming a part of their memories. I can’t help but feel like the day I moved schools at age 6 and saw all the girls grouping up with their friends they have made the years before, I sat alone and wondered when I was going to have friends too. I have the gift to remember the slightest details of very normal occurrences but all the trips to these massive airports have slowly meshed into one. So many hours feeling so insignificant. 

I run to places when things don’t work out the way they should, when things get hard, I fantasise about how this feeling of not doing enough or not being enough will change when I am far away. That the distance I create will, in time, make them miss me, need me. 

I run and hope that I’ll miraculously land in a place new where things will slowly unfold and without even realising everything would have had fallen into place. But, as the excitement of the new dies off slowly and the reality and that feeling of dread finally settles back, the urge to run again takes over. And before I know it, I am yet again planning my great escape. 

There is also this sense of constant feeling unfamiliarity that follows. I am so blessed to have people I am close to all over the planet, people that feel like home and take me into their homes and make me feel like I have always lived there too. But, once I step out of that intimacy and they bring me into their outside worlds is where I feel yet again like an outsider. Introduced to new people again and again, some faces I recognise from my last visits with whom I can somewhat have better conversations with apart from the small talk. I sit in silence with a slight smile as they recall funny anecdotes that include people I have never heard of. Some amazing connections have been made in the past and I have made plenty of friends but I never stay long enough to nurture any relationship for them to evolve into anything more than watching each other lives unfold through our social medias. 

This is also the same when I come home to the island after long stretches of time abroad, where I have to be introduced to newcomers by my life long friends. I am so unsettled by the closeness they have a created, maybe sometimes out of jealousy, riddled with the feeling of having had missed out on quality time with those I love most. Nothing sucks more than being the new girl in my own home. 

The rapid gentrification of the island can also be destabilising,  places that once brought me comfort are suddenly ripped away or built on without what it feels like no warning. My childhood neighbourhood once quiet, peaceful yet a little eerie is now just janky bars where frat boys black out. The charming beach shacks that sold the best lassis are now crushed by ginormous beach clubs. I have ran away from home and can’t seem to recognise anything anymore. Had I known things would change this way, I may have appreciated the life I once had. 

I wonder if all of the relationships I had left for months would’ve grown stronger or those who could’ve been would have become something real. If love would for once been real and safe without the knowledge that I would once again leave. If that one person I had met the day before my flight could’ve been the one. If I am ever capable to have a real relationship knowing that all I do is run. 

I have lived through so many serendipities and have lived most of my life aimlessly, a life filled with beauty. The unknown is exciting and scary, it’s filled with adrenaline and leaves a lot of space for wonder. 

Yet, a life where roots are planted a little bit everywhere or sometimes yanked out to be planted into new soils over and over again can be hard to care for, if abandoned will slowly die and if lackadaisically nurtured will never achieve its full potential and growth. I have planted pieces of myself everywhere, only to realise that without stillness, nothing truly takes root—not even me.

There are times where it is important to sit still and sometimes watch the paint dry. To sit in the discomfort and really sit on it. 

Because, no matter how often or how far I run, I can never outrun myself.

Vahine Blaise, Bali, Indonesia,

April 2026

Big Bite Of The Apple

 

Big Bite Of The Apple

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I travelled to New York to obtain my social security number, hoping it might eventually allow me to earn money with the O-1 visa I received for what seems like my waning modelling career. Visiting New York often serves as a stark reminder of the challenges of entering a new market, yet it’s always enjoyable, thanks to a remarkable group of girls in Manhattan.

They’re like the real-life, twenty-something cast of Sex and the City mixed with the quirkiness of Girls—each with her own defining quirks and unforgettable personality. They have it all: college degrees, thriving careers, supermodel looks, razor-sharp wit and a charming touch of awkwardness. Four single girls just trying to figure it out in the Big City: Alison, Jasmine, Sav, and Lily. But of course, you can’t have everything. The universe might’ve blessed them with brains, beauty, and ambition, but it definitely held back on one thing: a decent dating scene.

Jasmine is DJing at one of those Fashion Week events I love, mostly because you get free stuff. This time, they’re serving bites and free-flowing martinis, an important detail, as you’ll soon see. As always, before even stepping out in New York, I spiral over what to wear. There’s this weird pressure I put on myself in this city, I never quite feel like I’m enough. Not rich-looking enough, not cool enough, not like I belong.The girls’ social circle is filled with successful young people, many from powerful families or with careers most dream of at twice their age. And naturally, I’m afraid to stand out, in the wrong way.

After eventually giving up and settling on an outfit, I head out, walking north on Elizabeth Street toward Prince. The evening is buzzing. Sidewalks are full, restaurants overflowing with energy. My favourite thing to do in New York is walk around with my headphones in, pretending my eyes are a camera filming filler scenes for a movie. I walk faster than usual, I’m running late. I text Alisson to see where she is: eight minutes away. I wait across the street from the restaurant, nervous to walk in alone. I spot a few social media personalities I’ve seen on my For You Page more times than I can count. It’s such a strange feeling seeing them in the wild. Even stranger is watching them perform for the camera in real life. Their presence feels so much smaller, almost underwhelming. Jasmine sends me a photo of myself from inside and urges me to come in, so I do, awkwardly telling the door girl that I’m with the DJ.

I make my way to the booth where I join Jasmine, Alisson, and Lily, turns out, I’m the tardiest one. I’m immediately handed a dry martini and a baby slider. As we wait for Jasmine to wrap up her set, the rest of us sit outside, downing a few more drinks as we talk about their recent double-date trip to Turks and Caicos, funded by a finance bro who didn’t even make it on the trip due to last-minute work stuff. Alisson is realising that the boy who invited her there in the first place might not be the kind she should be seeing, he’s not ambitious enough and a little too vain for her liking while Lily thinks she might have fallen in love with her guy, ignoring the fact that he might have a major substance problem. A true hopeless romantic. 

I’ve grown to love martinis ever since my first sip in Dime Square just a year ago, it’s been the only cocktail I can truly enjoy since. Sav has a date later tonight but offers to grab a drink beforehand at Lucien. Jamie wraps up her set, and we all spill out into the night. Lily can’t join us for the rest of the evening, she has an early trip to Philly for work, so we kiss her goodbye before hopping into a car bound for the East Village.

As expected, the place was jam-packed. Speaking of the devil, the Turks and Caicos boys were stood outside, smoking cigarettes with a group of friends. Despite what Alisson said about him earlier, she seems completely smitten and greets him with a tight hug. 

Luck strikes when the cute hostess tells us there’s a free table in the back. We squeeze through the narrow path, the noise levels almost unbearable, though I’ve noticed that’s just the American way. Their voices carry, and it’s always easy to spot them in Europe. I slide into the booth. Next to us sit two older men and two young women, a sight far too common in this city. The men take the booth while the women sit on the chairs, which I find incredibly unchic. Jasmine orders a single tentacle of octopus, and the rest of us stick to martinis.

Sav arrives with a friend I’ve heard about through the girls, an incredibly talented photographer who captures beautiful images that resemble movie scenes. That’s the thing about New York, you’re constantly crossing paths with these brilliant creatives, and I can’t help but wonder which of them will become the icons of our generation, the ones whose work people will look back on forever.

Sav still hasn’t heard from her date, apparently, he had a show at the gallery he works at. Now he’s stuck at a gallery dinner, and it would be distasteful for him to leave. “Then why say 8:30? If he knows he can’t make it in time. Ugh, they all suck.” They all suck, but like everyone screaming this, we still put up with it. We’ve all ordered the Uber to his house at 1 a.m. at least once, even though the date was supposed to be much earlier. We finish our drinks. I’m feeling a little tipsy now, everyone is, and no one’s ready to go home.

We run out in our little heels. The weather is pleasant, it’s September but it feels like a summer night. Someone hails a cab, and we stuff all five of us inside. Like all roads, ours leads to Bar Oliver.

Here we order some more, there are no hard liquor allowed as they are situated right in front of a church, which I did not know was a rule. Bummer. Because as much as I probably do not need it, I’d love another martini. The younger server that Jasmine has been crushing on lately is not working today so we may not be lucky enough to have a free drink this time around. They have a lovely beer I enjoy, so I’ll just get that, to my drunk brain logic because it is less strong somehow it’ll sober me up. We stand because there are no seats available, so we put our drinks on this yellow box that looks like a mailbox but isn’t. It’s been our “table” a lot of the time as Bar Oliver has been really busy. Our little comfort spot before we get moved to a table. We mingle with the people who are already here, some faces I have started to recognise over time and can now comfortably have conversation with. This night, I feel like I belong a little more, it’s starting to feel like Martin Boire et Manger for me, my favourite bar and my second home in Paris. But as always, us girls gravitate towards each other. 

Once seated, Lily’s boy is sat across from us, as we are swiping through Jasmine’s hinge, swiping “no” to most of them. He tries to give his input, however Jasmine is just rolling her eyes at him, we don’t care for male opinion, especially not from him and not for this. We find out that although Lily has a work trip early tomorrow, she had been texting with him and he is going to head to her place after drinks at the bar. 

She waits in her apartment and grows more and more frustrated before ultimately telling him that if he didn’t leave now, he was no longer invited. We see him get in a car as he says his quick goodbyes to everyone at around 1 am. When he arrives at her place, they have the polite 20 minute hang out before ultimately getting down to it. It was sloppy and lazy before he collapsed next to her and fell asleep too fast. 

Alison is across from us, intertwined with her pretty boy. They look in love, “it’s too bad he is the way he is,” Jasmine whispers, “they look quite cute together”. The funny thing is that Jasmine had made out with the pretty boy before, a couple of times but that’s New York for you, a really big incest pool. Sav is going back and forth with us about if she should text her date, or if she should leave it. But if she were to text, what would she say? We settle on something “passive aggressive but chill”, because we want him to get the impression that “he low key fucked up but we don’t really care”. 

