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NOVALIE

@elvisbdoll / elvisbdoll.tumblr.com

✧・゚: *✧・゚:*
shifter, writer, Elvis gal ✨

Azure

Chapter One: Honey, You Know I’d Do Anything for You

Elvis Presley x Reader | Mid-1960s Hollywood | Toxic Romance • Angst • Manipulation | Reader’s POV | Beverly Hills Penthouse / Hollywood Nights

⟢ TW / CONTENT WARNINGS

toxic relationship • manipulation • emotional dependency • jealousy • possessiveness • mild verbal aggression • codependency • unhealthy power dynamics • cigarettes/alcohol • 1960s Hollywood themes

Los Angeles, 1965. The city burned golden in the late afternoon light, palm trees casting long shadows over Sunset Boulevard. The hills cradled the kind of secrets that only the rich and famous could afford to keep—whispers of affairs, overdoses, broken promises buried beneath the shimmer of Hollywood dreams.

You had learned early on that love in this town was transactional, but Elvis made you forget that. When he looked at you with those ocean-deep blue eyes, when his voice curled around your name like a slow southern drawl, you almost believed you were special. Almost.

You were already his. That much was clear.

You sat on the edge of his king-sized bed at the Beverly Hills house, running your fingers over the silk sheets. The house wasn’t home—not really. It was just one of the many places he took you, where he could love you in private and parade you in public when it suited him. The radio hummed low in the background, playing a song you couldn’t quite place.

Elvis stood near the window, shirt half-buttoned, cigarette hanging from his lips. His hair was a perfect storm of pomade and rebellion, dark and thick, curled just right. He was beautiful, almost too beautiful, like something carved out of marble and left out in the sun to melt.

“You been real quiet, sugar,” he said, taking a slow drag. His voice was smooth, warm, deceptive. “Something on your mind?”

You bit your lip, hesitating. The past few days had been a blur of parties, champagne, and stolen kisses in the back of Cadillacs. But last night had been different. You had seen him with another woman—just a passing moment, nothing incriminating, but enough to plant a seed of doubt in your chest.

“I just…” You exhaled sharply. “I saw you last night. With that blonde.”

Elvis tilted his head, a slow smirk tugging at his lips. “That what’s got you all wound up?” He stepped closer, pressing a hand under your chin, forcing you to look at him. His touch was gentle, but the control in it was unmistakable. “Baby, you know you’re the only one that matters.”

You swallowed. “Then tell me the truth.”

He laughed, a low, velvet sound. “The truth?” He cupped your cheek, brushing his thumb across your skin like he was soothing a child. “The truth is, you don’t gotta worry about her. Or anyone else.”

“But I saw—”

“Honey.” His voice dipped lower, all syrup and command. “You’re gettin’ yourself worked up over nothin’. I hate seein’ you like this.”

And just like that, he made it about you. Your feelings. Your irrationality. Not his actions.

You should have pulled away, should have demanded answers, but instead, you let him kiss you. He tasted like smoke and whiskey, and something else—something dangerous. His hands tangled in your hair, his grip just tight enough to remind you who was in control.

When he pulled back, his eyes locked onto yours, steady and unwavering. “You trust me, don’t ya, baby?”

Your heart pounded against your ribs. He was everything you wanted and everything you feared.

“…Yeah,” you whispered.

And that was all he needed to hear.

Mercy

70s!Dom!elvis x Bratty! Black! Reader

tw: heavy smut ahead — rough dom!elvis, bratty reader, spanking, light bondage, overstimulation, mirror play, daddy vibes, a lil crying, and then super soft aftercare. if any of that isn’t your vibe, skip this one babes 💋

You stood at the foot of the bed in nothing but one of his shirts—half-buttoned, no bra—playing innocent while your eyes sparked with challenge.

“Somethin’ wrong, baby?” you asked sweetly, tilting your head. “You look tense.”

Elvis didn’t even look up from his chair where he was thumbing through a stack of sheet music. Calm. Still. Dangerous.

“You been runnin’ that smart little mouth all damn day, sugar,” he said low, his Memphis drawl syrupy and slow. “I let it slide at breakfast. Let it slide when you rolled your eyes at me in front of the boys. But now you’re standin’ here half-naked, actin’ like you don’t know what you’re doin’. You beggin’ for attention, or just beggin’ for trouble?”

You smirked, shifting your weight. “Maybe I’m bored.”

He finally looked up, his blue eyes narrowing. The heat behind them made your stomach twist.

“Well, now,” he murmured, rising from his chair in one fluid, lazy motion. “That’s the first honest thing you’ve said all damn day.”

You barely had time to move before he was on you—his hand sliding around the back of your neck, pulling you in close. His lips brushed your ear.

“You wanna act like a brat, you better be ready for how Daddy handles brats,” he whispered, voice dark, dangerous, but still wrapped in velvet. “You think I won’t put you over my knee and make you cry my name like a prayer?”

Your breath hitched.

“Elvis—”

He smirked.

“That’s more like it. I don’t play games, baby. You wanna mouth off? Push my buttons? Then I’ll show you exactly where that leads. You wanted attention? Now you got it.”

He walked you back toward the bed with slow, deliberate steps, never breaking eye contact. His voice dropped low again, silk wrapped around steel.

“Now get up on your knees, hands on the headboard. You so damn desperate to act out, I’m gonna make sure you remember who you belong to.”

And you did. Every word, every shiver, every breathless second.

You climbed onto the bed just like he told you—slow, spine tingling, every nerve lit up under his gaze. You could feel his eyes on you, heavy as his breath, dragging over every inch of skin exposed under his shirt.

“Good girl,” he murmured. “For once.”

The mattress dipped under his weight as he climbed behind you. His hands ran up your thighs, firm and slow, spreading you just enough to make you feel seen. Controlled. Owned.

“You like testin’ me, huh?” he muttered as his fingers slid up higher, gripping your hips. “Mouthing off, wearin’ my shirt like a little tease, thinkin’ you can wind me up and not pay for it.”

You let out a soft moan when his hand cracked against your bare cheek. Not hard—but enough to sting. Enough to make your legs tremble.

“Elvis—”

“Nuh-uh. Don’t whine now, baby,” he growled. “You wanted my attention. Now you’re gonna take it.”

He gripped your hair and pulled you up, your back arching against him. His lips brushed your ear, hot and heavy.

“I should make you say please. But you’d just act up again tomorrow, wouldn’t you?”

