You Look Like Stevie Nicks
You look like Stevie Nicks


In ‘75 the hair and the lips


Crowd goes wild at her fingertips
half moonshine a full eclipse
-
im-bored-please-help liked this · 9 months ago
-
enchanted2meetuuu liked this · 9 months ago
-
capsfrom liked this · 9 months ago
-
leostarv liked this · 9 months ago
-
bobpil liked this · 9 months ago
-
meeknessadorable liked this · 9 months ago
-
slippingintomadness liked this · 9 months ago
-
fqrietqles liked this · 9 months ago
-
teamalive9556 reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
teamalive9556 liked this · 9 months ago
-
1989fan liked this · 9 months ago
-
the-official-muffin-man liked this · 10 months ago
-
exit-pursued-by-a-lesbian liked this · 10 months ago
-
snatchyour-wig liked this · 10 months ago
-
prettykittyfuture reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
prettykittyfuture liked this · 10 months ago
-
anxiousbaddie91 liked this · 10 months ago
-
them-night-moves liked this · 10 months ago
-
redevermore7 liked this · 10 months ago
-
fictionalfanatic123 liked this · 10 months ago
-
academicwitchversion reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
academicwitchversion liked this · 10 months ago
-
promisesbutnevertokeep reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
itskspice reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
honey-allergic liked this · 10 months ago
-
glamoir liked this · 10 months ago
-
nothinglacy liked this · 10 months ago
-
percabeth-taylorsversion reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
percabeth-taylorsversion liked this · 10 months ago
-
swiftiesforkamalaharris reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
aimeemwatkins reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
ultimatelyangel liked this · 10 months ago
-
playphil liked this · 10 months ago
-
aktinopterygia reblogged this · 11 months ago
-
moooosh liked this · 11 months ago
-
karmasa-god liked this · 11 months ago
-
lena1322 liked this · 11 months ago
-
raltimore liked this · 11 months ago
-
kingdom-lightsshined reblogged this · 11 months ago
-
twst--fan liked this · 11 months ago
-
leo-in-the-clouds liked this · 11 months ago
-
carltonstar liked this · 11 months ago
-
sparklyglitterpersona liked this · 11 months ago
-
skairipassecond liked this · 11 months ago
-
ayeshalivedhere liked this · 11 months ago
-
detectivewatson liked this · 11 months ago
-
cactusass liked this · 11 months ago
-
ar-u-breathe liked this · 11 months ago
-
nothingmuchsoever liked this · 11 months ago
More Posts from Mynameisntlame

this as an album outro 😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫
okay but “my beloved ghost and me, sitting in a tree, d-y-i-n-g” becomes even more devastating when you consider what comes right after the portion of the children’s nursery rhyme taylor modified: “first comes love, then comes marriage, then comes baby in a baby carriage”

ttpd's track 5 // folklore, lover, midnights
I think the only way I can handle shortening the ttpd song titles is by trimming off some words (I can fix him, who's afraid, smallest man, chloe or sam... etc) because whenever I see the acronyms my brain malfunctions. waolom? mbobhft? cososom?? icfhnric?? icdiwabh? tsmwel??? those aren't songs they're keysmashes
religion is one of the most prominent recurring themes on the album, and it has been present in some capacity for quite a few records now. taylor previously compared love to religion: her saving grace, her belief system, and a fated divine intervention (false god, cornelia street, and cruel summer are the best examples of this). ‘sacred new beginnings that became my religion’ and ‘we’d still worship this love even if it’s a false god’ are two of the defining statements about her philosophy on the lover album.
taylor doesn’t want to leave all of that behind on ttpd, at least not at the beginning. the first supernatural force she mentions is the spaceship on down bad, which she compares to a skylight of freedom in the epilogue. *something* has finally come to save her from her life of suffering. she doesn’t care if it’s a force of good at first; if anything, she’s just fine being taken away by aliens. she views this man as her destiny. it isn’t until guilty as sin? that taylor starts to ponder the moral implications of what she’s doing. is she guilty as sin for wanting to leave her previous religion and relationship behind? she comes to the conclusion that, even if she rolls the stone away and gets resurrected/redeemed, she cannot avoid the fallout. she is okay with the thought of having to wait, as long as both lovers vow to be together forever, just as she once did with someone else in false god. ‘I choose you and me religiously’ finishes the bridge of the song in a direct callback to cornelia street.
the next mention of religion has murkier imagery. she claims that she does not need the Lord’s help to save this man. she sees the halo that he has, and she can fix him herself. now that she feels free of her prior cage, she isn’t looking for divine intervention anymore. she wants control. she is their route to salvation.
when the relationship falls apart, she retreats back into the position of a believer rather than a divine figure. she compares him to a Holy Ghost who promised to save her and take her to heaven. instead, she is in hell in every sense of the word: she’s down bad and feels guilty for digging up the grave. he was a jehovah’s witness who promised that she could break free of the cage imposed by love without changing her religion altogether; she would’ve just had to switch denominations. she could still have a marriage and kids! she could still have a blue tortured poet! the man was different, but not the dreams they had together. the story of the first part of the album ends here. her faith has been broken, and she has only found any semblance of sanity by refusing to mention these belief systems altogether.
side b/the anthology blends the christian imagery of side a with goddesses, sorcerers, and prophecies. she bargains with these powers to let her have the future she wants (the prophecy). she doesn’t sound like someone believing in salvation. if anything, she feels cursed. she decides that the concept of divinely ordained timing will never work in certain relationships (‘the goddess of timing once found us beguiling / she said she was trying / peter, was she lying?’). this disdain extends onto her perception of other people’s faith (‘bet they never spared a prayer for my soul’). she does position herself as a prophet in cassandra, but even then, she admits that the role has hurt her. perhaps the pain in thank you aimee was meant to be, or perhaps she was just strong enough to build a legacy in spite of it, boulder by boulder. is she a martyr? does she want to be? or did she save herself?
the only real love song on this half of the album makes no mention of fate or any divine forces. it wasn’t meant to be. it’s not a supernatural invisible string or lightning in a bottle. she is just in love.
the album ends with the manuscript, which revisits an old story of a defining, formative heartbreak. as she sings ‘at last, she knew what the agony had been for’ while describing the legacy of her writing, she seems to revert to thinking about the purpose of trauma. the only exception is that, in this case, she is the one who found meaning in her pain by turning it into a manuscript. writing is her belief system now, and she proselytizes by telling her stories and thus giving up the manuscript.
ultimately, her belief in destiny has chewed her up and spat her out. she so desperately clung to her existing belief systems that she was fooled by a conman, which left her feeling cursed. religion is supposed to be with someone even in their darkest moments, but the album explains that taylor often felt abandoned. the only constant in her life was, well, herself. she’ll be okay, but her pen will be her saving grace.