As the night unfolds, we lose a few soldiers along the way, but the core troops still refuse to go home. The war against the alcohol running through our veins isn’t over yet. Why waste a perfectly good drunk on a night that ends too early? What’s the point of a hangover so brutal, so unforgettable, if not to stretch out the thrill of balancing on that fine line between drunk and blacked out?

Jasmine calls a car and punches in the address for the Nines—a bold move, though Sav knows the owner; they were neighbours or something like that. Her upbeat energy and that slightly intimidating insistence of hers can get you far in the city that never sleeps, so I’m not worried, if someone’s going to make something happen, it’s her. The car arrives, but we suddenly realise one of our troopers is missing. She’s locked in a bathroom stall. Sav rushes in to check and comes back out, breathless: “She’s screaming at him in there.” Pretty boy’s been taken hostage, facing the lethal cocktail of Lexapro and alcohol. The clock’s ticking, our buzz is fading, and I’m sent into the battlefield to rescue the hostage and retrieve our trooper, so we can make it to the next bar before the night slips away. “Alison, c’mon the car is here.” I knock gently, “Coming!”. I run out again, but the car is here and the meter is running, by the time Alison is out, we all know that we have lost a soldier, we must continue on without her. “I’ll meet you guys there, I promise.” All we can do is hope that she’ll be back on the journey with us, but we know that this usually means it is over. 

We are so little compared to these buildings, sometimes when I think about it too much I get frightened at the realisation of how massive everything is, how insignificant we all are. So small, I almost don’t matter, the world feels too big. But I have to stop spiralling on my own in the back of this cab or I am going to be sick. I should listen to the French song Sav is playing out of her iPhone as her silhouette dances in the dark car, her face gently lit at a red light. We collectively wonder where Alison could’ve gone or why the hell she was screaming at the boy, before we arrive to the Nines. I am nervous, I fear the I am going to hold my friends back when the bouncer takes a good look at me and tells me that well they all can get in apart for me, why is it that my brain always imagines the worst scenarios possible. I need to compose myself. The people before us are dressed to the nines (pun intended) yet they are turned away by the bald door man. Jasmine and I push Sav to the front because she knows how to do the talking and we cannot let our awkwardness ruin it all for us. As expected, Sav works her charm and her amazing people’s skills, casually pulls out a first name and the doorman is charmed, his tone went from professional to casual quite fast and in the moment, I knew that I could be wearing a singlet, board shorts and flipflops I would’ve still gotten in. 

“Mid White Boy is coming here,” Sav announces, “it’s like midnight,” I say “I know but he’s coming straight from the dinner.” Knowing Sav I’m surprised she even let him come. 

We are sat in the booth and surprise surprise, order another martini. Jasmine has been texting with a new friend of hers, that happens to be a breakout artist, recently finding superstardom. Her and a group of friends finally join us, and at this point, I do not remember much. Just snippets of the conversation I had with this girl asking her how it feels like to experience fame suddenly the way she has, how it feels to be recognised a lot.  We were pleasantly surprised and overcome with joy to see that Alisson honoured her promise and ended up joining us after all. 

So did Sav’s Mid White Boy. Sav seats at the bar to have some one on one time with the boy. She couldn’t really capture his aura, on one hand he’s sexy talking about alligators in the south and driving his truck, yet on the other he’s in the Nines with a backpack. The conversation got a little dull so she suggested that they join our group outside for a cigarette. She gave me “the look” before asking me in French to talk to him a little and ask him questions please, just to break the ice”, so that he wouldn’t understand. I did, and as expected from a mid white boy, he gave me very mid white boy responses. 

Next thing I know, I am sat in a very crammed car heading to a club that according to Jasmine is a no-go for many New Yorkers. But we were a bunch of people that do not know how to call it a night. We stand outside and stared at the building, still contemplating if we truly have it in us to go. At this point, it was Jasmine and I and the superstar and her friends. 

Meanwhile, Alisson and pretty boy made it home. It came to a point where her body couldn’t handle it anymore and decided it was time for it to cleanse itself from all the poison she had consumed that night. As she was kneeling over the toilet, she drunkely asked the pretty boy to hand her her phone. When she handed it back, he took advantage of the moment to keep the device unlocked. When he finally put her to bed and she was sound asleep, he proceeded to go through her phone and type in his name in her messages. There he found an array of messages she had sent to her friends, belittling him and calling him all sorts of things. He sat there for hours scrolling and reading through all of the realisations she has had about him and feeling more and more emasculated after each message. He cried himself to sleep that night next to the very person that caused it. 

As we finally gathered the courage to go into the building, the superstar expressed that she needed to go pee before entering. She insisted to do so outside because she really had to go and refused to wait in line for the loo. We agreed and told her we’d wait for her. After a good 20 minutes, she still hasn’t returned that’s when we started to worry. We circled the block and no sign of life whatsoever. We imagined the worse, what if she was kidnapped? I envision what the headlines would say. 

Her friends called the hotel multiple times to see if she’d been seen entering, no confirmation. I smoked a cigarette as we all try to figure out what to do. I regretted it instantly. I was hit with the nausea you get when you’ve had one too many cigarettes and too much alcohol sloshing in your belly. I crush the rest with the sole of my shoes in hopes it’ll go away, yet it persists. I couldn’t stand still as I was gradually getting sicker and sicker. The superstar’s friends decide to go directly to the hotel to see if she’s back, I try to keep my calm as I hug all of them goodbye. 

Jasmine and I start walking back towards Soho, when I finally admit to her that I don’t feel well and I really need to throw up. I tell her how scared I am to vomit. She looks at me deeply in the eyes and says “I am here for you.” In that moment, I have never felt more connected to someone, feeling safe and embraced by those 5 words. I nod, before spreading my legs wide as I yack in the middle of third avenue. 

I lift my head up and am hit with a feeling of pure clarity and lightness. How beautiful the city is at night, the gentle summer breeze as we walk our arms interlocking looking up at the twinkling lights of the massive buildings that now don’t seem to scare me as much anymore. Nothing compares to the company of a sister you have chosen, heels clicking on the sidewalk and your laughs echoing through the quiet streets. 

When we finally reach the cobblestones of Soho, we both agree that the night is not over. To the Submercer we go. We do not know how we made it into that elevator and how security did not stop us, but as we arrive on the right floor, all lights were on. The kind of light that paints you ugly the moment you step beneath it, your pores look like they’re breathing, your eyes sunken, as if you’ve been sleep-deprived for days. Never having gone there before, I think that maybe there is a reception area before the club but turns out we are standing in the middle of the dance floor. One of the staff members politely tell us that the party is over and for some reason I feel like I was caught naked. Mortified, we both ran out of there. We decide that our journey has finally come to an end but you’d be crazy to think that it would end without a stop at the bodega. 

We order our usuals, a chopped cheese for me and a BLT for Jasmine to go. We hang around the place to flirt with the cute bodega guy before stumbling back to the apartment. We seat on the dining table half dressed, makeup running down our faces, barefoot as we hover above our meals and chow it down like we haven’t eaten in years. 

The next morning, Sav steps out of the her Mid White Boy’s building and ran into his slightly hotter older brother. She could’ve sworn that he did a double-take and checked her out. She thought that maybe being siblings gives you the same taste in women and maybe she slept with the wrong one. 

Lily made it to the train on time and was on time for the job barely awake, sat in the makeup chair wondering if coke dick is ever worth feeling like this. 

Pretty Boy left while Alison was still sleeping. When she finally wakes up, she checks her phone to see a missed call from him. She calls him back and could hear in this voice that something was up. He asks her if she remembered anything, she said no, he asks if she remembered the fight at all, still no. 

She offers to come see him at his studio.

They seat across from each other. He asks her if she thinks that he is a bum and all these other things, and she denies them all. He tells her everything that happened, about the bathroom hostage situation and all the things she said to him. She is greatly confused by it all. He takes a deep breath before finally admitting that he went through her phone and read her messages. She sits there in disbelief as she slowly realises that this is, in fact, really bad. She doesn’t even have the time to be angry at him for not respecting her privacy before the feeling of guilt washes over her. She apologises for being mean, and I guess he liked her enough to stay around for a couple more weeks before she ultimately ends things with him. I guess she couldn’t ignore his flaws anymore. 

The discussion ends with him showing her the video of Charlie Kirk getting shot in the neck, making her hangover worse and her stomach churn. 

Jasmine and I wake up in her bed, grateful that we do. We have very little time of peace before I spiral over texts I send to my almost boyfriend at the time. Updates are pouring in in the group chat from all parties. We laugh in disbelief. 

I have lived life with complete freedom, a coincidence of being born into a family, beneath the right flag, and into a time that allowed me to be. I have been gifted with pure luck, that is all. As I grow and realise that unlike myself many of the sisters have never known such weightlessness and have not been given the same chances to simply be. While I laugh, dance, love and dress as I please, I can’t help but feel how fragile this all truly is, for it is not promised that tomorrow will be a breeze. Freedom is fragile and not a choice one can simply make, it can be easily taken away for the benefit of some ideology or by small men on very high pedestals. As thoughts of an unpromised tomorrow, and of the world I have always known slowly disappearing, consume me, all I can do is assert my inner sovereignty and aggressively exercise my freedom while a happy tomorrow still feels at reach.  

Vahine Blaise, New York, United States,

March 2026

Fish Tale

 

Fish Tale

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Because of a genetic predisposition to schizophrenia, I avoid drugs. Instead, I snorkel. 

Many may ask how I could ever compare tripping off acid or doing shrooms to snorkelling, but I believe you get the answer as soon as you finish asking the question. Think about it—you’re floating in water looking down at a whole different world. It feels like you’re flying over intricate cities, watching its inhabitants going on with their lives, very rarely paying attention to what you’re doing. They’ve all got their purpose and their routines, symbiotically co-existing in this beautifully designed chaos, where everyone contributes to the shared ecosystem. I get the same feeling walking through a busy street in a city during peak hour, everybody has a place to go and a place to be and no one is paying attention to me. It feels like I’ve died and no one can see me, and I’m watching over them like some sort of spectre. Witnessing these sea creatures exist makes me realise that I do not matter, life goes on without me and that to me is a form of soft ego death.

