Rings of Feeling: A Mood Journey in Nine Stones

Some emotions don’t whisper. They blaze. They consume. They flicker beneath the skin like flame or pulse like music in the bones. And when they surge, we seek reflections outside of ourselves—symbols to mirror the feeling inside. Mood rings might seem playful, but the deeper truth is this: color is emotion made visible. Gemstones, too, carry this emotional resonance. They do not just shine—they express

Fire Opal — Passion That Burns Through Stillness

Passion is not always wild. Sometimes it glows slowly. Controlled on the surface, burning underneath. Fire opal captures that kind of intensity. Its translucent warmth—ranging from honeyed orange to flickering red—feels like an ember just before it sparks. It doesn’t need permission. It already knows.

Wearing fire opal is like carrying a match in your palm. You feel its potential. Its edge. It represents moments when you’re fully alive, even when still. When your thoughts race faster than your words. When you’re creating, chasing, yearning.

The heat of fire opal isn’t loud. It’s deep. It’s the kind of passion that doesn’t show until you speak—and then, everything is flames.

On the body, fire opal draws the eye not because it’s flashy, but because it pulses. It suggests movement. Action waiting to be taken. It says: I am not settled. I am awake.

You wear it on days when you can’t sit still. When you’re in love with an idea, a person, a moment. When you feel lit from within, and you don’t care who sees it.This stone is not a decoration. It’s a declaration.

Amethyst — Desire That Waits With Wisdom

Desire often gets confused with passion. But it’s different. Where passion is combustion, desire is slow ache. Yearning that knows patience. Want that sits in stillness, holding space for what might be.

Amethyst carries this energy perfectly. Its violet tones range from rich plum to soft lavender, always hovering between seen and unseen. Like desire itself—felt in silence, alive in anticipation.

To wear amethyst is to acknowledge longing without need for chaos. It is self-possessed. It burns, yes, but with elegance. You want something, but you are not undone by that wanting. You are clarified by it.

On the body, amethyst settles the breath. It deepens the gaze. It does not beg. It beckons. There’s a depth to it—something that suggests this is not a fleeting attraction, but a sustained craving. The kind that lingers. The kind that builds.

You wear it when you want to remember what it means to want. Not frantically. But fully. When you know your longing is part of your aliveness. It’s not about having. It’s about reaching. And reaching, here is everything.

Peridot — Jealousy That Shines in Green

Jealousy is rarely embraced. But it’s real. It’s sharp. It cuts in places we try to ignore. But even jealousy, in its raw form, carries insight. It shows what matters. What stings. What we think we’ve lost—or fear we might.

Peridot reflects this beautifully. It doesn’t shy away from brightness. Its green is vibrant, almost unnatural, glowing with a brightness that feels close to electric. Like jealousy itself—sudden, jarring, hard to hide.

Wearing peridot isn’t about glamorizing jealousy. It’s about naming it. Giving shape to an emotion that thrives in the shadows. This is the stone for moments of tension. For honesty. For reckoning.

It glows on the hand like a question: What do you want that someone else has? Why does it hurt? What does it awaken? Pe ridot isn’t soft. It’s confrontational in its beauty. You don’t wear it to soothe. You wear it to sharpen.  But within that sharpness is power. Clarity. The knowledge that you care. That you want more. And sometimes, that want reveals everything.

Wearing the Unspoken

These three stones—fire opal, amethyst, and peridot—map the emotional terrain between creation, craving, and comparison. They are not neutral. They are alive.

To wear one of these is to let part of your emotional world sit just above the skin. Not for others. For yourself. A reminder of what you’re feeling. A reflection of what you’re holding.

You don’t always have to explain it. Sometimes, wearing a fiery stone is enough to release the burn. Sometimes, a violet gem can hold your silence. Sometimes, a green light on your hand is all you need to say: I feel this, and I’m letting it move through me.

These rings become more than aesthetic. They become emotional companions. Unjudging. Unblinking.

Why We Attach Emotion to Stone

There is a reason we place emotion into objects. We can’t always carry everything in the mind. Feelings spill. They ache. They ask for containers.

Stones become those containers. Especially those worn as rings—where the pulse lives, where the hands move, where the body touches the world.