You bit your lip. Didn’t answer.

He chuckled darkly. “Thought so.”

With one hand, he held you against him, his hips pressing against your backside, hard and deliberate. With the other, he slid his fingers down, slow and possessive—finding just how soaked you already were.

“Jesus, baby… You’re drippin’. All that attitude just a cover for how bad you want me, huh?”

You nodded breathlessly.

“I said, huh?”

“Yes, Daddy…”

That earned another smack—sharper this time, but laced with the drag of his palm soothing the burn right after.

“That’s more like it.”

You gasped when his fingers slid inside you, deep and slow. Taunting. Controlled. His other hand gripped your throat, not choking—but firm enough to make you stay. Stay in place. Stay still. Stay his.

“That little mouth gets you in trouble,” he breathed. “But this right here… This part of you? She tells the truth. She knows who you belong to.”

You whimpered.

“Elvis, I—”

He pulled his fingers out and brought them to your lips.

“Open.”

You obeyed, eyes locked on his, your bratty attitude long gone—replaced by pure need, pure heat, pure surrender.

“That’s it, baby,” he said, sliding inside you with one long, punishing thrust. “Now take it.”

And you did. Every inch. Every command. Every dirty, worship-soaked second of it.

Because no matter how mouthy you got…

You lived for the way he put you in your place.

“Look at you,” he growled against your neck, voice ragged with heat. “So damn cocky earlier, now you’re cryin’ into my sheets.”

You gasped when his hand snaked around to rub your clit, slow circles that made your knees shake.

“Y-You’re bein’ mean…”

He laughed darkly, thrusting into you hard enough to make the headboard slam against the wall.

“I ain’t even started bein’ mean, baby. This is what you get when you act like a damn brat.”

His hips didn’t stop. That rhythm—deep, punishing, possessive—hit every sweet, aching spot. Your nails clawed at the sheets, desperate to hold on.

“But you love it, don’t you?” he muttered, lips brushing your ear. “You need it rough. Need me to tear you apart and put you back together.”

He leaned over you, chest to your back, breath hot on your neck.

“Say it.”

You whimpered, eyes fluttering shut.

“Say it, or I’ll stop.”

“I need it,” you gasped. “I need you—just like this.”

“Damn right you do.”

He grabbed your wrists and pinned them above your head with one strong hand, keeping you helpless as he drove into you faster, harder, deeper.

“Your body’s honest even when your mouth ain’t,” he rasped. “She knows who she belongs to. Don’t she, baby?”

You choked on a moan. “Yes, Daddy…”

He let out a low groan, his rhythm faltering as he pulled out suddenly and flipped you onto your back like you weighed nothing.

“I wanna see that bratty little face when I make you come,” he hissed, spreading your legs wide, dragging the tip along your dripping center. “Wanna watch you fall apart on my cock.”

You arched into him, your body already trembling. He slid back inside with a growl, stretching you open until all you could do was sob his name.

“Uh-huh. There she is. That’s my girl. Not so mouthy now, huh?”

He held your jaw, making you look up at him.

“You’ll remember this next time you roll those eyes at me. Next time you pout and sass me like you’re not beggin’ for this deep down.”

You nodded desperately, tears of pleasure streaking down your cheeks. You were so close it hurt.

“I’m gonna come—Elvis, please—”

“You ask permission,” he snapped, slowing just enough to keep you teetering.

“Please, Daddy, please let me come—!”

“That’s what I like to hear,” he growled. “Go on then. Come for me, baby. Make a mess.”

And you did.

It ripped through you like lightning—back arched, thighs shaking, a cry of his name strangled in your throat as you shattered beneath him.

He didn’t let up.

Not even when you begged.

Not even when your body gave in a second time—overstimulated, ruined, completely undone.

Because he wasn’t just f**king you.

He was owning you.

——————————————-

You were still trembling when he came back from the drawer—box in hand, sweat slick on his chest, eyes dark like sin.

“What’s in there?” you mumbled, breathless, limp across the bed.

He set it down with a thud.

“Oh, sweetheart,” he said with a slow grin. “You said you wanted a surprise.”

You tried to crawl back, instincts screaming—but he caught your ankle with one hand and dragged you back under him.

“Uh-uh. No runnin’. Not after all that mouth earlier. You wanted Daddy to lose control, didn’t you?”

Your eyes widened when he pulled out the silk rope.

“Elvis…”

“Don’t you ‘Elvis’ me now,” he growled, voice low and dangerous. “You earned every second of this.”

He flipped you onto your stomach and began tying your wrists to the headboard with skillful ease, leaving your back arched, legs trembling.

You were on display—helpless, soaking, still flushed from your last orgasm.

And then you heard it.

Click.

Your eyes darted up.

There was a mirror above the bed. One of his little renovations. And now? You were staring up at your reflection—messy, bound, wrecked.

“Elvis…” you whispered.

He climbed back behind you, dragging the tip of a vibrator down your spine.

“See what I see, baby?” he purred in your ear. “See how good you look ruined for me?”

He flicked it on.

You screamed.

The toy pressed against your clit while he slid back inside you, deep and unforgiving. The overstimulation made your thighs shake instantly, your cries echoing off the walls.

“That’s it, cry for me,” he growled. “Let ‘em hear you from downstairs. Let ‘em all know who makes you feel like this.”

He thrust harder, one hand tangled in your hair, the other gripping your hip tight enough to bruise.

The mirror above reflected everything—his wild eyes, your twisted sheets, the way your body obeyed him even when it couldn’t take any more.

You sobbed, begging—nonsense words, broken pleas.

But he didn’t stop.

Not when you came again.

Not when your legs collapsed.

Not even when your voice gave out.

Because you were his.

And tonight?

He was gonna make sure you never forgot it.

———————-

You collapsed against the sheets, breath stuttering, mind buzzing.

Your legs were still shaky, wrists tingling where the rope had held you, your whole body humming and tender.

And Elvis—

The wild fire in him softened the minute he saw you melt.

He brushed your hair back with both hands, thumbs stroking your cheeks as he leaned in close.

“Hey… hey, look at me, baby,” he whispered, voice warm and low. “You with me?”

Your eyes fluttered open, and he smiled—so gentle, so full of something that made your chest ache.

“There she is,” he murmured, kissing your forehead. “My sweet girl.”

He untied you slowly, carefully, like you were something precious. Every knot undone with a kiss to your wrist, a warm breath across your skin, a whispered “you did so good for me.”