I am also reminded of how vast the ocean is and every snorkelling moment is a reminder that I am so small. Just like when on drugs, I start wigging out about how small I truly am and how vulnerable I am in this big blue sea and have to comfort myself by imagining that I am swimming in a fish tank in a Chinese restaurant somewhere and that there are no threats around but people eating sweet and sour chicken.

You cannot convince me that the visuals of hallucinations are better than those you see in the water. I have tried my best to explain a few of the things I have seen, both odd and beautiful, but I can’t seem to get it right, they are too unique, too peculiar to even find the words. I do not have enough skill or vocabulary to do these phenomenal beings justice. But all I can say is how I find it so fascinating how everything in the water is organised. For instance, the shades co-existing, creating such an immaculate symphony of colours, where the fauna matches the flora perfectly. Or the schools of smaller fish of the same breed coming in multiple colours in the perfectly balanced colour palette as they move in such synchronicity. How their stars live among them, coming in different shades of blue, crimson, bright orange and more than anyone can count. Why wait to meet aliens when nudibranchs are a thing, these extraterrestrial-like miniature creatures that come in the craziest forms, or even just cuttlefish that can shape-shift and change colours? Let’s not forget the flora: like these gorgeous lilac seaweed I saw on my last snorkelling trip that resembled feathers of a big bird growing out of vibrant corals, calmly swerving side to side as the current passes.

Many people dismiss fish as dumb creatures made to be eaten, but if you think that, you’ve probably never watched tropical fish in their habitat. Their faces hold so much character — almost human, in a way. The triggerfish, for example, has a stern expression, big lips, and unkind eyes that perfectly match its nasty personality.

My personal favourite is the pufferfish, with its googly eyes and chubby, nervous little body. I once stalked one for a good ten minutes before it couldn’t handle the attention anymore and hid under a rock until I left.

Did you know there’s even a fish with a nose that resembles Pinocchio? I don’t know much about them, but I imagine them as snobby French timekeepers — that’s how vividly expressive these fish faces are; you can almost picture what they’d be like as humans.

Divers know this best: fish have personalities. Some are curious and friendly, and some will come straight for you if you’re in their territory, no matter how much bigger you are. It’s disappointing that we don’t appreciate them as much as we should.

Nothing compares to witnessing a Manta Ray in the wild. These majestic creatures will instantly put you in a trance just by being in their presence. Watching them dance in the blue abyss, some are larger than me but they appear so light, like a light veil dropped from a building gracefully floating in the wind. They are calming and regal and hold this tangible energy that I once again find hard to explain. I will never get over witnessing a sea turtle and find it so endearing that they move through life in solitary and admire how comfortable they are being alone. They remind me of puppies as they play in the reef. But my favourite part is seeing them sleep with their eyes closed surrounded by fluffy seaweed and squishy corals, I had once seen one resting its head on a white shell like it was a pillow.

The ocean equally calms me and makes me think more than any other place. I often think about how fish have no idea what they look like and it made me wonder how life would be if I, like a fish, didn’t know what I looked like. How would that be? Like, does a frog fish know how unpleasant it looks? If it had the possibility to see itself and realise that what it’s looking at is actually itself, would it affect them? These are the kinds of questions that arise as I float about.

But mainly, I think about how I envy their freedom in being born with a set purpose and task, that they were put on earth to do a few things and few things only, resulting in them being freed from any questions on their purpose in this world. They do not have to think about what it is that they are, they just do what was programmed. A fish is free.
I may never be as free as a fish but I have felt freer and freer every single time I am in their presence, learning from them just existing. How sometimes maybe I shouldn’t be so preoccupied about what it is I should be or do and just do what feels natural to me and follow my heart like they do with the current. I have also learned that no matter how small or how insignificant I feel, I belong in this world and have something to contribute, just like how the small fishes are detrimental to the well-being of the ocean life, they matter way more than they seem to. This last statement may contradict what I had mentioned in the beginning but both are true and it may be confusing for some but to me it makes perfect sense.
Where the strongest currents are, where the movements are most intense, is where wildlife thrives, bringing in the richest biodiversity because currents carry the most nutrients. The same goes for life, where the most beautiful things grow from rough patches, and every hardship becomes a chance to grow your internal garden bit by bit. Last but not least snorkelling reminds me to stay curious and look closely at things, to take my time observing and being patient, because in those moments is when I discover the most beautiful gems the ocean can offer.

I can assure you that no drug could ever bless me with lessons so impactful.

Vahine Blaise, Komodo Islands, November 2025

Yung Lean

 

Yung Lean

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I just watched a clip from a Yung Lean interview with the New York Times where he talks about realising that all of “this” isn’t that deep after going sober. In his case, “this” referred to the noise surrounding fame and the music industry but for me, it resonated in a different way.

My mum had asked me to come to the “old house” to see what things I wanted to keep. This was the house we moved into when she finally left an emotionally abusive relationship that she’d been in for over a decade. She has worked very hard to build another home for us now, which we moved into just six months ago. As much as the old house was in an unfavourable area and riddled with rats, it symbolised our freedom. So as much as I hated that house and begged my mum over and over for us to move, or at least fix the collapsing roof, it gave us the shelter and the mental peace we had been deprived of for many, many years. Freedom from living with that man felt so good that I never mourned the more luxurious lifestyle I’d had living with him.

All I cared about salvaging were my diaries. Most of them were half-empty because I loved buying new ones but never managed to stay consistent with journaling. I even found old audio notes buried in my phone, my sleepy voice whispering various “deep thoughts” that honestly made me cringe a little. Some of the writing, though, was surprisingly good. I was impressed by how clearly I could articulate my feelings back then, how well I understood what I was going through as a tween.
I sat there for hours, reading, listening, and reliving every emotion, instantly transported back to the person I was in those moments.

Then came a wave of sadness when I realised that so many of the things I’d been worried about or struggled with hadn’t really changed. It hit me that I’ve spent years feeling upset and confused about the same things, again and again. It felt maddening, like Groundhog Day repeating the same thoughts as if trapped in some loop of obsession. I pictured myself as that person at the metro station, rocking back and forth, mumbling the same sentence endlessly.

Nothing in life should be deep enough for me to struggle with for over a decade. Or at least, I no longer want to accept that for myself.
I’ve tried to give myself grace and I still believe in being patient with myself but I think I may have gone too far. I’ve spent years viewing myself as this chubby, pouty little crybaby who constantly needs care and attention, pointing fingers at all the people who have hurt her. I’ve tried to heal, and to some extent, I have. But I see now that I could never fully do it, because I’ve given too much power to the things that happened to me. As much as being shaped by the trauma you’ve endured is something we cannot change, being defined by it is a choice. It also means giving too much credit to those who have disrespected me, allowing them enough power to live within me for so long. Why would I want them to be a part of me forever? Who are they to have such an impact on the way I move through the world? Why would I allow their actions to rob me of experiencing the beautiful things in this life?

None of us are special. This may sound harsh at first, but if anything, it’s comforting. No one is special enough to have a completely unique thing solely happen to them. Even when something feels like an isolated struggle, we are never truly alone. The beauty of the human experience is that, no matter the distance between us, someone, somewhere, will walk a path that mirrors our own. So to excuse bad behaviour or have a perpetual case of the sulks because that one thing happened to you is too easy. Because there is someone out there who went through the same thing, yet was able to be decent and happy because, well, they simply made the effort to do and be better. It may feel like there is no light at the end of that tunnel sometimes, but there is always a light, always. I don’t know anything about anything, but this is something I could swear down on.

There is real power in letting go. It no longer matters whether they feel regret or share your pain. I’ve learned that it doesn’t make things any easier. Maybe a touch of empathy is better than none, but the pain remains all the same. Now that they’ve done the damage, now what? Are we just going to sit there and scream at the void with no one listening? Maybe it’s time to turn around, walk the other way, and continue on the path.

Now, if you’re reading this and feel some type of way about what was said, I understand and I’m sorry. Who am I to dismiss how you feel?
But all I hope is that you’ll look back one day and realise that Yung Lean was right — it wasn’t that deep.

Vahine Blaise, Bali, November 2025

The Elephant

 

The Elephant

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I have been blessed with a perfect memory. Not the kind that recalls math formulas or reminds me to return the sweater you left at mine but the kind that remembers how it felt when your fingers accidentally grazed my forearm. I remember the way you looked at me that one time, the crack in your voice when you told me what happened. I remember the moment exactly, how it felt, entirely, perfectly.

I have memories from as early as three years old. Some people tell me that’s impossible, that I must have invented them. But how could that be, when I’ve had them for as long as I’ve been conscious? There’s never been a version of my life without them. And if they’re made up, then how is it that my mother remembers them too?

I can still remember the sounds of the waves crashing as my mum put me in bed in our wooden beach house, how it lulled me yet also terrified me. The head of the snake my father beheaded on the step of my childhood bedroom, the way the ants crawled out of its mouth and the its dead eyes staring back at me. I will remember my mother’s screech before he did it, begging him to not kill it because it is forbidden in our culture. The feeling of deep joy to see my father come home from work, I still feel his strong hands holding me tight. I also remember those same hands yanking me off the floor after I had ripped his cigarettes open thinking they were little gifts. How my little fingers burned when I decided that the chilli needed a bath in the bathroom sink. The feeling of sneezing while eating my mother’s mushroom omelette in the morning and spitting it all over the place every time I sat on the sunny side of the table, because even then, sun rays made me sneeze. The deep frustration I felt when I’d see my own shadow because I hated how my curly hair looked as I tried to rip the strands off my head. I remember the way he enjoyed the very mediocre cookies my mother and I baked, how hard and sweet they were, how he told me I did a good job. How proud I felt in that moment. I remember the love I had for them both and the love they had for each other.