Gemstones aren’t just pretty. They’re metaphors. Fire opal for fire inside. Amethyst for want shaped into wisdom. Peridot for the spark of comparison that reminds us what we care about most.  We reach for these rings not just because they match an outfit. We react because they mirror us. Because they say what we can’t say out loud.  A gemstone on the finger becomes a moment you can return to. A feeling you’re processing. A truth you’ve stopped hiding.

And when others see it? Maybe they recognize it. Maybe they don’t. That’s not the point  .The point is that you do.

Jewelry as Emotional Architecture

Passion. Desire. Jealousy. These are not flaws. They are facets of feeling. And like gems, they have angles, clarity, depth.

When we wear stones that reflect emotion, we are building a kind of architecture around ourselves. A structure made of color and light and memory.

Each ring becomes a room. A place where feeling lives. Where it breathes. Where it isn’t judged.

This is not about decoration. It’s about embodiment.

The Power of Choosing Your Stone

What you wear reveals what you’re ready to hold. Some days, that might be fire opal—when your spirit is alight and cannot be dimmed. Some days, it’s amethyst—when you’re craving but grounded. Some days, it’s peridot—when truth hurts, but you’re listening. There is no wrong choice. Only alignment.

Choosing a stone becomes a small act of self-honoring. A way to say: I see what I’m feeling. I see what I’m carrying  . And in seeing it, I claim it.

The Softer Spectrum — Tenderness, Love, and Joy in Gemstone Form

There are moments when emotion doesn’t erupt. It unfolds. Slowly. Gracefully. With more softness than spectacle. Where fire once lived, water now flows. The heart doesn’t always beat with urgency—it sometimes moves gently, with kindness, with warmth, with lightness. Gemstones are not just reflections of intensity. They can also hold grace. Blue topaz, red tourmaline, and moonstone are stones that do not demand—they invite. They do not pierce—they glow. These rings are not worn to conquer. They’re worn to remember what it means to feel deeply without defense.

In moods where we feel tender, loving, or uplifted, our need isn’t for armor—it’s for resonance. These stones capture emotional softness without fragility. They are beauty shaped into presence, worn not to be seen, but to be understood.

Blue Topaz — Tenderness in a Cool Glow

Tenderness is often misunderstood. It’s not weakness. It’s strength without sharpness. Power without pressure. It’s what allows us to hold someone’s hand, to stay present in vulnerability, to choose gentleness in a world that often doesn’t reward it.

Blue topaz reflects this energy in color and clarity. Its pale, almost icy blue isn’t cold—it’s calming. There is nothing rushed about it. It cools rather than burns, offering a sense of stillness and space. Wearing blue topaz is like stepping into quiet after a storm.

You choose it on days when your emotions are raw but steady. When you’re moved by something small. A memory. A gesture. A truth that surfaces softly instead of striking hard. It becomes a companion to the part of you that feels deeply without needing to be loud about it.

Set in a ring, blue topaz rests calmly on the finger. It doesn’t flicker wildly. It catches light with gentleness, refracting the world back through a soft lens. It is not a statement piece. It is a piece of stillness.

This is the kind of ring you reach for when you want to care without losing yourself. To feel without fraying. To sit with the full beauty of tenderness.

Red Tourmaline — Love That Lives in Color

Love is rarely simple. It isn’t always sweet or romantic. Sometimes it aches. Sometimes it glows. Sometimes it just exists—quietly, powerfully, without need for performance. Red tourmaline carries this nuanced kind of love. Not showy. Not perfect. But undeniably alive.

Its color is not the traditional red of roses or rubies. It leans into a pinkish-red, sometimes magenta or cranberry, with subtle shifts under light. This makes it a stone of depth rather than drama. Love that is felt more than flaunted.

Wearing red tourmaline is like saying, I am open. I care. I’ve been changed by connection. It belongs on the hand during quiet dinners, long conversations, letters written but never sent. It reflects the energy of someone who knows how to love, not just chase it.

On the body, red tourmaline centers you. It reminds you that love isn’t always about grand gestures. Sometimes it’s just being present. Staying soft. Letting someone in. Or letting yourself be held.

This ring doesn’t sparkle for attention. It pulses with meaning. You wear it when you’re full of emotion. When you feel the pull of connection and are brave enough to feel through it.

Moonstone — Joy That Glows From Within

Joy is light. Not always in volume, but in presence. It glows rather than bursts. It shows up unexpectedly—like a breeze through an open window or laughter you didn’t expect to share. Moonstone reflects this energy with a gentleness that feels celestial.

