“I learned that I was using ‘getting laid’ as a stand-in for ‘being chosen,’” she says. “And being chosen isn’t a one-night thing. It’s a practice. It’s showing up for yourself even when no one else is watching.”
She pauses.
“That’s the part people don’t show in the ‘getting laid’ narrative,” she texts me later. “The part where you’re just a person with a runny nose who wants someone to bring you soup, not someone to rail you. But soup is intimacy too. And I forgot that.”
She describes Feeld as “a bazaar of polyamorous programmers and couples looking for a unicorn who can also fix their Wi-Fi.”
In fan communities, popular "top-tier" female characters are often given the respectful suffix "-sama." When these characters are placed in stories where they actively seek intimacy, it creates a "gap moe" effect—a contrast between their usual composed or authoritative personality and their more vulnerable, desperate, or "hot" desires.
“I learned that I was using ‘getting laid’ as a stand-in for ‘being chosen,’” she says. “And being chosen isn’t a one-night thing. It’s a practice. It’s showing up for yourself even when no one else is watching.”
She pauses.
“That’s the part people don’t show in the ‘getting laid’ narrative,” she texts me later. “The part where you’re just a person with a runny nose who wants someone to bring you soup, not someone to rail you. But soup is intimacy too. And I forgot that.” kyoukosama wants to get laid hot
She describes Feeld as “a bazaar of polyamorous programmers and couples looking for a unicorn who can also fix their Wi-Fi.” “I learned that I was using ‘getting laid’
In fan communities, popular "top-tier" female characters are often given the respectful suffix "-sama." When these characters are placed in stories where they actively seek intimacy, it creates a "gap moe" effect—a contrast between their usual composed or authoritative personality and their more vulnerable, desperate, or "hot" desires. It’s showing up for yourself even when no