I remember the day he left us, the day she ran to the beach to find him. The fear and confusion of having to sleep at the neighbours for a few days. The smell of their room when it was only her, how unpleasant it was, like as if her tears had a scent. Oh god the pain, in her voice as she held my tiny head in her hands and how irritated I felt for some reason. I will forever recall the moment I understood that he wasn’t coming back. The moment she couldn’t accept it and ran towards to waves to try and join him. And it was like in that moment, my very little self decided that all I could do was remember as it was the only way to keep him alive somehow. 

I can only speculate that keeping his memory so vividly alive has, in turn, trained my brain to remember everything. It’s a habit I’ve practiced for so long that forgetting now feels almost impossible. In many ways, it’s a gift. I’ve become the keeper of happy times, the key to memories others struggle to recall. When we finally sit down for coffee after months apart, I bring up that one story, and I love watching their faces light up as the sweetness of the moment returns to them. It warms my whole being to see them so touched by the fact that I would remember such detail because it lets them know that I care and I care to remember. 

Being in love with a memory like mine can be magical, it’s a strength that makes me a better partner. The small things you say, even when you’re just muttering to yourself about picking something up from the store, stay with me; I’ll remember and bring it home to you. The way your face lit up that one time I made you tea is enough for me to keep doing it, just to see that flicker of joy again. And the harder things too — I’ll never mention that family member again, because I could tell, from the way your body tightened without a word, how deeply it hurt. My memory allows me to love completely, and to love right. And when I miss you, I’ll remember how your sleepy hand felt resting on my tummy this morning and the way your lashes looked up close when I woke before you, and I’ll close my eyes and remember the smell of your sheets and it’ll be like I was still right there with you. 

Like most beautiful things, this kind of memory carries weight, it haunts, it hurts. Sometimes it feels like a curse, because memory does not choose sides. It lets me recall the warmth of your kiss, but also the ache of the last one. I lie there after it’s all over, trapped in the loop of what was, feeling the ghost of your hands that are no longer there. Your voice, still soft and gentle, repeats itself in perfect rhythm, like a record that won’t stop skipping. My heart keeps falling to my gut, again and again, just as it did the first time you told me. 

I bite my tongue when I meet someone new and feel myself starting to fall, holding back from asking them to please be careful, please be gentle — it’s hard for me to forget. But, I do not say anything at all.

Sometimes it feels like no one understands how isolating it is to be the only one who remembers. As if I were the sole witness to something that never really happened. The pain they caused isn’t real to anyone but me because no one else remembers it. Their words and actions still echo, cutting into me over and over again. And when I try to mention it, even lightly, and they respond with “I said that?”, I realise that I was the only one who suffered. That moment wasn’t shared, it was mine alone. 

I have no choice but to remember. I carry everything with me as life goes on, the good and the painful alike. Sometimes it feels heavy, like being followed by ghosts of my own making, a chronic nostalgia that demands effort just to stay present. But it’s worth it, because I get to keep the sweetest memories too the ones that still glow inside me, shaping the young woman I’ve become. I gather them the way I once gathered seashells and small dead crabs on the beach, my father nearby, watching me with that quiet, knowing smile.

Vahine Blaise, Bali, November 2025

Germination, Anthesis & Phototropism

 

Germination, Anthesis & Phototropism

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I am met every morning with a living painting nestled in my door frame right in front of my bed. It’s hues, textures and minimal movements vary depending on the time and the tides but it is always the same. There sits the little sailboat, peacefully floating on the LaHave River, while the towering trees across the way make me feel like a tiny ant among the moss. My days, like the view I wake to, repeat themselves with indifferent precision. Sometimes, there are brief ruptures, a visit to the market, breakfast at the Rosebay. I had just spent three months in Europe, packing and unpacking my suitcases, crawling from house to house. I felt a sense of relief when I finally put my clothes in the closet knowing that the next time I will pack again will be in at least a few weeks. You’d think I was running away from something, maybe I am.  

It had been colder than usual for the month of August in East LaHave, which I didn’t particularly mind after the many heatwaves experienced in Paris, where my shirts clung to me, sweat dribbling down my back as I biked down Boulevard République to meet my friends at Martin Boire et Manger. 

The sounds here were what Earth was meant to sound like, a beautiful symphony between the blowing wind, the dancing leaves, the sloshing waves and the buzzing bees. I have seen no planes flying above us, only seagulls and flying among us are the most little hummingbirds feeding off the flowers. 

I spend certain mornings soaking myself in the cold water, it feels like a shock at first but slowly a sense of warm calm takes over and there my mind goes numb. Once I get out, I sit still on the sand as the sun slowly loosens up my cold tight skin. I take a moment to myself and think about my eventful summer and how many relationships sprouted and bloomed under the sun. Or the ones that feel like they’d never change that require little to no watering to forever feel like home. Then there were the ones that grew stronger and the ones that slowly wilted away. Of course, there were also the relationships, once a canopy of closeness, stretched gently toward the light. a quiet reaching that, over time, created a little more space than there was before.

I found these different shifts and movements interesting and how intense it had all been, how I was so immersed in it unaware of it all, until I unrooted myself and what felt like a blink of an eye was met with pure isolation. 

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Germination

I looked at the back of the Uber driver’s head as I climbed in the car, “he looks hot”, I said to R who surprised me at the airport after I had been away for months. I greeted him, but he didn’t answer, I figured that maybe the sound of my voice was drowned by the French rap music that was blasting. I was delirious from my seventeen hour flight and couldn’t believe I was back in the city I loved most. I was overwhelmed by how happy I was to be back with my best friend. The driver announced that he had to stop and get gas, as he stepped out, I was eager to see how he looked like, I couldn’t see him in the rear view mirror earlier, his cap covered his face. When I finally turned around to see who had been driving us, my heart stopped. 

Around 16, I discovered his music on SoundCloud after hours spent scouring the internet for new sounds—a teenager dreaming of life beyond the little island I called home. Listening felt like a form of escape, a way to imagine what kids my age might be hearing all over the world, as if it brought me a little closer to them. I dreamed of Paris and imagined that every teenager lived like the characters in LOL by Lisa Azuelos (the original French version, of course—not the one with Miley Cyrus). I pictured them walking around late at night, smoking cigarettes by historical sights, wearing skinny jeans, and holding hands in the pockets of their winter coats. They’d make out everywhere—girls’ hair plastered to their partners’ faces as the winter wind whipped through some park, or maybe it was a quick boob grab-kiss combo in someone’s kitchen during a house party in the 7th arrondissement, thrown while their wealthy parents were off hiding in the countryside for the weekend.

I just found the idea of teenage years in the city, magical. I also only kissed one boy by then, who also made me give him a handjob in some dodgy abandoned house, I got so icked out, I didn’t speak to him ever again. 

I dreamed of teenage romance. 

Going to a French school in Bali, some of my classmates were from Paris. They’d talk about their friends back home and show me their social media profiles. It made me fantasise about Parisian boys—they seemed effortlessly cool, handsome, always well-dressed. There was this casual, detached charm about them that I found magnetic—like so many teenage girls probably did.

I only listened to only two of his songs, they were on repeat for a little while. It felt special to me. It felt like I had discovered a little gem—my secret.

A few years later, I cannot recall which year it was but I had already moved to Paris—I found myself at some random house party that spontaneously happened after a rowdy afternoon at  Jeannette. I walked to the kitchen to serve myself a drink, and there I recognised him, I didn’t really keep up with his music after high school. “Are you that guy who makes music?” “Yeah, that’s me”, “Sick, I used to listen to you in high school”. It didn’t take long to see he was a character—quick, witty, and effortlessly funny. 

I didn’t think of him much at all, I only would run into him occasionally at different bars or parties, with a swift hello and nothing more.

Everything changed when he invited me to the screening of his latest project at the Silencio des Prés cinema last year — a visual accompaniment to his new album. I got the time wrong and showed up too late, completely missing the show. I was bummed as I was very excited to see his evolution as an artist. We passed each other on the staircase, exchanging awkward banter—the foundation of all our past interactions. I told him I missed it all, he told me that there would be no second chances, I asked if he’d play it for me again and he told me that maybe he would. We smiled. I thought he looked handsomely ridiculous—in the best way—with his baseball cap tossed on top of a sharp business suit. 

The cinema transformed into a club, with guests dancing between the rows of red chairs. Drinks were flowing, music was blasting, lights dimmed. I had gotten to know one of his close friends over the years as well, who also made music and had asked me to be apart of his music video, which never happened. I never usually like to indulge in lust with men I have not gotten to know privately first, but something took over me that night. His friend and I danced in each other’s arms and sang the lyrics to “Prototype” to each other. When the cinema party ended, we were not ready to call it a night, someone suggested the Pamela, an underground night club. 

We made our way to the club, when his friend stopped me from walking letting the group pass us. He asked if he could kiss me, I nodded yes. There he kissed me under the Parisian yellow lights of the quiet streets of Saint Germain Des Près. All I could think about was that I wish it was him instead. 

A few months later, I ran into him at a bar and had given him Brookies (a mix of a brownie and a cookie) I carried with me in a ziplock bag. He really liked them and that is how we started having quick conversations through instagram afterwards. I had seen that he was going to DJ at fête de la Musique and announced that he would play Black Eyes Peas, which is arguably one of my most favourite music groups of all time. I responded to the story post and told him that it would be my dream, he told me to come and said that he’d play 7 black eyed peas songs if I wanted to. 

The night came, R and I went to his DJ set at 11 PM and as promised he played all the songs I could ever dream of. The rain started pouring—a refreshing relief after hours of dancing in the thick, humid heat. In moments like that, I felt grateful to be young, full of energy, able to feel everything so deeply and let it all out through wild, aimless movement.

Once that was over, still filled with energy he offered to take us to his music studio to keep the party going, R had to work the next day, so we walked her home. 

Then he told me to sit on his lime bike, which I firmly declined out of fear we’d crash but he told me to trust him. I guess I was drunk enough to finally agree. I screamed and laughed all the way, as he huffed and puffed behind me trying his best to get us there safely, which he managed. His friends joined us, and there we stayed dancing sloppily to music with me laughing at him most of the time. 