With its milky base and blue or rainbow flash, moonstone is never static. It shifts with movement and light. Like joy itself—it appears in glimmers. It asks to be noticed, but only softly.

Wearing moonstone is like catching your breath in a moment of beauty. It reminds you that joy is not a destination—it’s an atmosphere. Something you create, carry, and sometimes rediscover.

You may wear it after sadness. As a bridge back to yourself. Or you may wear it when you feel lighthearted, playful, open to whatever the day brings. Its presence on the hand is soothing. Familiar. You may glance down at it and feel a smile rise without thinking.

This is not a loud joy. It’s the kind that fills rooms slowly. That brings you back to center. That lets you remember what it feels like to be full of light without needing to shine it in every direction.

The Spectrum of Soft Emotion

Blue topaz, red tourmaline, and moonstone occupy the emotional landscape, often overlooked in favor of passion and grief. But these feelings—tenderness, love, joy—are just as defining. They shape us. They heal us. They remind us that strength doesn’t have to come in sharp edges.

Together, these stones offer a gentle spectrum. One that reflects a state of being often felt but rarely named. Wearing them becomes a way to hold that softness close. To protect it, not because it’s weak, but because it’s rare.

These are rings that don’t shield. They soften. They let you be your whole self,  not just when you’re fierce, but when you’re feeling everything.

Wearing the Gentle Truth

We often armor ourselves with fashion. We wear sharp silhouettes, strong gemstones, and bold statements. But what happens when the most powerful thing we wear is our softness?

Blue topaz, red tourmaline, and moonstone are not defensive. They are receptive. They remind us that being open is not the opposite of being strong. It is a strength in its most essential form.

When you wear a ring that carries tenderness, you are not saying you are fragile. You are saying you are attuned. When you wear a ring that reflects love, you are not saying you need someone. You are saying you know what connection feels like. When you wear a ring that glows with joy, you are not being frivolous. You are honoring something sacred.

Jewelry does not need to be armor. Sometimes it can be a mirror. Or a candle. Or a handheld. These stones are like that. They sit with you when you’re most vulnerable. They don’t protect you from feeling. They remind you how beautiful a feeling is.

And that reminder—that daily glint of softness on your hand—is sometimes all you need to keep going gently.

Styling Emotional Light

Because of their subtlety, these three stones are easy to layer. A pale blue topaz beside a glowing moonstone reflects sky and moonlight together. Add red tourmaline, and you have a sunrise or a blooming garden on your hand.

They play well with others. These stones don’t compete—they collaborate. Whether set in yellow gold, white gold, or even mixed metals, they retain their softness. Their emotional presence stays intact, no matter the setting.  You wear them when you’re not trying to impress. You wear them when you’re living fully. That’s their power. Not drama. But depth.

The Message You Send to Yourself

These stones may not spark conversation the way bolder gems do. But they don’t need to. Their message is meant for you. They say: Today, I am whole. I am feeling. I am in touch with the gentlest parts of myself.

You don’t have to share that message aloud. But every time you move your hand, it’s there. Catching light. Catching breath.

And maybe someone sees it and smiles, not knowing why. That’s the magic of emotional resonance. It travels quietly.

 The Echo Within — Hope, Pleasure, and Nostalgia in Gemstone Light

Some feelings don’t blaze or break. They resonate. They hum just beneath the surface, like music you can’t quite remember but feel deeply all the same. These emotions don’t arrive suddenly. They linger. They fill quiet moments. They accompany solitude. They are not reactions, but states of being. In this part of the series, we explore three of these internal worlds: hope, pleasure, and nostalgia.

To experience these emotions is to exist in a space where time folds. Hope leans forward. Nostalgia bends back. Pleasure lives fully in the now. And each of them deserves a form, a visual, a weight. Green tourmaline, garnet, and iolite become vessels for these moods—not for performance, but for presence.

These aren’t the feelings you explain. They’re the ones you carry.

Green Tourmaline — Hope that Grows in Silence

Hope doesn’t always look like brightness. Sometimes it is a seed, buried and unseen. A quiet resilience. A breath that deepens instead of racing. Green tourmaline captures this kind of hope. Not naive, not loud—but enduring.

