Last year and this year have been hellish for my mental and physical health, with months worth of time spent in hospital and care facilities including two months straight where I was forcibly admitted to psychiatric care. And as a consequence of my mental state I had to deal with multiple physical health issues as well.
In spite of all this I am one of the lucky few who was able to afford all the care that I needed to still be standing here today. In Australia many are not so fortunate. The rising cost of living has forced many to forgo professional mental health services to pay for rent, food, fuel and more. Millions have to deal with their issues on their own because they cannot get the care they need.
This June I am participating in the @PushForBetter challenge to do 3,307 pushups across 24 days as both a challenge to improve my own mental and physical health and a campaign to support free mental health services for Australians who need it most. I’d be honoured if you could support my journey and even more grateful if you could donate even a little to help those who need it in our community!
I created a team using the fan name of my oshi and friend @ScarletValkyre if any of my fellow Aussies would like to join and support a good cause! Today’s goal is 150 and I’ve done 40 so far!
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https://t.co/wPEOkZvStt
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If you believe people deserve to feel respected, heard, and safe in online spaces, please repost this. Let’s normalize the idea that it’s okay to say no, and that respecting someone’s boundaries is the bare minimum.
Setting boundaries does not make someone a bad person.
“No” is not hate. “Stop” is not rejection. A boundary is simply someone communicating what makes them uncomfortable, and that deserves to be respected.
In content creation, we need to normalize the fact that creators don’t owe anyone unlimited access to their time, attention, or personal lives. They’re allowed to say no. They’re allowed to protect their peace. Twisting someone’s boundaries into a narrative that they’re “mean,” “manipulative,” or “a bad person” is unfair and honestly harmful.
As a female content creator, I’ve experienced this firsthand. Boundaries are questioned, pushed, and sometimes completely ignored. I’ve watched people invent stories about my intentions simply because I chose to set a limit. No one should have to defend themselves for communicating what they’re comfortable with.
Respecting boundaries shouldn’t be controversial: it should be the standard.
❤️aussie brats appreciation post ❤️
i just got off the phone with my friends in down under land who were at SMASH con this weekend and they were telling me how much BAE LOVE there was at SMASH..... they were sending me pictures of the artist alley, and telling me about all the cosplays they saw🥹
SMASH con will forever hold a very special place in my heart .... aussie pride tank u ilysm
The 2026 World Cup has turned into a custody battle over Hatsune Miku
Fans joked the winner of Japan vs Brazil would get to keep the Vocaloid star, and now Norway has her