Some of his musician friends jumped into impromptu jam sessions, playing whatever instruments were around, while he grabbed the mic and started freestyling—rapping random words, some dedicated to me. 

In a blink of an eye it was 7 am and the sun was up. We found out we lived 5 minutes away from each other this whole time. So we decided to walk home. The city stirred awake, last night’s celebration still lingering in the scattered party cups and crumpled trash glinting in the early light. We slipped out before the street cleaners arrived. Paris felt hungover. In true French fashion, he asked me if I wanted a croissant from the bakery, instead I asked for a pain au chocolat please. We walked side by side, and had a banter-less conversation for the first time. I honestly don’t really remember what we talked about and it all felt like haze. When we finally arrived in front his place, he looked at me and asked if I’d like to come in. I told him, I couldn’t because well, a friend of mine had already expressed that she had a crush on him—which was true. And I couldn’t possibly break the bro code. I also felt uneasy about the fact that I went home his friend earlier that year and something about it made me feel weird. I had already categorised him as a no-go for those two reasons despite the undeniable attraction I had for him deep down. 

Our friendship bloomed over the months, I would come over sometimes in my pyjamas to play video games and eat snacks and go home. Sometimes we’d meet up at the park and just talk about all sorts of things, from music to our ambitions as future parents. Our butts itching on the grass as we took in the sun rays on a wonderful warm fall day. 

He always had a pleasant face—soft eyes framed by thick, baby-cow lashes, and a smile that bordered on movie-star charming. I’m not usually into blond men, but his dirty-blond hair suited him, highlighting the subtle flush of red in his complexion. His voice was comforting, and his laugh had a way of making everything seem funnier. He expressed how it was lovely to be able to have this relationship with me, how we could just talk and do nothing else, I agreed. I think we settled on being friends and were happy with that. 

I had made the decision to move back to Bali that fall to start my business and blog and left abruptly, he found this out on social media and asked me if when I’d be back, I told him I didn’t know. 

And so I spent the next few months back home, focused on building my new career. We still talked now and then—little story replies, bits of banter. He’d ask if I knew when I’d be back, slipping in jokes that hinted he loved me and missed me, and I’d play along.

He kept asking me when I’d come home and I’d still tell him that I didn’t know. Until one day, I did. He kept asking me about details of my flight which I found odd because it wasn’t like we were close to the point where he’d be interested in that type of information. 

It all made sense, when I realised he was the “Uber Driver” filling up the gas tank. I hopped out of the car and gave him a big hug. I was so touched from this kind gesture, especially when I found out that it was initially his idea. I didn’t realise how much he cared for me and this made me question how much I cared for him. 

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He took me to the cinema to watch Lilo & Stitch, and somewhere in the dark, I don’t know what came over me—but I reached for his hand. When we stepped outside, the sun was setting and everything was glowing and orange, like the last good day before the end of the world in a dystopian film. We walked past a salsa dance group by the canal. He extended his hand, inviting me to dance. So there we were—dancing clumsily to Latin music in the middle of seasoned pros, as I belly laughed through it all. We shared a beer at a local bar and spoke more about our upbringing and how much it had affected us. I was impressed by his growth and the way he had handled his traumas and how in tune he was with his feelings. Nothing about it was performative, and I know performative when I see it. He was raw and real. We walked home—our favourite activity to do together at this point, sharing earbuds, listening to our favourite songs, dragging our feet in a sleepy Paris. When we finally made it home, I told him yet again that I wouldn’t come up. I saw a little disappointment in his eyes, but as always he remained graceful as I kissed him on the cheek goodbye. 

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I had to leave again this time to Italy for a few weeks and barely got to see him before leaving. But when I came back, I had the pleasure to house sit take care of his cat while he left on vacation. I grew to his cat love very much. It was funny to be in his home again without him present. I wondered what he’d be doing in here alone, where he’d write his lyrics. I wondered if he danced alone his boxers like I do. I wondered if he cried a lot listening to his vinyls. He was so tidy as a boy, which I liked. 

When he finally came home, we spent more time together and I believe this was all thanks to his fat cat, the reason I’d come visit more often. 

He invited me to hang out in this huge apartment he was staying in for a little while. There we laid on the same bed 2 feet apart watching my favourite movie the world “Super Bad”, where he discovered the magical McLovin. Then we ran out to eat chocolate crepes and as usual, he walked me home. The most mundane thing felt like a movie scene when around him because I have come to understand that just like me, he romanticised everything.

I was starting to have these unwanted feelings creep up on me and have found myself almost being a bitch to him at times to counter them. But that never phased him, it almost amused him. He had no ego. Which made me fancy him even more. 

A few days before having to leave to North America, I had invited him to dinner at a rooftop restaurant that my old roomy worked at (I can never pass a good discount). I stopped by the studio where he was recording his new project and sat on the couch, listening to the voice I’d known before I ever saw his face—still just as soothing. He kindly listened to my input and asking for my opinion even though I had no knowledge in music whatsoever. Then we rode the metro together, knees innocently touching, in comfortable silence. 

We were the goofiest pair in that rooftop restaurant—wide-eyed and excited to try every fancy dish, surrounded by iconic landmarks and a view that felt almost unreal. We didn’t want it to end there, so we walked up the hill searching for ice cream and the first apartment we met. We stood in front of the building recalling that very night, exchanging points of views. We kept climbing until we reached Montmartre, grabbing beers from the iconic épicerie featured in Amélie, before settling onto one of the classic Montmartrois steps, gazing out at the summer funfair lighting up the Tuileries below. There we sat for hours talking. Talking from the children in our families to the deaths of our fathers. 

A couple sat on the steps below us, kissing like they’d been holding back all night—eager, almost ravenous. We watched them, amused, laughing at how intense it was but also thinking it was kind of sweet. I turned to him and said, “Our first kiss is going to be so awkward—just like us.”  “Like this,” I added, before leaning in and mock-kissing him, playfully pressing my tongue against his lips in the most ridiculous way, then throwing my head back in laughter. He just looked at me for a second, a little caught off guard—then burst out laughing with me.

When our butts eventually couldn’t stand sitting on the cold hard stone, we decided to go home. Mid-way before reaching the bottom. He grabbed me by the arm, then cupped my face before landing a soft kiss on my lips. He drove us home on a little moped, Childish Gambino playing through his iPhone speaker. I pressed my chest against his back, our heads separated only by the helmets. It was cold, but I felt warm. 

This time, I went up with him.

Just a couple of days later, I had to say goodbye again—without knowing when I’d be back. “I’m sad,” I said, our fingers laced together in front of my door.
“Why?”
“Because I have to leave again… so soon.”
He smiled gently. “I waited a whole year for you. I’m sure a few months won’t hurt.”

⋆⁺₊⋆ ☀︎ ⋆⁺₊⋆

Anthesis

Jade R and I didn’t get very close until a year and few months ago, but sparks were felt from the moment we sat in some girl’s house talking about astronomy books as the other girls were snorting crushed up pills in the back. 

Despite not knowing each other that long, our bond feels like it was written in the stars and it was meant to be. I wonder if I’d ever feel so connected and close to my future partner like I do with her. I wonder if it could ever truly be healthy to become so close so quickly with someone of the opposite gender. Jade R owns a heart of gold and incredibly, traits that are rare, especially in the glamorous world she is apart of. 

She is, all at once, the luckiest and unluckiest person I’ve ever met—a living collection of life stories, some gut-wrenching, others almost surreally beautiful. She is a beautiful, walking paradox— warm yet sometimes bitter, soft yet harsh. 

She took me into her home, without hesitation, holding my hand through a transition in my life I am internally struggling with, leaving the life I am far too attached to behind. I think about the warmth I feel when she brings me a cold Hojicha in the morning, that she prepared with care, before she lights up a cigarette and serenades me with whatever notes her heart feels like playing on the piano. 

The love we had kept growing and growing so seamlessly, it feels like those friendships you make at the hotel pool when you’re seven years old on vacation. Our laughs echoed through the apartment that felt like home to me and tears were shed in her queen sized bed as her husky quietly slept nearby. Her reassurance made me feel strong and uplifted me, making me braver then I had ever been before. I will always remember seeing her small body quietly sleeping beneath the large duvets, like she had been gently washed ashore, as I tiptoed to the kitchen for some water, careful not to wake her. Or I’d come home from running errands and find her in her home studio, creating the most beautiful music—sitting in the centre of towering speakers, like Godzilla among skyscrapers. Her intimate setup makes her music feel deeply personal—like a silent cry, curled up in the corner of a bed. And I wait impatiently for her music to be shared with all the girls in the world, who will soon feel the comfort I have felt through her voice. 

I cherish our late night dog walks where we shamelessly spoke about everyone because we believe that gossiping is healthy, as we walked past the home of the former French president. How we treat her gentle giant like our own son, as I wonder what it would be like to be mothers together, if we ever decide to be. We constantly complained about how broke we were but didn’t hesitate to treat ourselves to the strip club because we both have a deep understanding of how fragile life truly is.

Jade is a breath of fresh air, the kind that fills your lungs and makes you feel alive and unburdened.

⋆⁺₊⋆ ☀︎ ⋆⁺₊⋆

Phototropism 

His brother was standing by the DJ booth—right in the same spot we’d seen him the year before, same day, one year later. When he noticed us, he greeted me with the big smile they both shared. “He’s around here,” he said. I made a face, jokingly. He shrugged and giggled in response.

When he finally appeared and realised I was standing there, he looked surprised—then suddenly lit up with joy. He pulled me into his arms and told me how glad he was to see me after all this time.

Something about it all felt strangely familiar, like no time had passed. It warmed my heart to see him again.

This was the third year in a row we’d been at this same event, always held on the same day. The first year, we came as a brand-new couple—everything felt fresh and full of promise. The second year, it was post-breakup, with tension still in the air and a flicker of jealousy from him when another man tried to hold my hand.