The stone itself is rarely one flat shade. It shifts across mossy green, olive, and even grassy tones, with occasional golden undertones. This layered color evokes growth. Not the kind you notice all at once, but the kind you recognize only in retrospect. A new leaf. A slow return. A soft persistence.

To wear green tourmaline is to align with the belief that things can change, even if slowly. It speaks to the part of you that still wants, still waits, still trusts. Even when exhausted. Even when tired of trying.

On the other hand, it doesn’t glitter like a diamond. It glows like intention. It doesn’t dazzle. It roots. It holds its space like a quiet yes.

This is the ring you reach for when you’re ready to begin again. Not because everything is certain. But because something inside you still believes there’s a next chapter.

Garnet — Pleasure that Grounds and Glows

Pleasure is a sense, not a spectacle. It’s the texture of your favorite fabric. The last sip of a slow drink. The weight of sunlight on skin. It lives in the body before it reaches the mind. Garnet, with its deep red-to-burgundy tones, reflects that embodied richness.

This is not the glittering red of a parade. It is the dark warmth of wine, of berries, of candlelit rooms. Garnet is a pleasure that has matured. It holds knowledge. It knows what feels good and doesn’t rush it.

Wearing garnet is a way of honoring the body. It reflects to you your depth, your ability to feel in layers. It sits on the hand like a reminder that pleasure is not indulgent. It’s necessary. It softens the edges of daily life. It returns you to the self.

When you wear it, you’re not seeking attention. You’re seeking alignment. With sensation. With rhythm. With the parts of you that want to feel whole and warm.

This is a stone for ritual. For resting in what you already have. For remembering what joy tastes like without needing to name it.

Iolite — Nostalgia that Sings in Indigo

Nostalgia doesn’t ask for answers. It arrives unannounced. In scent. In music. In a photo that folds time. It is not sadness, but longing. Not grief, but grace. It says: that mattered. And still does.

Iolite reflects this with its twilight hues. Blue-violet. Indigo. Faint gray at the edges. The color shifts depending on the light, just like memory. What once felt clear now feels soft. What once hurt now feels beautiful.

Wearing iolite is like holding a letter you wrote long ago and never sent. It is for the moments you drift through memory without needing to fix anything. When you miss a place or a person or a version of yourself. Not to go back—but to honor what shaped you.

On the hand, iolite flickers in indirect light. Its beauty doesn’t scream. It hums. You notice it not because it blinds you—but because it invites you in.

This is the ring you wear when you want to remember without being undone. It anchors the echo. It lets you move through memory like walking through fog. Slowly. Without fear.

The Emotional Landscape of Reflection

Green tourmaline, garnet, and iolite do not shout their presence. They sit quietly and wait to be noticed. They ask only to be felt. Not analyzed. Not justified.

These stones are for the days when your thoughts are inward, your touch is slow, and your presence is whole. They are for the moods that don’t make announcements. They are for you, and only you.

You wear them when you’re not explaining yourself. When you’re not trying to move too quickly. When the goal is not to change, but to be.

They reflect back the beauty of emotional richness. That depth is not darkness. That feeling is not fragility. That being with what is—without needing it to be something else—is its own kind of strength.

When Jewelry Holds What We Cannot Say

We are taught to present ourselves through clarity. Through articulation. But some emotions defy language. Some live in the skin. Some move in shadow. Some don’t want to be solved—they want to be held.

Jewelry, in its simplest form, becomes a holding place. A pause. A permission slip to feel without performing. A ring can sit on your hand like a silent companion to your memory. A gemstone can echo what you’re not ready to say.

Green tourmaline does not ask you to be optimistic. It reminds you that something inside you still hopes. Garnet does not demand that you radiate joy. It invites you to feel comfortable. Iolite does not insist on closure. It lets memory stay open.

These stones become emotional architecture. Rooms for your heart. Surfaces for your silence. Light that flickers gently instead of blinding. And when you look down at your hand and see them, you do not need an explanation. You feel met. You feel mirrored.

That is the power of emotional adornment. Not what it tells others,  but what it tells you.

Styling Stillness

These gemstones lend themselves to intimate styling. A single garnet on a gold band feels complete. A green tourmaline flanked by two empty fingers gives space for growth. Iolite, set low and softly, offers a mood more than a message.

They don’t demand stacking. But they welcome it. You can wear all three together on separate fingers and carry a quiet narrative across your hand: the future, the now, the past.

