![]() The pictures that I'm using I find from real estate agencies, I find from travel agencies, I find from hotels, car dealerships, limousine services-from all over the place, because I want to make “normal” pictures. Also, I speak Arabic, and I’ve been learning Arabic for five years now-and websites in Arabic are so much more colorful and amazing, and they use their typography in a very beautiful way. So for me, it's a sort of reaction to this boring, bland aesthetic. I'm inspired because of the colors-I'm living in Norway, and Norway is a very gray and minimalistic country. Where do you draw your inspiration from?Įarly web, internet type of aesthetic, of course, is an inspiration for my work. ![]() But what if they’re not extremely lonely? Then it's great, they can read it, they can affirm it, and they can be grateful for that-that they're not extremely lonely. They might say, “Oh, that has something to do with the subconscious.” Somebody once told me that reposting the pictures can be interpreted as a sort of cry for help, but it’s also cheeky, and a little bit funny. For example, I would say: I am not extremely lonely right now. ![]() Sometimes people complain about my affirmations that I'm using the negation too much. I twist that around, I try to make it positive. I think I'm contributing to making a sort of new wave on Instagram. Many niches of Instagram have been characterized by a sort of negative attitude, memes with a negative perspective on the world. This wellness thing has been around for some while, but I think I'm making it more approachable and less boring. What do you think makes your content unique among other Instagram accounts that talk about wellness or mental health, which tends to take a more technical standpoint with riffs on subjects like trauma or toxicity?
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