And now, here we were again.

We stood still in a sea of dancing bodies, yet it felt like we were alone. We reminisced about the days we were in love and all the things we used to do. He took my hand, gently tracing the spade tattoo on my ring finger with his thumb.

“It’s still there,” he said.
“Well, I don’t think it’s going anywhere,” I replied. “It’s pretty permanent.” Unlike us. 

There was a time I naively thought he’d be the one to put a ring there someday—maybe even laugh about the slightly botched tattoo as he did. In hindsight, it was silly of me to think so, we had only been together for such a short amount of time, but it felt real and I had never felt so strongly about a boy before. I’ve learned since then that love isn’t enough. 

We caught each other up on our love lives. He told me he’d gotten into a relationship after me. I told him I’d stayed single.

“You made it hard for me,” I admitted. “You really raised my standards.”

And it was true. He had treated me like a princess, with all these small, thoughtful gestures. I almost felt fully seen—he understood my taste, my humour and appreciated my quirks and for a young girl who’ve never felt that before, it meant the world. Until he betrayed me out of nowhere on a trip abroad. That didn’t exactly help in the trust department.

“You did too.” He calmly responded. 

There were plenty of quiet moments between us, where we simply stood and watched the joyful chaos unfolding in front of us. The flickering lights danced across our skin, staining and unstaining it in turns. We were both deep in thought, unaware of what was passing through the other’s mind.

It’s strange—almost surreal—to be acquaintances with someone who once felt like an extension of myself.  At times, it felt like we moved through the world as one, symbiotic, in step with each other. 

I’ve spent so much time replaying it all, especially the part where I didn’t realise the last day would be the last. It is truly life-changing to experience that kind of weight when pain and anger come from someone you once felt nothing but love and safety with. So many unanswered questions and even when answered, more eventually keep pouring in until you understand that answers, do not necessarily heal. 

How incredible it is to wake up one day and realise—you survived it. Even when it felt impossible, when you were sure you’d never recover, you made it through. Yes, there may still be a pinch in my heart, one that might always linger… but I think I stand taller now.

I’ve come to understand the quiet power of forgiveness and how, in the end, it freed me more than anything. I thanked him for the pain and the betrayal, “it made me grow”, I smiled.

There were moments where I wondered if we could one day be intertwined again and if there could be life growing after Slash-and-Burn. But, like to seedlings once planted side by side, we were now drawn by separate suns, bending and stretching in different directions, silently and peacefully growing. Knowing we couldn’t be growing towards the same sky. 

Vahine Blaise, Nova Scotia/New York City, September 2025

Surrender

 

Surrender

Home » love

God only ever seems close when I’m in pain or afraid and for that I feel guilty. The moment something goes wrong, I come crawling back. It’s almost ritualistic now, the way I mentally escape, fleeing as far as my mind can stretch. The furthest place it can imagine, that’s where I believe God is. Usually somewhere in the depths of the universe, past burning planets, past light itself. And there, in that vast silence, I kneel. I beg. I promise.“I’ll let go. I’ll stop trying to control everything. Just guide me. Give me peace, relief, anything—I’ll follow. I’ll listen. I’ll trust the path.” I don’t know why I do this. But there’s something undeniably calming about surrendering. And yet, I’m not even sure who or what I’m surrendering to. All I know is that I’ve clearly been fighting it and I’ve been punished for it. “I’m just one stupid human girl, naive enough to believe I ever had control. But I get it now. I’m powerless. I have no say. It’s all in your hands. I’m sorry for resisting.” In my mind, I offer up my beating heart still warm, still heavy. It’s theirs now. I’m too tired to carry it anymore. And even as I struggle to lift it, to hand it over, the relief washes over me instantly. 

𓆝 𓆟 𓆞 𓆝 𓆟

My family is mostly Muslims, with a few Catholics scattered in—thanks to my grandfather, who married a few times or at least had kids with a few women. Some of his wives kept their own religions, which now seems surprisingly progressive for the time. There has been a history of religion-related conflict in the country but nothing I had seen or experienced directly. I find that most of us Indonesians are very respectful of each other’s beliefs and have deep respect for one another. My mother never imposed anything on me, she’d say that God will find me when he does and whatever I end up believing in, she trusted that I would know best for myself. She told me all she could do is give me the things she knew and have learned herself through her own spiritual journey, but the Truth will come to me. 

This was different compared to the rest of my family who have always been told from an early age what it was they needed to believe in. However, this “freedom” she had given me in a way made me feel isolated, even though no one ever judged me or her for it. During the holy month of Ramadan, when all of my other cousins went to pray, a piece of me envied them. I envied them for  connecting with other kids in the village through their beliefs. I envied them for knowing how to read and speak Arabic and how beautiful it sounded when they would pray quietly. I admired the beautiful robes they would wear and imagined how nice it must be to be able to pick out the prayer mat. I thought about how nice it was that they shared the struggle of fasting together and how breaking it was something truly special and not just another meal like it had been for me. 

When I briefly expressed that I too wanted to pray and learn more about the holy book, I was met with delighted faces like they had been waiting for me all along. They sat with me and taught me how to say certain prayers, letting me sit behind my aunties so I could follow their movements during worship. “But I don’t know what to say,” I’d whisper.

“Just talk to Him,” they’d reply. “He’ll still listen. You can learn the proper way later.” And so I sat there struggling to find anything to say but express gratitude for my life and my family and asked Him if he’d make sure I get a Blackberry phone. 

I even considered covering my hair, in hopes it would make me feel more connected to Him. As I tried the headscarf in the store, I was complimented by the vendors and how beautiful I looked with a hijab. In some ways, I finally felt like I was fully apart of the family. However, my heart was never really in it. It didn’t last very long though as soon as I left Java and went back to the secular French international school I was attending, all of that was out of the window. 

I tend to picture God as a father figure, a calm, steady male presence who will guide me through the chaos. And yet, the idea of God as a woman resonates more deeply with me. It makes more sense, somehow. Still, like most of the world, I’ve been shaped by the notion of a male God—indoctrinated, really. Maybe that association goes back to when my father died. For a while, my deceased father was my God. 

I was just a little girl when my mother told me he was everywhere.

“Everywhere?” I asked.
“Everywhere,” she said, as we sat on the steps of the house we moved into after she met her second partner. I imagined thousands of tiny versions of him—perched in trees, swinging off stars, crawling through grass, hiding behind cabinets. “He’s always keeping an eye on you,” she told me. I didn’t find that comforting. I found it deeply unsettling. How was I supposed to get away with anything now? Does he watch me pee? 

With time, I understood what my mother was trying to say: that my father would always be with me, watching over me, protecting me in ways I may never fully understand. 

So when I grew up and started to learn more about Islam, I found it hard for me to connect with Him. God to me was a comforting figure, one that didn’t judge me or instilled fear. As much as all of my family members kept on telling me how much God loved me or how he would protect me, this feeling of fear kind of lingered, the feeling that everything I did was wrong. It confused me a lot as a child, I could see how the religion was meant to inspire goodness but I was constantly reminded that I would never be good enough. I struggled to fully immerse myself in it because there were too many things that didn’t sit right with me, especially the lack of tolerance for certain people and perspectives. 

As much as I was told that God forgives and that he loved me no matter what, his followers on Earth never failed to make me believe that this wasn’t the case. For instance, my grandmother’s sister constantly telling me how I shouldn’t be showing so much leg and shoulder every time we’d visit her. Or the men during Ramadan telling me I shouldn’t be surprised if I ever got raped. I was twelve wearing overalls. Although very open-minded and accepting of everyone, my family still fears that one of us would turn out gay. 

I was told many times that it was important to distinguish what was really written and interpretation. That the people who weaponised it or used to it to justify certain acts were not “true muslims” but without the weapon itself, would there be any pain? 

I recall that one time my two classmates in 7th grade having a debate about God, the atheist asked the muslim girl, if God were real why would he let such atrocities happen to innocent people all time? She responded by saying that our experience here on Earth was a test to prove that we are worthy of Jannah—paradise—where pain and suffering ceases for those who deserve it. From that moment on I knew I couldn’t stand behind it. 

I still carry certain shame and guilt for not fully devoting myself to the religion I was born into. And beneath that, there’s a lingering fear, fear of what it might mean if it turns out to be true, fear of facing the consequences of not believing, and the terrifying thought of eternal punishment. If that’s the case, then all I can do is hope that living with kindness and striving to be moral will count for something. That, when the time comes, it might be enough to earn forgiveness.

𓆝 𓆟 𓆞 𓆝 𓆟

In parallel, I was immersed in the mystical world of Balinese Hinduism. It surrounded me, and its presence could be felt as soon as you set foot on Balinese ground, the smell of incense immediately taking over. It could be seen in the beautiful, bright Canang Sari offerings placed on sidewalks, shrines, shop counters, or even vehicles—a daily expression of gratitude toward the Gods. It could be heard in the late-night ceremonies, accompanied by Gamelan, a powerful ensemble of traditional percussive instruments, and the chants of priests reciting in Sanskrit. 

Although, I was not apart of a Balinese family, I have attended many ceremonies growing up. One ceremony in particular, I will always remember. I was maybe about 5 or 6, I was invited by my neighbour who was my age to come to her house for a ceremony. I put on my traditional balinese outfit and my little flip-flops and walked on over. We sat criss-cross apple sauce right in front of the priest, an older gentleman with long, fine white hair tied neatly in a bun, a matching white beard, and dressed entirely in white garments. He was surrounded by a burst of colours: vibrant offerings, an array of foods, ceramic pots—and on either side of him, small cages filled with baby chicks.

I remember thinking how cute they were, secretly hoping he’d let us play with them once the ceremony was over. But then he began to chant, words I couldn’t understand. And without pause, he reached into one of the cages, gently holding a chick in both hands:  one on its tiny head, the other on its fragile body and snap.

I froze in horror.