When he finally pulled you into his chest, you sank into him instinctively, face pressed against the warm skin of his shoulder. His arms wrapped around you strong and steady—protective, grounding.

“Shh… I got you,” he whispered, rocking you just a little. “You’re okay, baby. I’m right here.”

His fingers traced slow circles up and down your spine, easing out the leftover trembles.

Every touch was soft. Reverent.

The same hands that had held you down like you belonged to him were now touching you like you were something breakable.

He kissed the top of your head, then your temple, then your jaw—tiny kisses, feather-light.

“You gave me everything,” he whispered against your skin. “So damn proud of you.”

You let out a small, exhausted sound, and he pulled the blanket over both of you, tucking you close.

“Breathe with me, darlin’,” he murmured, guiding your inhale with the rise of his chest. “Nice and slow. That’s it… easy now.”

One of his hands slid up to cradle the back of your head, holding you against the warm curve of his neck.

“You’re safe,” he whispered. “You hear me? Safe with me. Always.”

You nudged closer, and he chuckled softly, kissing your cheek.

“Mm, that’s my girl… Come here.”

He cupped your face gently and pressed your lips together—slow, lingering, tender. Not hungry. Not wild. Just soft.

A promise.

A grounding.

A reminder that he loved every side of you—the bratty, the needy, the undone.

He nuzzled your nose, smiling.

“Didn’t mean to wear you out that much,” he teased lightly. “You alright?”

You nodded into his chest, and he held you tighter, burying his face in your hair.

“Good,” he whispered. “Rest right here, baby. I’ll stay with you. Ain’t goin’ nowhere.”

And he didn’t.

He stayed there with you—warm, gentle, humming low under his breath while you drifted off, wrapped in his arms

Honey, say please.

Elvis Presley x Reader | 1973 | Smut | Reader’s POV | Graceland Bedroom

WN: Begging, overstimulation, fingering, praise + light degradation, dom/sub dynamic, dirty talk, TCB chain action, Elvis’s voice weaponized.

N/A: Helloooo! It’s been a while since I don’t post a proper fan-fiction. Well, life has been crazy lately but I’ll try to be more active in here!

The bedroom’s dark.

Golden lamplight kisses your bare thighs as you sit up on your elbows, watching him from the bed like you’re trying not to squirm.

He’s standing at the foot of the mattress — shirt off, rings on, black silk pants unzipped just enough to tease. The TCB chain rests against his chest, swaying ever so slightly with the slow rise and fall of his breath.

“You wanna come?” Elvis asks, voice low, a sinful drawl that melts down your spine.

You nod, eyes wide, lips parted.

He tsks, slow and soft, one brow lifting.

“Nuh-uh. Not good enough, baby. If you want me to touch you again…”

His palm wraps slowly around his cock, stroking it once. Twice. Watching your eyes follow every move.

“…you’re gonna have to say please.”

Your breath catches. You squirm. He smirks.

“You were loud as hell last night,” he murmurs, stepping closer, “cryin’ on this dick like you were born for it. Now you can’t even beg like a good girl?”

“Elvis,” you whisper, thighs pressing together.

He climbs onto the bed like a panther — slow, controlled, hungry.

You fall back on the pillows, gasping when he grabs your ankles and spreads you open with a single motion.

You’re soaked. You know it. He sees it.

His smile turns dark.

“Ohh, look at that. Drippin’ and I ain’t even touched you yet. Damn, honey.”

He settles between your legs — hot breath against your core — but doesn’t touch. Just hovers. Teases.

Then his fingers slide up your inner thighs, stopping just shy of where you need him most.

“Last chance,” he whispers, lips brushing your skin. “Say it for me.”

You whimper. It burns.

“Please, Daddy.”

He freezes.

“…Say it again.”

“Please,” you moan. “Please, Daddy, I need it, I need you—”

He groans like he’s starving and sinks two fingers into you, deep and slow.

You arch off the bed with a cry, but he holds you down with one hand, the TCB chain brushing against your belly every time he moves.

“Good girl,” he growls. “That’s all I wanted. Ain’t so hard, is it?”

His fingers work faster, curling up inside you like he knows exactly where heaven is. The sound of it — wet and obscene — fills the room.

You’re a mess in seconds.

“I wanna come,” you cry, grinding into his palm.

He leans in, pressing his lips just below your ear.

“Then say it again, baby. Louder.”

“Please!”

He laughs — dark and satisfied — before kissing you like he owns your mouth, your body, your whole damn soul.

And you fall apart.

Again. And again.

Until your voice is gone and his chain is slick with sweat and your legs are trembling from the way he whispers, “Say please” every single time.

You’re still twitching beneath him when he pulls his fingers out — slow, slick, like he loves how ruined you are.

“Pretty little mess, aren’t you?” he murmurs, licking you off his fingers, his voice thick with want. “Didn’t even fuck you yet and you’re already beggin’.”

You’re breathless, eyes hazy, lips parted. “Elvis, please…”

He leans over you, one hand braced above your head, the other slipping beneath your thigh, pulling it up around his waist. His cock is heavy, hard, and pressed right against your entrance — but he doesn’t push in yet.

Not until you look him in the eye.

Not until you mean it.

“You ready to behave?” he asks, cock head teasing your slit, slicking himself with your arousal. “Or do I gotta teach you all over again?”

“Please,” you whisper, lifting your hips in desperation. “I’ll be good, I swear—”

“Say it louder.”

“Please, Daddy, fuck me.”

His eyes flash.

Then he’s inside you.

A slow, brutal thrust, dragging out the stretch until your mouth falls open and you cry out his name — raw, broken, real.

He fills you deep, holds still for a moment, letting you feel every inch. The weight of him. The chain swinging gently between your bodies, cool against your skin.

You can’t even breathe.

Then he starts to move.

Rough, controlled thrusts that shake the headboard against the wall — slow enough to be cruel, deep enough to feel like possession.

“That what you wanted, baby?” he pants, jaw clenched. “Wanted Daddy to fuck it into you?”

You nod — eyes glossy, hands scrambling at the sheets.

He grabs your wrists, pins them above your head with one hand, the chain glinting under the lamplight.

“Ain’t goin’ nowhere,” he growls. “You stay right there and take it.”

He fucks you harder. His hips smack yours with filthy, rhythmic slaps. Your name falls from his lips in a low, reverent moan as he leans down and bites your shoulder.

