
She grew up in St. Louis, got a biology degree, and landed somewhere unlikely: teaching kindergarten and farming in Arkansas. What sits between that life and the one she has now is a nonprofit she built to prevent overdose deaths in her community. When the funding ran dry, she started stripping to keep it going. She has talked about this publicly and without apparent embarrassment, framing the transition not as a fall but as a practical decision made by someone who had already decided what mattered to her.
She started posting content at the beginning of the pandemic, and she is candid about the fact that timing helped — lockdown collapsed the barrier between curiosity and subscription for a lot of people who might otherwise have never clicked. She credits consistency and luck as much as anything she did deliberately. What she doesn't talk about much is what happened to the nonprofit, or whether it's still running. That gap sits at the center of her story and nobody seems to have pushed her on it.
The Ten
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