Pair with muted tones. With soft knits. With bare skin. With whatever feels like comfort.  These aren’t rings you wear to stand out. These are rings you wear to stay present.

The Emotions You Choose to Wear

Not every emotion is dramatic. Not every ring is meant to dazzle. Some exist to remind. To soothe. To accompany.

Green tourmaline for your hopeful days. Garnet for your embodied ones. Iolite for the ones filled with echoes.  You don’t need to name the feeling every time. You only need to feel it.  And when you do, you’ll find that these stones don’t just sit on your hand. They sit with your story.

Whole and Human — The Full Spectrum of Emotion in Stone

No emotion exists in isolation. We don’t live in a single hue. Our days shift. Our hours turn. We move from longing to contentment, from joy to quiet ache, from hope to nostalgia in a matter of moments. That is the beauty of being alive. That is the beauty of emotion that resists categorization.

Gemstone rings, when chosen with intention, become companions for this emotional movement. Not rigid symbols, but fluid reflections. Each ring becomes a mood. A memory. A map of feeling. To live among them, not trying to fix or label them—but simply allowing them to speak.

This is not about collecting jewelry. It is about acknowledging presence. The presence of feeling. The presence of the self in all its shifting states. These stones are not trophies. They are thresholds.

The Language of Hands

Our hands move through the world constantly. They carry. They care. They protect. They create. They hold. They reach. To place emotional symbols on them—gemstones that resonate with feeling—is to give weight and meaning to the act of living.

A ring does not sit passively. It touches every part of the day. When we wear one that reflects something we’re feeling—a quiet love, a deep hope, an unspoken grief—it becomes an extension of expression.

A blue topaz catches light during an apology. A garnet glows during solitude. A fire opal hums with movement when we are chasing something we cannot name.

We may forget what we wore yesterday. But we often remember the feeling we carried in our body, the stone we touched, the subtle reassurance it offered.These rings do not accessorize. They affirm.

Not Just Emotions, But States of Being

To live with intention is to recognize the different emotional temperatures we carry. Sometimes we are tender. Sometimes fierce. Sometimes reflective. Sometimes undone.

The purpose of emotional jewelry is not to perform a single identity. It is to reflect the fact that identity is made of seasons.

You may wear amethyst for weeks, craving its steadiness. Then suddenly reach for moonstone, needing a flicker of joy to carry you through. Some days, no stone feels right—and that too is honest.

There’s no hierarchy. No emotion is better than another. These rings remind us that to feel is to be whole.

And to feel fully is to honor every facet, every glint, every shift.

 A Circle for Every Season

A ring is a circle. No beginning. No end. Just continuity. Just flow. That alone makes it a powerful form to hold emotion. To wear a ring is to carry a feeling in repetition—seen every time the hand rises, touched every time the fingers fold.

We don’t live our emotions in straight lines. We return to them. We revisit. We evolve. What once was joy becomes memory. What once was desire becomes reflection. What once was longing becomes acceptance.

The stones we wear as mood rings are not labels. They are landscapes. They offer terrain to move through, again and again. A garnet may mean sensual pleasure one year. Next, it may hold memory. The year after, it may simply feel like warmth.

These rings adapt. They shift with us. They do not ask us to define. They ask us to feel. To trust that what we reach for is right for the moment we’re in.

That is the emotional wisdom of adornment: a small object that holds something too large for language. A wearable expression that does not fade—but folds time and feeling into form.

Layering Without Overexplaining

We may wear several gemstone rings at once. Not to declare multiple moods—but because we’re rarely only one thing at a time.

Hope and nostalgia. Joy and stillness. Tenderness and fire. They coexist. And so we layer.

There is something powerful in allowing contrast. A moonstone beside a peridot. A fire opal next to iolite. You don’t have to resolve the difference. You simply wear them. The hand becomes a kind of diary. A record of what you’re feeling, without punctuation.

These combinations are never random. Even if chosen unconsciously, they speak. And what they say is this: I am all of it. And I do not need to edit.

Emotion Worn, Not Explained

In a world that constantly asks us to name how we feel, it can be healing to simply wear how we feel.

You don’t owe anyone an explanation. Not for your ring. Not for your emotions. You wear a red tourmaline because something inside you glows with love. Or aches with it. You wear garnet because you want to feel rooted. Or because you’re already there.