“Goddamn, sugar,” he pants. “You feel too good. Too fuckin’ good—might never let you go.”

You’re gasping, whimpering, so close it hurts.

“Come on, baby,” he whispers into your neck. “Come for Daddy again. Give it to me.”

Your body obeys. Shaking, sobbing, breaking.

And as you fall apart beneath him, he lets go too — with a groan so deep, so raw, it vibrates through your bones.

He spills inside you in slow, deep thrusts, his hips stuttering as he presses his forehead to yours.

The chain swings once… twice… before going still.

And when the only sound left in the room is your breathing, tangled together, his voice comes quiet and warm against your cheek:

“Next time you wanna be stubborn, baby… remember this.”

He kisses your mouth like it’s the sweetest thing he’s ever tasted.

“Say please,” he whispers, “and I’ll give you the whole damn world.”

August 16th

I don’t even know where to begin, because when I try to write about him, the words feel so small compared to the way he fills me. Elvis isn’t just an artist to me—he’s a presence, a soul that somehow lives in every corner of my mind, my heart, my being. I miss him in ways that are hard to explain. And yes, I wasn’t alive when he walked this earth. I wasn’t alive when his laughter echoed through rooms, or when his voice first stunned the world into silence. I wasn’t even alive the day he left us. But none of that matters. Because love doesn’t measure itself by time or circumstance—it just happens. And I love him. I miss him, like you’d miss a friend, a lover, a brother, a guiding star.

People tell me it’s silly. That it’s foolish to grieve someone I never met, someone who died before I ever breathed. But I don’t care. How could I not miss him? How could I not ache for someone who makes me feel seen in a way so few ever have? He is beyond an idol. He is beyond an artist. He was a human being with a laugh that sounded like light itself, with a voice that could break you apart and mend you in the same breath. And I carry him with me like a secret flame, always burning, always alive.

There’s something about his laugh—soft, contagious, like he was trying to make the world bearable not only for himself but for all of us. You hear that laugh, and suddenly everything feels lighter, easier, sweeter. And then there’s the way he spoke about spirituality, about God, about purpose. It comforts me in ways I can’t explain. He wasn’t just a singer; he was a seeker. I picture him lying in bed at night, glasses on, book in hand, a pencil tucked between his fingers as he underlined passages, nodded along, searching for something greater. His mind reached beyond what words could hold. He saw through everything. And that—God, that’s beautiful.

I can’t shake the image of him like that. It’s sacred, almost. The world saw the star, the man in rhinestones, the legend—but I see him in quiet moments too. The thinker. The dreamer. The boy who lost so much and gave so much. The man who carried everyone on his shoulders and yet kept searching for a reason why.

He’s more than music to me. He’s comfort when the world feels unbearable. He’s warmth when loneliness creeps in. He’s laughter that still rings in my ears, love that still wraps itself around me. And no matter what anyone says, I will never stop missing him. Because missing him feels like proof that he’s real, that he touched me in some way that can’t be undone.

It’s a strange kind of grief—grieving for someone you never knew, yet feeling like you’ve known them your whole life. But maybe that’s what makes it powerful. Maybe that’s what makes it love. Elvis gave his soul to the world, and somehow, across decades and lifetimes, it reached mine.

So yes, I love him. I love him so much it aches. I miss him every day, as if I had once sat beside him, laughed with him, cried with him, lived with him. And maybe in some way, I did. Because love like this doesn’t ask for logic—it simply is.

Elvis lives. In the notes of every song. In the echo of every laugh. In the silence of the night when I imagine him with his books, searching for God, searching for meaning, searching for something eternal. And he found it, I think. Because here we are, still carrying him, still loving him, still missing him.

He lives in me. Always

Anonymous asked:

Are you ever gonna finish velvet chains dude that ish is my favorite

Oh my gosh. Im sorryyy! But I’ll drop something today I PROMISEE 🩷😭

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✧ WELCOME TO MY DR SERIES ✧

Hi, loves. 🖤

If you’re here, welcome to the chaos, the magic, and the velvety madness that is my Desired Reality. This series is where I’ll be sharing pieces of my shifting journey—the love, the laughter, the drama, the Memphis Mafia antics, and above all… my life with him.

Yes, I shift.

Yes, it’s real to me.

No, I don’t need you to understand it—just respect it.

🪞✨ In my DR, I am Novalie Hadid—a Dominican-American actress with a bold career, a sharp tongue (especially when I say coño or diablo), and a life filled with deep love, chaos, and soul-bonding moments with Elvis Presley and other people.

But let me make this crystal clear:

This is my reality.

The Elvis or other people I write about is not a historical figure—he’s the version of Elvis and the people who lives in my DR, who I love, who I laugh with, and who I sometimes argue with while barefoot in the Graceland kitchen at 2am.

I am not claiming these are facts. I’m not rewriting history. I’m just writing my story.

🛑 DNI:

If you are anti-shifting, if you plan to mock, disrespect, or dismiss the shifting community—do not interact.

Go read something else. This space is sacred to me and others who shift. Any negative comments will be deleted, blocked, and saged with spiritual sass. 💅🏽

This is a space for romantics, dreamers, shifters, and those of us who live between timelines. I’ll be sharing stories—funny, spicy, heartbreaking, and absurd. From jealousy tantrums in Graceland to almost burning the house down with the Mafia boys—you’re gonna get it all.

So buckle up, baby. Light a candle. Pour a cafecito.

It’s gonna get real.

✧ TAGLIST ✧

💌 Want to be tagged in every post from my DR series? Just reply, reblog with “✨tag me✨”, or send me an ask/message!

🕯️ If your name isn’t showing up, make sure your Tumblr settings allow mentions.

✘ Anti-shifters, trolls, and bad vibes will be blocked faster than Elvis can throw a guitar at me for messing with his nose.

Since some of yall are interested in shifting, here’s my shifting blog!

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shifting propaganda i will be falling for bcuz why the hell not

  • being the main character in my drs.
  • shifting for different people just for fun.
  • scripting unnecessary things just because.
  • shifting for mundane / 'trivial' reasons (food, getting laid, etc.)
  • having multiple s/os in the SAME reality (polyamory final boss.)
  • lazy shifting / not putting in effort to shift (bcuz it's litch never that serious.)
  • contradictory scripting (yes, i am very emotionally intelligent and aware but i will also cry if you yell at me.)
  • being a major overconsumer in my drs (i will have a ginormous wardrobe and a million different perfumes bcuz i can. but dw, i scripted that doing this doesn't cause any issues.)
Inside the Mind of Elvis Presley: A Psychological Portrait

EPISODE V: Sanctified and Searching.