The chick’s headless body flailed in frantic circles before finally collapsing in the dust. I sat there, stunned and sick, unable to process what I had just witnessed. The rest of the day passed in a haze of sadness and confusion. I couldn’t stop wondering, how was that fair? Why did that sweet, innocent little chick have to die… for us?

I went home upset and did not understand why the chick had to be sacrificed, it didn’t even have the time to grow fat enough to eat. It died for nothing, I thought. 

I have always had such admiration for the Balinese religion, I had thought many times about learning more about it and loved the whole philosophy behind it all. The importance of balance and the respect for the land and everything that grows and lives on it. But deep down, I knew I could never truly belong to it. Balinese Hinduism isn’t just a religion, it’s a way of life, woven into the island’s culture, ancestry, and community. It lives through daily rituals, caste traditions, and temple ceremonies, often passed down through generations or embraced through family ties. 

On top of it all, Balinese women are some of the strongest I’ve ever known, bearing responsibilities I could hardly imagine, often with very little recognition. They live within a strict patriarchal system, where they’re expected to uphold religious duties at home—crafting offerings, tending to household shrines all while managing domestic responsibilities. Despite their vital role in temple life and daily rituals, women are often excluded from leading ceremonies and are barred from entering temples during menstruation, as they are considered ritually impure.

Beyond the home, many are also expected to contribute a second income, balancing spiritual, domestic, and economic duties. There is immense pressure to have children, as procreation is seen not only as a social expectation but also a spiritual obligationcrucial for maintaining lineage and enabling reincarnation. Women who are unable to conceive may be viewed as less than, their worth tied to their ability to continue the ancestral line.

Leaving a marriage is rarely a real option. Upon marriage, a woman leaves her family and community to join her husband’s. If she divorces, she risks losing her place in both worlds no longer accepted by her husband’s family, and not always welcomed back by her own. She’s left in a liminal social space, disconnected from the structures that once gave her belonging. To make matters worse, children typically remain with the father, as they are considered part of his lineage. A mother may only see her children if the father’s family permits it.

This is something I could never handle. 

𓆝 𓆟 𓆞 𓆝 𓆟

I have grown up in a country that is very spiritually charged. Despite being the largest Muslim country in the world, Indonesia is deeply animistic and rooted in indigenous beliefs. This is especially true in Balinese Hinduism, where the line between the spiritual and physical worlds is almost imperceptible. I can confirm that spirits are real—and if you said you’d believe it when you see it, then I would say that I saw it, and so I believe. There are things I’ve experienced that defy logic, events that would be difficult for many in the West to accept. The energy is palpable and heavy; they are constantly around us, roaming freely among the living. I’ll save the scary ghost stories for another day.

But everything changed when I moved to Europe. It wasn’t just the physical distance—it was as if the spiritual presence vanished entirely. I began to feel that absence deeply, and I think part of it was cultural: once people die here, they aren’t remembered in quite the same way. Over time, especially living in Paris, I lost touch with the spiritual world I had grown up with. The daily reminders were gone. Instead, I found myself drawn to a different worldview. It was in Paris that I discovered Camus and his philosophy of Absurdism: the idea that life is inherently without meaning, and that our human drive to find purpose stands in direct contradiction to the universe’s indifference and randomness. God may not be real, but the dancing trees are. The sun on your skin is. The salty Mediterranean air is. We spend our lives chasing meaning, often missing the beauty of the world and the simplicity of the present moment. I found Camus’ view strangely comforting, maybe even necessary, at a time when I was trying to find my place and purpose in the world, like many do in their early twenties. It stuck for a little while, but every time I went back to the Motherland I was reminded that there was more than the eyes can see and I just couldn’t ignore it.

𓆝 𓆟 𓆞 𓆝 𓆟

My friends can tell you all about the strange curiosity I developed toward Christianity. It was odd. It all came when I was going through some heartbreak and it felt like death. I sat in my room facing the wall trying to get some relief somewhere and out of pure desperation, I tried to connect with that father figure that always brought me comfort as a kid. This time he came in the form of Jesus and in the moment it felt like the Truth. I felt warm, understood and comforted. I started going into churches I walked past to sit with my thoughts and processing whatever it was I was going through. I wept silently and surrendered to the huge statues that sat front and centre. For a moment, I thought that this was the Holy Spirit reaching out to me, the Truth my mother had mentioned. I expressed my new found faith to my close ones and was met with perplexed faces and questions, rightfully so and I’d respond, “I don’t know. It just feels right”. I attended a few Sunday services in Bali held by an American pastor in a nightclub they converted into a place of worship every Sunday afternoon. We were greeted by young and attractive members with bright smiles. It was surreal to see verses projected on the big screens near the booth where world renowned DJs would play. How unsettling it was to hear the scriptures read out loud in a space that usually was riddled with sin the night before. Church-goers wearing island dresses and linen sets, something you’d never see in other churches. It all felt like a cult but I felt seen by the lessons we were taught by the Pastor. And for a little while, I thought about baptism and reading the bible. 

But just like with Islam or Hinduism, I couldn’t fully surrender to the bible because that meant betraying the people that I loved, the people who wouldn’t be welcomed into the kingdom of God because of their own beliefs, sexuality or choices. It would be betraying the women who are getting screamed by pro-lifers making their way to the abortion clinics and the gay people forced out of their homes by their families or forced to go to conversion therapy. I may have found love for God but I love people more and for the many times God didn’t listen to my prayers, I found solace in the arms of the ones that have loved me.  How could I ever be a Christian if I didn’t believe that everything said in the Bible was right. 

The last time I was in a church was in Naples. I had been taking an afternoon stroll, trying to clear my head after a series of strange events in the apartment I was staying in. I had passed the cathedral many times before but never stepped inside.

That day, something pulled me in.

As with every time I enter a church, I was immediately met with a deep calm, a feeling not unlike my mother’s embrace, yet watched over with the quiet intensity of a teacher pacing the classroom during a test. I walked slowly, making myself as small as possible.

Light streamed through the yellow stained glass in the apse, sharp and golden, like it came from somewhere beyond the clouds. I was so caught up in my own thoughts that I didn’t notice the deep voice filling the space, measured and slow, it sounded like the voice of God itself.

I stood, almost without thinking, and followed the sound. Before I realised it, I had made my way to the very front bench, the only empty seat. 

To my right, an older Italian woman sat with her palms open to the ceiling, eyes closed. At certain words the priest spoke, her face would twitch gently, as if she felt them in her bones.

Strangely enough, after three weeks in Naples, I could understand most of what was being said. The priest’s slow cadence helped too. 

“True faith, is not something we wear on the outside. It is not a performance, nor is it a display meant to impress others. True faith is something deeply personal — it lives quietly within the heart. It is the intimate bond between you and God. Faith does not seek applause or recognition; it seeks only to respond to the love of our Creator. It is not proven through noise, but through quiet trust, humility, and devotion. Remember this: faith is within you.” 

There I wept and wept. I have searched everywhere. But, it had been with me all along. 

And it’ll always only be between Us. 

Vahine Blaise, Nova Scotia, August 2025

A conversation with a retired fuckboy

 

A conversation with a retired fuckboy

Home » love

It was just him and I, out on the front porch, having a night cap. 

He is my mother’s living proof of “third time’s the charm”, first came the husband who died, second came the abusive narcissist and last came this one. To put it simply a lovely British man who says yes to everything she says, one that can handle her fits of rage and who may swear a little too much but has never raised his voice at her. One that I like to believe would give her the world. He always says that he manifested her—an independent woman with her own children and a joie de vivre. They are like a teenage couple without the excessive PDA, silly and playful. Yet, they also look like they’ve been married for decades, so comfortable together in silence. He adores her so much, he fears he’ll fuck it up.

He always says that when I first met him, I was a “cunt”  but rightfully so. And I know I was, and I didn’t care because I didn’t trust any man around my mother, not after what we went through. But he proved himself over the years and eventually I warmed up to him. To the point that he may be one of the men I trust the most in my life. 

However, he hasn’t always been this tame. He’s had a colourful past, let’s put it that way. A past filled with parties, substances and women. Stories I have promised to not share. They were dark times but I always sense a hint of nostalgia as he recalls them, he knows it was bad but maybe he knows he’ll never feel those types of highs ever again. Many of his past behaviours remind me so much of those of the young men today. Similar stories to the ones my girlfriends and I share with each other with great rage and passion, ones I have analysed and replayed in my head over and over again, asking myself “why the fuck did he do that?”. True head scratchers that have left me confused, baffled by their logic and their sheer audacity. Ones that make you wonder who raised them? Or how could such a lovely mother create such creature? 

So many years between us, yet so many things haven’t changed. No true evolution when it comes to the way many men treat women, making me wonder if true change can happen. Many think that this fear of commitment is an issue that only our generation struggles with but the more I speak to the older generations the more I realise, it was just much easier to cheat back then. 

I sat for a moment, perplexed, before quickly realising the opportunity that I had in front of me—I could gather information to help the girls straight from the source. “Don’t move,” he said as he stood up, “I’ll give you the answers.” He went to the kitchen and poured himself another drink.

Here are 7 things you should know about dating as a girl in your 20 somethings according to a retired fuckboy: 

1. You will get played. Point Blank Period.

As a twenty something woman you will get played no matter how cautious you are. They will flatter, make you laugh, buy you things to get what they want. Even when it may seem genuine sometimes, never be surprised if they 180’d and gave you the same boring excuse. Because many simply do not know what they want, they might mean everything they said in the moment but this could change tomorrow. So the best advice would be to enjoy it whilst it lasts and do not blame yourself too much if they just up and left out of nowhere. 

2. Men only chase women who act like men. 

Women fall for security and men, for challenge. To put it simply, the more detached you are the more they’ll desire you. The more it seems like you hate them and would never give them a chance, the more they’ll pursue. Being thoughtful and cute only works when you’re already locked in, doing too much when you aren’t in a relationship with the man will freak them out. If you do not care to act like a man and don’t care to play games, focus on yourself and maybe a good boy will come along. Patience and kindness will get you nowhere because many young men aren’t ready to receive such things. 

