She was homeschooled, which she has mentioned in interviews as part of her background, though she hasn't dwelt on it as a defining wound or gift — just a fact about where she started. What she has talked about more openly is what she did after the cameras stopped: training at an autopsy firm, handling bodies, learning the clinical side of death as part of a path toward medicine. That's not a detail most people lead with about themselves, and the fact that she does — casually, on podcasts, alongside conversation about gym nausea and VR shoots — suggests someone who doesn't compartmentalize her lives the way the industry sometimes encourages. She spent roughly a decade performing, which she has described without apparent regret, and she writes for Hustler Magazine, meaning she stayed inside the world but shifted her role in it. She's talked about found footage involving body chunks on the internet with the same tone she uses to talk about everything else. That consistency is either a personality or a performance, and the interviews don't quite resolve which.
The Ten
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