Before you read: here’s the DISCLAIMER

Before the lights. Before the jumpsuits. Before Graceland.

There were two twin boys—Elvis and Jesse.

Only one of them survived.

And from the very beginning, Elvis Presley believed he had been spared for a reason.

He didn’t just carry guilt for Jesse’s death—he carried purpose. As if God had handpicked him to live, to rise, to move people. And no matter how famous he became, how many fans screamed his name, it was that early belief that grounded him: “I’m here for something bigger.”

A Bond With God, Not Religion

To understand Elvis, you must understand that his faith was not a public performance. It wasn’t shaped by church pews or dogma—it was personal. Private. Sacred. He didn’t talk about God for attention. He talked to God like He was a friend, a protector, a lifeline.

He read the Bible constantly, not to preach—but to understand. To feel connected. To figure out why he had been chosen. And when he found something that moved him, he’d share it—not to convert you, but because he believed it might help you too.

Elvis didn’t separate his fame from his faith. In his mind, his voice, his gift, his charisma—it was all God-given. He was simply the vessel. He often told those closest to him, “God gave me this talent. He gave me this life. I have to use it for something good.”

The Shadow of Jesse

Elvis never forgot Jesse. The idea that he had lived while his twin had not—that was the center of his spiritual longing. According to Billy Stanley, Elvis used to wonder out loud what Jesse’s mission might have been, and why he was the one still walking the Earth.

That loss, buried so deep, became a guiding force. He wasn’t just looking for comfort. He was looking for clarity. He believed he was living two lives in one—his and Jesse’s. And the weight of that doubled sense of destiny pushed him to dig into every form of spiritual teaching he could find.

The Search for Truth

From Christianity to numerology, from the Bible to The Impersonal Life, Elvis chased knowledge like a man starved. Not because he was confused—but because he was hungry for truth.

He believed there was a reason for everything. That everything was connected. He studied the number 8. He learned about chakras and energy, about the afterlife and angels. He wasn’t just curious—he was devoted. His room in Graceland became a quiet sanctuary of books, prayer, and reflection.

And always, at the center of it all, was God.

Not just a God. His God. Loving. Listening. Leading.

Faith as Compass

To his stepbrother and inner circle, Elvis often spoke of how the presence of God gave him direction when nothing else made sense. Fame was chaotic. Relationships were fragile. His body was failing. But God—God was steady.

He told Billy that sometimes when he prayed, he could feel a peace wash over him. Like he was being reminded that he wasn’t alone, that he was doing what he was meant to do—even if it was hard. Even if he didn’t understand it all.

He didn’t always follow the straightest path. But the compass was there. The desire was real.

Not a Saint, But a Seeker

Elvis was no saint. He was human—flawed, overwhelmed, at times lost in the shadows of his own contradictions. But that never made his faith less real. In fact, it made it more powerful.

Because even when he was hurting, even when he felt farthest from grace—he kept reaching for God.

Even when he stumbled, he tried to get back up.

Even when he didn’t have the answers, he never stopped asking.

He was Sanctified and Searching.

Not because he was broken beyond repair—

But because deep down, he believed he was part of something divine.

That he was spared for a reason.

And that reason was still unfolding.

The King Who Bowed His Head

To the world, he was The King of Rock and Roll. But behind closed doors, Elvis often felt more like a servant. A man kneeling before something much greater than fame. He didn’t crave worship—he feared it. Because he didn’t believe the crown belonged to him. It belonged to God.

There were nights when, instead of partying, he’d gather the guys and read Scripture aloud. Or sing gospel songs until dawn. His most authentic joy wasn’t found in the spotlight—it was in those quiet moments, harmonizing hymns with the ones who loved him, eyes closed, voice trembling, lost in something eternal.

His stage presence may have electrified crowds, but gospel? That’s where he felt the most alive. He said it over and over again: “That music comes from my soul.” It was more than art. It was prayer.

Misunderstood Devotion

People around Elvis didn’t always understand the depth of his spirituality. To some, it seemed like another celebrity quirk—the endless books, the late-night talks about life after death, the obsession with ancient symbols and Eastern mysticism. But to Elvis, this wasn’t indulgence. It was survival.

He wasn’t looking for power. He was looking for peace.

He wanted answers about why he felt so deeply, why his heart ached when others were hurting, why he couldn’t seem to fill the emptiness inside—even with the whole world at his feet. And he thought maybe, just maybe, the answer was hidden somewhere between the pages of a spiritual book or in the quiet whisper of a prayer.

He was trying to make sense of the burden of being chosen. Of being spared. Of being Elvis.

Jesse, Again

In private, he spoke to Jesse like he was still there. Not in a delusional way, but in a spiritual one. Like Jesse was still watching, still listening, still connected. Elvis believed their bond couldn’t be severed by death.

It gave him comfort. But it also reminded him of the pressure. That he had to do enough for the both of them. That he had to live a life worthy of being the one who survived.

He didn’t say this often—but those who knew him well said you could see it in his eyes. That constant tension between gratitude and guilt. Between praise and pain.

His Own Kind of Ministry

In many ways, Elvis’s life became a kind of ministry. He didn’t stand at a pulpit—but he carried light into dark places. Whether through a song, a gesture, or the simple act of seeing someone who felt invisible, Elvis made people feel closer to something sacred. Not because he tried to—but because it was in him.

He gave away more than money. He gave people hope. A reason to believe that beauty could come from poverty, that broken hearts could still shine, that even the most unlikely soul could be chosen.

It’s no wonder he kept searching for spiritual answers until his last breath. Because deep down, he believed that when his time came, he wouldn’t just meet his Maker—he’d meet Jesse again.

And he wanted to be ready.

Sanctified and Searching (Refrain)

Elvis never stopped searching. Not because he lacked faith—but because his faith was so alive, so urgent, it couldn’t sit still. It had to move. It had to reach. It had to know.

He was sanctified—not in the sense of perfection, but in the sense of purpose.

And he was always searching—not out of doubt, but out of devotion.

In a world that crowned him king, he never stopped asking who the real King was.

And maybe that’s why the world loved him.

Because beneath the rhinestones and applause—was a man with a prayer in his heart,

and eternity in his eyes.