No matter the reason, the ring listens. It holds without interrupting. It knows without needing clarity.

There is power in silence. Especially the kind that still holds light.

Returning to the Self

Eventually, all adornment is a return. Not to fashion. But to self. Gemstone mood rings are not about trend. They are about truth. Small truths that evolve. Subtle truths that anchor.

You may find that your favorite stone changes over time. What once felt necessary now feels distant. What once felt foreign now feels like home. That is not an inconsistency. That is growth.

To return to yourself through color, through light, through feeling—is a gentle act of self-recognition. A quiet way of saying: I am here. And I know how I feel, even if I don’t speak it. The rings do not require clarity. They respond to presence.

The Stone That Stays

There may be one ring you never take off. One stone that holds all your phases. It may not be the most precious. It may not be the most admired. But it knows you.

It saw your grief. It saw your laughter. It stayed through change. It became part of your skin. You touch it without thinking. You reach for it when you’re unsure.That stone becomes your constant. Not because it solves anything. But because it stays.Sometimes that’s all we need. Something that stays.

Closing the Circle

This journey through gemstone emotions is not about assigning meanings. It’s about accepting them. About letting stones become mirrors, companions, whispers of light on the hand that remind you of what you carry.

You are never just one thing. You are never finished becoming. And the rings you choose, wear, and keep are not final chapters. They are punctuation marks in a long and radiant sentence.  Passion. Desire. Joy. Hope. Nostalgia. All of it belongsAl l of it glows.

Conclusion: Where Feeling Lives — The Enduring Language of Mood in Stone

Some stories doo not need to be told out loud. They live in gestures, in glances, in the smallest details. In the ring you wear without fail, in the color that comforts without reason, in the quiet act of placing emotion on the hand when words refuse to come.

Throughout this series, we have moved through nine emotional landscapes. Not dramatic extremes, but nuanced moods—passion, desire, jealousy, tenderness, love, joy, hope, pleasure, and nostalgia. Each linked to a gemstone. Each rooted in a feeling. Together, they form something more than adornment. They form a language.

Mood rings were once seen asa  novelty. Trinkets. But at their core was always something true: color is memory. Light is emotion. Temperature is energy. And when these elements are captured in stone, they carry us through the unspoken and the unforgettable. They let us wear what we feel. Not for display—but for recognition. For resonance. For ritual.

A fire opal catches the hunger of wanting more than you can hold. Amethyst honors the ache of desire that waits instead of demands. Peridot holds the sharp green flash of comparison we rarely admit but often feel. Blue topaz offers the breath of tenderness, the relief of calm in a too-loud world. Red tourmaline says love is allowed to be raw and present, without spectacle. Moonstone shimmers with joy that doesn’t shout, but glows like morning. Green tourmaline roots hope into the palm, a quiet resilience that endures. Garnet remembers that pleasure is not excess, but essence. Iolite carries us back—not to escape, but to remember—what shaped us into who we are.

Each stone holds more than color. It holds time. Each ring becomes a circle not just of metal, but of memory. You may look down at your hand and see a timeline. Not linear, but layered. A soft constellation of what you’ve carried, what you’ve craved, what you’ve come through.

What makes this form of emotional expression so quietly powerful is its refusal to simplify. You don’t wear these stones to define yourself. You wear them because you understand that who you are can change from hour to hour, season to season. The mood ring, when chosen with care, becomes not a label, but a permission.

To feel joy and longing in the same moment. To hold space for hope and nostalgia at once. To want and wait and remember and love without needing any of it to be perfect. This is the gift of emotional jewelry. It doesn’t ask you to fix yourself. It asks you to see yourself.

And as time passes, these rings take on more than the emotion they originally represented. They absorb your breath. Your hours. Your transformations. They stop being objects and start becoming companions. Touchstones. Little altars on the skin.

Maybe you pass one down. Maybe you lose one and never replace it, but still feel its shape in your memory. Maybe you keep one forever, even when you stop wearing it, because it reminds you who you once were—and who you chose to become.

There is no single meaning. There is no final message. Only this: when you wear what you feel, when you dress your fingers in truth, you are closer to yourself. Closer to the invisible that moves you. Closer to the beauty of being fully, unapologetically human.

And that is a kind of obsession worth holding on to.

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