Jessie Blue Rain

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Jessie Blue Rain

Jessie Blue Rain

@JessieBlueRain

Fashion Influencer, Twitter Model, Body Positivity Advocate 💎💎💎💎 NOT selling ass (21+ONLY) 🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈

Gulf of Mexico Katılım Temmuz 2023
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
They say you can't be an alpha male and a femboy at the same time, but here I am
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@estherzelda0514 You can increase a whole cup size just by hitting chest heavy at the gym. And that's free, healthy, and 0% risk.
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Not a Good Jewish Girl✡️
Not a Good Jewish Girl✡️@estherzelda0514·
Okay, I have to address this because it's very dangerous advice. A boob job is not "one and done." Complication rates over the lifetime of the implants is close to 1 in 3, and that's if you're lucky and don't need revisions to achieve the aesthetics you want. About 1 in 4 patients will have to have another surgery in the next 10 years. Within 20 years, half will have a rupture and will have to replace their implants. And that is if everything goes right. Namely, about 1 in 5 have capsular contracture, where the body forms such a thick protective pocket of scar tissue around the implant that it causes pain or visible deformation. This is on top of the issues you would have with a surgery, like issues with excessive scarring, infections, etc. For maintenance, you will need to get regular MRIs about every 2-6 years to check for leaks. As you age, the implants can shift and make you look lopsided or deformed, which can only be fixed with revisions. The maintenance of a boob job leads about 1 in 3 women that receive one to remove their implants entirely within 20 years. So no, a boob job is a major surgery that requires lifetime maintenance, and should not be taken lightly. This is why I don't have one. I was highly considering it in my late 20s, as I've always been noticeably flat chested. When I researched what it would take, I recoiled and decided against it. I have not regretted that decision. As my friends and I have reached our late 30s, some of them have had to have surgery over half a dozen times to correct their implants.
Kayla@caryatis

That’s it, I’m coming out in favor of boob jobs. Think about it: you do ONE THING in your youth and you can dramatically increase your attractiveness for the rest of your life. It’s ~5-10k, cheap and safe for plastic surgery. And, while every other beauty thing we do requires ongoing effort—I work out every day, I do shit to my hair and skin every day—this is one and done and never worry about it again. It’s like the IUD of beauty. (Also, you can get away with being fatter if you have breasts: your waist will look slimmer by comparison.) If you're young and slim, congratulations, you're probably already attractive, but there's obvious low-hanging fruit you're not picking

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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@Gnar1104 It's called "selective literacy". It's not that they CAN'T read, it's that they CHOOSE NOT TO read what they don't like. They WANT to pay with cash, so they ignore the "card only" signs.
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@CryptoCyberia I hate that modern technology tries to link everything together. I want my photos to be SEPARATE from my email and both of those SEPARATE from each social media app. I don't want anything linked.
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
Let's teach kids about women's liberation, self-esteem, self-love, health & fitness at ALL ages, and living life to the fullest all the way to the end. That's much better than teaching kids that the fun is over at age 30 and you have to cover up from then on.
GQTsonga@TwiiitBack

@JessieBlueRain they do but she could be someone's granny what will you tell the kids