📌 DISCLAIMER:

Hi everyone,

I’m writing this post just to clarify a few things regarding the ongoing series I’ve been sharing, which explores the psychological depth and emotional complexity of Elvis Presley.

First and foremost, I am not a psychologist, nor am I claiming to be one. This series is not an attempt to diagnose Elvis Presley or present any psychological perspective as absolute truth. What I am is someone deeply passionate about understanding the emotional and human side of one of the most iconic figures in music history. This project is a labor of love—rooted in empathy, curiosity, and respect.

The goal of “Inside the Mind of Elvis Presley: A Psychological Portrait” is to dive into what might have shaped Elvis emotionally, psychologically, and spiritually. It’s a way to reflect on his inner world, not to distort or degrade him. I’m not trying to portray him as a saint or a villain—just as a man, one who carried immense pressure, loss, beauty, contradictions, and depth.

This is my personal interpretation, based on research, personal reflections, and an interest in psychology—not a definitive biography or clinical analysis. If you disagree, that’s completely okay. I welcome respectful discussion, differing opinions, and thoughtful critique. I’m not here to silence anyone or avoid accountability.

However, if this kind of content is not for you, that’s okay too. You can simply scroll past. I won’t take it personally. And if this project truly upsets or offends people, I’m more than willing to shift my focus back to writing fanfiction or other content. My goal was never to stir controversy—it was to open a meaningful conversation.

Lastly, I want to make it clear that I deeply respect Elvis Presley. I am one of the first people to defend him. This series does not come from a place of mockery or exploitation—it comes from admiration and a desire to understand the real human being behind the legend.

Thank you to everyone who’s read, engaged, shared kind words, or even offered constructive criticism. Your interest and support means the world. 💙

Inside the Mind of Elvis Presley: A Psychological Portrait

EPISODE IV:ATLAS IN RHINESTONES

Before you read: here’s the DISCLAIMER

He was 22 years old and already supporting half of Memphis.

After returning from Germany in 1960, Elvis Presley stepped back into a country he no longer fully recognized—and a fame that had grown even larger in his absence. But he didn’t just return to music, or to Hollywood sets. He returned to the full weight of an identity he had been building, quietly and unconsciously, since childhood:

He was the provider. The savior. The man who made sure no one else ever had to suffer.

That role began long before the rhinestones.

When Vernon went to jail, Elvis was just a little boy. But in that moment—without ceremony or recognition—he became the man of the house. Gladys didn’t ask for it. But grief has a way of hollowing a space, and Elvis filled it the only way he knew how: by being everything. Her comfort. Her emotional stability. Her protector.

He carried that same instinct into adulthood.

When Gladys died, the pain didn’t just wound him. It reinforced something that had already begun to take root:

“If I’m not strong, everything falls apart.”

So he made sure everything stayed together—by being everything to everyone.

Atlas in Rhinestones.

That’s what he became.

Not just a man. Not just a star. But a symbol. A myth. A lifeline.

He wore Vegas jumpsuits stitched with diamonds and capes like a superhero, but it wasn’t just performance—it was armor.

Because behind the sequins and spotlights stood someone who genuinely believed that it was his duty to hold the world together.

And not just his world—everyone’s.

The Presley family. The Memphis Mafia. The Colonel. The fans. The hangers-on. The people who cried when they saw him, who asked for favors, who called him “Boss” and “King” and “EP.”

They needed him.

And he needed to be needed.

Because somewhere deep inside, Elvis still carried the shame of being that poor kid from Tupelo who couldn’t afford a proper pair of shoes. The boy who watched his mother cry over bills. The child who felt small in a world that didn’t offer much kindness.

So he made it his mission to give others what he never had—security. Protection. Magic.

He gave out Cadillacs like candy. Bought houses for people who’d once bought him lunch. Handed out money to strangers with a kind word and a nervous smile.

Not because he wanted praise.

Because he wanted relief.

And maybe—on the deepest level—because he hoped that if he made enough people feel loved, he’d finally feel it, too.

But there was a cost.

You can’t hold the world on your shoulders without it crushing something inside you.

And Elvis? He never said no.

He didn’t believe he had the right to.

That’s what made him different. He wasn’t arrogant—he was obligated.

“I have everything. I don’t get to complain.”

That was the belief that governed him.

So when the pressure got too high, when the requests piled up, when the loneliness crept in—he didn’t talk about it.

He retreated.

Into silence. Into spiritualism.

Into pills.

Into the stage, where for two hours a night, he could disappear into a version of himself the world already understood.

But when the lights went down, Atlas was still standing there.

Not on a mountain—but in a hotel suite, in Graceland, in a limousine at 3 a.m.—wearing rhinestones and holding up the weight of a thousand expectations.

And no one ever thought to ask him:

“Do you want to put it down?”

Because kings aren’t supposed to cry.

And providers aren’t supposed to fall apart.

And if you give everyone everything, no one asks what you need.

He wasn’t just carrying the Presley family.

He was carrying the myth of Elvis Presley.

And in the end, that myth became heavier than anyone could have imagined.

For years, he kept the illusion alive.

The fans still screamed. The diamond suits still shimmered under the spotlight. The boys still circled him like a protective orbit, ready to say yes before he even finished the question.

But inside, he was starting to break.

Carrying everyone was no longer noble. It was exhausting.

And Elvis didn’t know how to stop.

Because to stop meant to let go.

And letting go meant something might fall apart—someone might fall apart.

And that was his deepest fear: that without him, it would all collapse. That if he ever let down his guard, everyone would see he wasn’t a god—just a man with too many ghosts.

So he built a castle around himself.

Not made of stone, but of control.

He decided who stayed. Who left. Who got access.

He gave love on his terms—lavishly, but conditionally.

Because if he could control the giving, he wouldn’t have to fear the taking.

But even the strongest myth has pressure points.

Elvis began to unravel in silence, behind closed doors.

He became unpredictable—one moment generous and glowing, the next distant, paranoid, furious.

He’d blow up over small things. Or retreat into hours of brooding quiet.

Some called it fame.

Some blamed the pills.

But those were symptoms—not causes.

The cause was the unbearable weight of never being allowed to be human.

He couldn’t grieve.

He couldn’t rest.

He couldn’t be unsure, or afraid, or tired.

He was Atlas. In rhinestones.

And no one ever told Atlas he could sit down.

The people around him saw the changes, but they didn’t always understand them.