3. Two different worlds. 

Remind yourself that their human experience on Earth is in some ways so different from ours, leading them to react to things differently. They truly sometimes do not view the world or human connections the way we do. What seems moral and right to you may not apply to them. So stop beating yourself up trying to understand why they would do certain things and try to analyse them, because you’ll just end up losing your mind. Let them be and find your peace. They’ll learn in their own time. 

4. If they stop “shagging” you, beware. 

They’re probably not cheating on you, but they probably are. You can have steak and caviar every night but sometimes you just want a burger. Wether he is or not, just know that you can be the most beautiful, intelligent girl and still get fucked over. 

Shag his friend. 

5. Shoot the shot. 

Your rejection rate as a girl in your 20’s are low, because men like their ego stroked. They will most probably go for you just because you were ballsy and made them feel special enough that as a young woman you made the first move. 

Talk to him. 

6. If he over compliments you, tell him to fuck off. 

Exactly that. (I guess love-bombing wasn’t a term at the time yet but it’s been around forever. So STOP FALLING FOR IT). 

7. Substances and Performative Sex. 

This is for both boys and girls. Doing drugs and expecting to only have wild crazy sex all the time can rob you from the beauty of the mundane. Meaning, living in such high highs all the time will take away the beauty in the small things, having you constantly chase a feeling you can only feel high. Soon enough, you’ll no longer feel gratitude for the warmth of the sun, the lingering smell of lavender or a slow morning with a loved one. Eventually, you will not be able to feel anything anymore, the calmness and the normal will feel unbearable. 

We finished the conversation with, “however you shouldn’t be afraid, never stop yourself because of fear. Yeah, we’re assholes for the most part but don’t let all of us rob you from an experience with an actual decent guy. I know it may be hard to believe sometimes but they’re there, somewhere.” He’s not the most expressive man out there and gave me a very simple conclusion which was “just do you”. 

Everything said here is obviously to be taken with a grain of salt and it was truly a very unserious conversation but in a way it was comforting to know that sometimes, it’s not my fault. As women we are born with built-in guilt in our bones and constantly blaming ourselves for things we seriously have no reason to feel guilty about. If he didn’t like you that much in the end, well he just didn’t like you that much, it wasn’t because you said something weird or because of your lip combo. We can’t be everyone’s cup of tea and that’s okay. There’s nothing to fix or to better, sometimes, it is truly just that. I think the main takeaway I had here is that the more you decentralise your life from men and male attention, the more peace you’ll find in dating. When your entire sense of value isn’t placed in their hands, their leaving or disrespect won’t shake your self-worth. You hold the power. This is something I’ve struggled with ever since I started dating chasing people I probably didn’t even like or who didn’t deserve my attention because I believed I was worth nothing without them. (As someone who tends to resent men, admitting this was really difficult. I hope you can appreciate the honesty.) 

But ironically, the more you do that, the more they come to you. 

Anyways, having had this conversation with a father figure I wish I’d had earlier really helped my case. And for my fatherless or shit father-having ladies out there, I hope it helps you too.  

Vahine Blaise, Nova Scotia, August 2025

Crazy, forever.

 

Crazy, forever.

Home » love

“I think we’re done here. I don’t think we need to schedule another appointment for the moment. It really feels like you’ve got it under control. I’m truly impressed by your progress. Call me if you need me, but I feel like you’re doing just fine.”

When these words came out of my therapist’s mouth, I was elated. I had been seeing this man for years, ever since I started university. He knows my life story better than anyone else. I’ve cried and cried on his couch so many times while recalling painful events from my life—him listening quietly, nodding, and then offering clarity on my actions and feelings. Hearing him say that to me almost felt better than finding out I’d graduated university after failing a few classes.

The usual post-session snack run and walk home felt like a breath of the freshest air. This is it, I’m turning the page.

Obviously, it’s not that easy. It never is.

I’ve had a few more sessions with him ever since then but much less frequently. To be honest I should go way more but I am clinging onto the fact that I already figured it out, he told me. Clinging on to the crazy-free future I imagined for myself where I’d be at peace for eternity, freed from my own brain. Going back to him now, is a reminder that it’s not going to happen and life will continue to raw dog me and that the way my brain is wired makes it more difficult to process. 

Like what the f*ck do you mean? I did the work, I deserve to waltz through life as a proud alumna with acquired skills and no longer be a sleep-deprived miserable student struggling to make it out. 

Unfortunately, it’s easier to remember that omnichannels are essential to a marketing strategy than to remember that the reason I keep running back to the something-something-aholics is because I’m apparently hellbent on proving I’m special enough to be someone’s reason to change because some fuck shit happened to me as a child. It’s fucking boring and repetitive. Yet, here I am needing to sit my ass down on that velvet couch on the verge of tears as he explains to me that I must use my mental tools to overcome whatever it is I am going through.

 “Remember the tools.” 

As a borderline personality disorder girly, I rely on these tools. All I ever wish for is going through life without having to meticulously analyse why is it I feel things intensely and then having to take a moment to deescalate if it’s not too late— and if it is, having to fix it and apologise for my impulsivity. Or having to consciously remember that people don’t just become evil because they didn’t react the way I wanted them to. That no I am not actually in love with that man I saw twice. 

It’s like watching everyone ride through life in a smooth automatic vehicle as I am having to figure out how to change the gears of a beat up 1995 Toyota Camry, hoping to God that it doesn’t stall. 

I am so tired, I could cry. 

Struggling with mental health isn’t something to be ashamed of but it can lead you to say or do things that are. My reality gets so warped sometimes that whatever I feel like saying in the moment seems valid, even insightful, until I come to and realise it wasn’t. By then, the tools and coping strategies show up too late, and I’m left looking at something I said that now feels wildly off. It’s terrifying, this moment when I realise I wasn’t thinking straight, that I’d convinced myself of things that aren’t even close to true. And I wonder: how did I get there? How was I able to take it that far? It makes me feel unhinged, like someone who should be locked away. Honestly, if anyone even remotely interested in being with me saw the inside of my mind, they’d probably run for the hills. And I wouldn’t blame them. There are days I want to run from myself too.

Still, I can acknowledge that my immediate impulses aren’t inherently dangerous—if I’m able to stop myself from acting on them. Like I often have the impulse to stalk people who’ve rejected me however I’ve very rarely acted on it and if I did it was always a healthy amount, stalking in a charming way, if you will.  But reining my impulses in when my emotions are dialled up to a hundred takes an exhausting amount of energy. It often feels like I’m one body housing two people: one, a stubborn, impulsive child; the other, a calm, patient caretaker. They’re in constant, maddening dialogue. Honestly, sometimes I just want them both to shut the fuck up or, at the very least, have Scarlett Johansson’s voice from Her narrate whatever the hell I’m doing instead.

But Scarlett’s voice will never be my reality. That’s a fat fucking pill to swallow, and I’m choking on it.

I may have been embarrassed many times from the ways I have acted however I do take great pride for trying to strengthen my coping skills without any crutches. I love being independent and always strive to be that way in every aspect. So I did stop taking my pills and believed that I could better myself. BPD has no cure so I’m better off figuring it out. And I must say I am seeing results and I do feel stronger. 

However, sometimes I do think about that one time my psychiatrist offered me to go to this “retreat” a couple of years back. I mean I know it was probably a psych ward but I won’t pretend I haven’t fantasised about it, even though the thought also terrifies me.

It actually sounded kind of nice. He described it as “rest time,” somewhere on the outskirts of Paris, with lots of trees and a big garden. A place where someone would tell me when to take my pills, when to eat, when to sleep. When I could go outside and feel the sun, and when I had to go back in. I wouldn’t have to think for myself anymore, and I’d be pleasantly numbed by medication. Maybe I’d even make a friend, someone I could sit and read with during outside time.

Maybe what I really needed then was rest. Maybe it was time to surrender a little, to let myself be tucked into bed by someone else, to give up—just a bit.

When I had meningitis and was hospitalised for ten days, I didn’t feel like I had to suck it up or push through. I was overworked, I was tired, I knew I needed rest. And weirdly, I had a great time. I wore sunglasses in my hospital bed because I was sensitive to light, and hot medical students would pop in to ask how I was doing. My biggest concerns were which YouTube video to watch next, and whether the food tray would come with yogurt. Not once did I feel like I had to be strong. 

I wish I could give myself some grace sometimes when it comes to my mental health. To trust myself enough that I will be back on my feet faster than I used to, and that I won’t be rotting in bed for 3 weeks at a time anymore. Trust in the work I’ve put in, the tools I’ve come up with to guide me through everything. That it is okay to not always be the most emotionally intelligent, to not be the bigger person, to say the right things. If sane people make mistakes and get depressed sometimes, I’m sure it’s okay for me to go through similar things too. It’s okay to feel tired and weak and sure as hell is okay to go back to therapy when needed. I am learning to accept that not everything is a straight line. 

Anyway, yeah I’ll probably be crazy forever and everyday will continue to be a fight to be more stable and there will be days I’ll be tired and will have to go back to my therapist. And then he’ll tell me again that I am doing well and I probably will be—before, of course, I come back to him again. I’m doing my best to surrender. 

Sizy always says my “condition” makes me special, that it’s not a flaw, but a gift. It means I ache for depth, crave connection, and feel everything in vivid, unrelenting colour.

There is a wild, aching beauty in this way of being. I can never quite capture it with words—how gratitude swells in me until it spills over, how joy with my friends burns so brightly it feels like the sun itself lives in me. Heartbreak doesn’t just sting; it devastates. But even in its ruin, there’s a strange sort of grace. It reminds me I’m alive, that I’m still capable of love, of longing.

And when I fall for someone, it’s not subtle. The butterflies eating me inside out. My breath catches. A velvet warmth floods through me, soft and all-consuming. 

Maybe she is right and that it just means that I am a constantly living life at its fullest, that I feel very much alive every single second. Not a single moment wasted. 

V.B, Bali, April 2025