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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@seedposting "a big tell is a handsome groom" 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Girl, I feel roasted but I laughed so hard at the same time 🤣🤣😝
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lana 🌱
lana 🌱@seedposting·
Something you should know if you're looking to hire a wedding photographer is that a lot of photographers have "styled shoots" in their portfolio. These are basically organized events that a photographer has paid to attend, in which professional models are hired to play the part of groom and bride, with a beautiful venue and beautiful decor. They're not real weddings. Real weddings are hard. You can't control the light or the people and once a moment has passed, it's gone - there are no do-overs. Styled shoots are a common cheat. It’s kind of unethical imo. Once you know what to look out for, it’s pretty obvious. A big tell is a handsome groom. But I think most people not in the industry probably have no idea!
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@HannahDCox Sadly, some people are intent on self-destruction. And as a society, we simply lack the resources to save them all. As bad as this sounds, if a person is determined to destroy their lives via gambling and then off themselves, it's their life, their choice.
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Hannah Cox
Hannah Cox@HannahDCox·
They say the older you get the more conservative you become. As someone whose political trajectory went from conservative to libertarian in my teens, I couldn’t have ever imagined that fate befalling me. But lately, I’ve had to eat some crow—and in the process, I’ve found some old conservative impulses sneaking up on me. Back in 2018, when the conversation around legalizing online gambling was first gearing up, I was an ardent supporter. That support wasn’t baked in any interest in participating (I actually detest losing money and can barely stomach the occasional slots in Vegas). Instead, I supported legalization because I hate busy-body big government policies and I often think using them to enforce morality backfires in ways that create secondary problems bigger than the original vice. If someone wants to partake in activities that hurt them, so long as they aren’t harming anyone else, isn’t that their prerogative? Things have moved quickly since then. At least 30 states have passed some form of online sports gambling, and in the intervening eight years, we’ve been able to observe and collect a lot of data on the impacts of that. It hasn’t been good. What’s interesting about this phenomenon is how one sided the effects are, young men are being impacted at rates that far exceed young women. Approximately 48% of men aged 18-49 in the U.S. have an active online sports betting account. Of those, 20% have lost money they couldn’t afford, 34% say they know someone who has developed a gambling problem thanks to these platforms, and only 9% have ever sought help for their addiction. Perhaps in part because men are so much less likely to seek mental healthcare, gambling addicts are far more likely to die at their own hand compared to other addicts. Young men, who are already struggling many ways in society, are particularly vulnerable to this industry. This is a crisis that impacts far more than the individual. Society has to pick up the costs for those who go bankrupt due to gambling. Young women increasingly struggle to find partners who aren’t addicts or buried in debt. That downstream leads to fewer kids being born and weaker communities. It’s no wonder 43% of adults now say online sports betting is bad for society. With all of this in mind, it is inexplicable that a handful of conservatives in the Georgia legislature have been quietly trying to pass a bill to legalize this here. Representative Matt Reeves (who often sponsors bills I like!) has been championing the push. It has also been supported by the likes of our Lieutenant Governor @burtjonesforga who has reportedly accepted over $100,000 in donations from the industry. He’s hardly alone in that. Last year, sports gambling companies gave more than $500,000 to elected officials in Georgia. 2026 shows no signs of slowing down either, to date, they’ve contributed another $64,800, including a $50,000 donation to the Georgia House Republican Trust. Elected officials are practically the only Georgians who stand to profit off the legalization of sports betting. As was recently covered in a report in The Atlantic, only about 3% of regular bettors are consistently profitable. Sportsbooks maintain a structural advantage through fees, setting odds that favor the house, and the addictive nature of their product. These are quite simply predatory practices, and the government does have an interest in protecting consumers from such things. The only way legalizing sports betting could even be considered ethical would be alongside a major public awareness campaign to ensure citizens are sufficiently informed on its dangers and risks—akin to what we did with cigarettes. But to be clear, nothing of the sort is being suggested with this measure, nor are there funds in place to do so. At the end of the day, educating people about the risks involved with sports betting would cost taxpayers far more than simply banning the product. There is a difference between decriminalizing harmful substances (so that taxpayers don’t have to waste money on enforcement) and on giving them a vote of confidence—which is what legalization would do. We shouldn’t legalize a sports book in every young man’s pocket for the exact same reasons we shouldn’t legalize heroin being sold in gas stations. Our country was set up as 50 mini states so we can learn from the others and only implement the ideas that work. Online gambling, including sports gambling, is not working and Georgians don't need to re-learn these lessons. The fallout from these vices does impact other people and it’s shocking, as a libertarian, to have to inform conservatives of that fact.
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Jazz
Jazz@Jazztakx·
@NickStillHere Having to work out? You sexualizing a 50 yr old? Porn brained asses
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@DarnellDaChief @NickStillHere I would be happy for her. All women deserve to love themselves, feel beautiful, be free, and live their lives to the fullest. Some of y'all just want your grandmothers to be oppressed and miserable.
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@TwiiitBack Kids: "Why is Grandma dressed like that?" Parent: "Because she loves herself, she's healthy & beautiful, and she's living life to the fullest."
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GQTsonga
GQTsonga@TwiiitBack·
@JessieBlueRain they do but she could be someone's granny what will you tell the kids
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
I've been skinny, muscular, and thick. I think I look best obese. #bodypositivity
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Jessie Blue Rain
Jessie Blue Rain@JessieBlueRain·
@tmsilverman At 6'1" and 253lbs, I am clinically obese. I feel healthy, beautiful, and strong, not diseased at all.
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