To them, he was moody. Hard to please. Reckless.

But really, he was screaming without making a sound.

He tried to anchor himself in things that felt safe:

The Bible. Old friends. His daughter. Familiar rituals.

But the more he gave away, the emptier he felt.

Because here’s the truth that no one ever taught him:

If you spend your whole life making sure no one else feels poor, lonely, unloved—you’ll forget what it’s like to be taken care of.

And Elvis forgot.

He forgot how to ask.

He forgot how to receive.

He didn’t believe he deserved to receive.

So he spiraled—quietly at first.

A little more withdrawn.

A little more erratic.

Then came the cycles: spiritual highs, violent lows, intense generosity, isolation, collapse.

Repeat.

The people around him kept taking. And he kept giving.

Because if he ever stopped—what would be left of him?

By the mid-70s, the myth had consumed the man.

He was still performing. Still gifting. Still providing.

But you could see it in his eyes:

The weight had grown too heavy.

He was still Atlas.

But now, the rhinestones looked like armor he couldn’t take off.

The smile was more forced. The voice a little more weary.

He didn’t ask for help.

Because kings don’t beg.

And gods don’t get to rest.

And deep down, Elvis Presley—the poor boy from Tupelo—still didn’t believe he had earned the right to be taken care of.

Inside the Mind of Elvis Presley: A Psychological Portrait

EPISODE III: THE ARCHITECTURE OF NEED

Before you read: here’s the DISCLAIMER

“You look like a lonely little boy,” she once said to him. And she wasn’t wrong.

1962. Elvis Presley came home from Germany not just as a soldier, but as a son without a mother. Gladys was gone. And so was the last piece of emotional safety he’d ever really known.

He returned to a mansion, not a home. The world was watching, waiting for him to pick up where he left off. Movies. Records. Headlines. But inside, Elvis was stuck—half grieving, half surviving.

And in the fog of that in-between, he thought of her—the quiet, blue-eyed girl he met in Bad Nauheim. Priscilla Beaulieu. She had been just 14 when they met—young, soft-spoken, and attentive. He was drawn to her, not because of who she was, but because of what she offered: a sense of stillness. Safety. Innocence.

The world around Elvis was demanding, complicated. Priscilla, in contrast, didn’t ask much. She listened. She admired him. She made him feel strong. And in her presence, he felt something rare—not judged.

He didn’t force her into anything. But over time, she shifted herself to fit the outline of what she believed he wanted. The hair, the makeup, the style—it wasn’t about control. It was about approval. She wanted to be the woman he would never leave. And in that silent agreement, a dynamic formed. Elvis didn’t need to ask. Priscilla chose to become who he needed.

Bringing her to Graceland wasn’t just about romance—it was about filling a void. He had lost the one woman who truly understood him, and now he was trying to build something similar out of memory and need.

But Priscilla was not just a passive figure in his life. She may have been young, but she learned how to exist within his orbit. She knew when to be quiet, when to offer comfort, when to back away. She adapted. And with time, she carved out her place—not just as a girlfriend, but as a constant. A pillar.

For Elvis, stability was everything. Fame had spun his world off its axis. He didn’t want to be challenged; he wanted to be held together. And Priscilla became part of that scaffolding.

But what began as emotional refuge slowly turned into routine. And routine turned into distance.

By the time they married in 1967, Elvis was already becoming emotionally unavailable. The version of Priscilla he had idealized was changing—growing. She was no longer a teenage girl shaped by his shadow, but a woman with thoughts, needs, and boundaries of her own. And that unnerved him.

He began to detach. He sought affection elsewhere. Not necessarily out of malice, but out of a need to avoid vulnerability. The closeness that once felt comforting began to feel risky. And Elvis—ever protective of his emotional core—started to shut down.

The tragedy wasn’t that he stopped loving her. The tragedy was that he didn’t know how to love without fear. Fear of being abandoned. Fear of being misunderstood. Fear of being seen too closely.

So instead, he leaned into what he did know: performance. Charm. Distraction.

He smiled in public, laughed with the boys, posed for photos.

And when the lights dimmed, he slipped back into silence.

Their marriage didn’t fail overnight. It faded. Quietly.

Two people who once clung to each other for safety now stood in opposite corners of a house that had once promised peace.

Elvis never stopped needing connection.

He just didn’t know how to hold it once he had it.

Elvis longed for closeness, but closeness terrified him. He could be warm, affectionate, and magnetic—but when things started to feel too close, too vulnerable, he pulled away.

After Gladys died, the part of him that could fully attach to another person dimmed. That loss had cut too deep. She had been everything—his mother, his mirror, his emotional lifeline. Losing her wasn’t just about grief; it was about losing safety itself.

So Elvis began to love in fragments. He kept people at arm’s length—not always physically, but emotionally.

He surrounded himself with a crowd but built emotional escape routes into every relationship. Friendships, romances, even marriage—all held at just enough distance to avoid the pain of another loss like hers.

That distance wasn’t cruelty. It was protection.

Elvis didn’t want to feel that kind of devastation ever again. So he coped the only way he knew how:

Don’t get too close. Don’t let anyone in too deep. That way, when they leave—and they always do—you won’t fall apart.

Inside the Mind of Elvis Presley: A Psychological Portrait

EPISODE II: MOTHER’S SHADOW

Before you read: here’s the DISCLAIMER

Elvis loved his mother. That part has never been up for debate. But what’s often overlooked is just how much that love defined him—how it shaped not only who he was, but who he felt responsible to be.

When Elvis was just a toddler, his father, Vernon Presley, was arrested and sent to prison for altering a check. He was gone for eight months. At that time, Elvis was too young to fully understand why, but old enough to absorb the shift in atmosphere. The man of the house was gone, and in that absence, something changed.

Gladys Presley was left alone—with no husband, no real income, and a baby to raise in East Tupelo, a poor, rural neighborhood where reputation traveled fast and options ran thin. She had always been protective, but now she was anxious, burdened, emotionally stretched. And Elvis, even as a little boy, felt that weight.

Children don’t need words to understand when something’s wrong. They respond to tone, energy, silence. Elvis began clinging to her more. Watching her face more. Trying to make her laugh when she looked tired. Being quiet when she looked overwhelmed. That’s when the pattern began—not of being taken care of, but of taking care.

He stepped into that role unconsciously: the little boy who didn’t cry too loud, who didn’t ask for too much, who tried to keep the sadness out of the room. He wasn’t “the man of the house” in any literal sense, but emotionally, that’s what he became. Gladys’s stability rested on him. And he felt it—even if he couldn’t name it.

When Vernon came back, things didn’t reset. Trust was broken, and the dynamic between husband and wife had shifted. Gladys leaned even more into her bond with Elvis. He was her everything—not just her child, but her protector, her comforter, her emotional anchor. And she became his world.

They were physically close—sharing a bed well into childhood. Emotionally fused. Gladys didn’t want him out of her sight. She took him to school. She feared other children would hurt him. She didn’t trust the world to protect him. And that made Elvis fearful too—of strangers, of change, of anything that might take him away from her.

As he grew, he started to absorb her emotional state as his own. If she was upset, he was upset. If she worried, he’d do whatever he could to calm her. That bond taught him that love meant sacrifice. Love meant being responsible for someone else’s feelings.

And it followed him into adulthood.

When he began to sing in school and church, it wasn’t just about music—it was about giving something to her. Making her proud. Making her smile. She didn’t always show it—Gladys had a hard time with praise—but he chased that reaction like his life depended on it. Because emotionally, it did.

She didn’t celebrate his early success. She feared it. The clothes, the crowds, the attention—it meant other people would want him. That he might drift away. He felt that resistance, but he also felt the need to provide. To buy her a home. To give her everything she never had. And when that didn’t make her feel better, he blamed himself.

Once Elvis found success, he didn’t stop giving. He couldn’t. He became the main provider for the entire Presley family—his parents, cousins, extended relatives. That weight landed on him early, and he wore it like a second skin. The boy who once had nothing now gave away cars, homes, jewelry, stacks of cash—often to people who barely knew him. Not to show off, not even to buy loyalty. But because he remembered.

He remembered what it was like to have no car. No money. No power. To watch your mother cry quietly because there wasn’t enough food. Deep down, giving made him feel safe. It made him feel loved. It gave him control over a world that had once denied him everything. And more than that—it let him make people feel the way he wished someone had made him feel.

Taken care of. Chosen. Special.

He wanted to be a savior, because nobody had saved him.

And that drive never stopped. Even when it drained him. Even when it left him surrounded by people who took and took without ever really seeing him. He was constantly trying to recreate what he never had: security, love, and peace. But you can’t buy the past back. And no gift—no Cadillac, no mansion—ever filled the hole left by a childhood shaped by lack.

When Gladys died in 1958, Elvis lost the person he had built his world around. He was 23, stationed in Germany with the Army, when she fell ill. The grief was immediate, raw, and consuming. He screamed at doctors. He sobbed in public. He held her body for hours. He was inconsolable.

People say he never recovered. And maybe that’s because her death wasn’t just the loss of his mother. It was the loss of the person he had been living for. The person he had tried to protect, save, and please since he was a little boy.

From that point on, Elvis’s giving became even more desperate. More frequent. But also more hollow. Because no matter what he gave, or how many people called him “The King,” he was still that poor kid in East Tupelo who thought love meant keeping everybody happy. Who thought being wanted meant being useful.

And so, even at the height of his fame, Elvis Presley carried the weight of a child who once had nothing—and took it upon himself to give everything.

Inside the Mind of Elvis Presley: A Psychological Portrait

EPISODE I: TWINLESS

Before you read: here’s the DISCLAIMER

One came into the world silent.

The other came screaming.

That was the beginning of everything and the end of something no one ever saw. Tupelo, Mississippi, 1935—cold, poor, and already grieving.

Elvis Aaron Presley was born with a ghost. His twin, Jesse Garon, never took a breath. And yet he never truly left. For the rest of Elvis’s life, the presence of that missing half echoed in everything—the music, the hunger, the ache in his eyes when no one was watching.

From the start, he wasn’t just a boy. He was a survivor. And he carried it like a secret cross.

Gladys clung to him like he was made of glass. Overprotective didn’t begin to cover it. She didn’t just love him—she needed him. And in that household of sighs and scripture, a boy learned early that love could mean fear. That safety could feel suffocating. That silence had weight.

Elvis Presley was born into absence.

On January 8, 1935, in a tiny shotgun house in Tupelo, Mississippi, Gladys Presley gave birth to twin boys. The first, Jesse Garon, was stillborn. The second, Elvis Aaron, came into the world alone—alive, but missing something that would follow him quietly for the rest of his life.

That early loss was never spoken about in much detail, but it shaped him. There are theories in psychology about “vanishing twins”—how surviving twins can carry the weight of the one who didn’t make it, even without realizing it. Elvis never had to be told he was different. He just was. From the beginning, something in him seemed divided, pulled between life and something heavier.

Gladys worshipped him. That’s not an exaggeration—her grief over Jesse turned into an obsessive love for Elvis. He was her miracle. Her reason. Her second chance. But being someone’s entire world isn’t a gift; it’s a pressure. From the time he was a toddler, Elvis had to carry her expectations, her fears, and her constant need to keep him close.

She wouldn’t let him play outside too far. She’d walk him to school. She worried over everything. And because of that, he grew up emotionally enmeshed with her—tied to her in a way that would affect every relationship he’d have for the rest of his life. Elvis loved women, but he never really learned how to be separate from them. It always came back to that first bond: intense, protective, and impossible to fully return.

They were poor. Very poor. Food stamps. Government aid. A two-room house where dreams were small because survival came first. Elvis wasn’t one of the kids who stood out in a good way. He wore hand-me-downs. He was quiet. Awkward. Emotional. Teachers remembered him as polite but sensitive. He cried easily. He hated being laughed at. He wanted to fit in but didn’t quite know how.

Then came music.

It wasn’t just something he liked. It was a coping mechanism. Gospel music in church gave him a way to express emotions that were too big to say out loud. Blues and rhythm music gave him edge and attitude he didn’t have in real life. When he sang, he became someone else. More confident. More whole. The boy who lost his brother stepped into a voice that belonged to both of them.

It’s important to understand this about Elvis: he was always split. Always trying to live for two.

He didn’t talk about Jesse much. But the weight was there—in his grief when Gladys died, in his need to be adored, in his fear of being alone, in the way he clung to people, and in the way he destroyed himself when he couldn’t meet the expectations the world had for him.

The loss of his twin didn’t just happen on the day he was born. It kept happening, over and over again—every time he looked in the mirror and didn’t quite see the person he thought he should be.

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