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Marilyn Monroe, with her platinum hair and iconic red lips, is often remembered as the epitome of old Hollywood glamour but beneath the surface was a woman shaped by a painful, unstable childhood, bouncing between foster homes and longing for a sense of belonging. We talk less about that Marilyn the one who was Norma Jeane, the one who never really knew her father and whose mother was in and out of psychiatric care. Instead, we idolize the version created by studios and magazines, a myth wrapped in diamonds and vulnerability. And yet, with all we don’t truly know about her the private heartbreak, the blurred lines between performance and person it raises a strange question: why do people still get her face inked into their skin, frozen forever in a pose she may have never truly felt? Maybe it's not homage, but a kind of forgetting dressed up as tribute.
My YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/@NELIRAMUSE
My Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/61563410034042/posts/pfbid02zHfMPC4L6FabKLy2zBZfBvxTANziuHLLaUcA7C6WVBTrME5Ycf6NRCqbrauCQno6l/?mibextid=wwXIfr
My only two books, written by Ashley Marshall (aka NELIRA MUSE) : Available on Amazon.com
Tin Foil Central is a modern forum for thinkers, dreamers, and explorers of all kinds. It's a space where open hearts and curious minds come together to share ideas, challenge assumptions, and imagine new possibilities. Whether you're passionate about philosophy, science, or the mysteries of the universe, we invite you to join the conversation. This is where diverse perspectives meet, and where every idea has a place at the table, as long as you're ready to think big and explore the unknown.
By NELIRA MUSEMarilyn Monroe, with her platinum hair and iconic red lips, is often remembered as the epitome of old Hollywood glamour but beneath the surface was a woman shaped by a painful, unstable childhood, bouncing between foster homes and longing for a sense of belonging. We talk less about that Marilyn the one who was Norma Jeane, the one who never really knew her father and whose mother was in and out of psychiatric care. Instead, we idolize the version created by studios and magazines, a myth wrapped in diamonds and vulnerability. And yet, with all we don’t truly know about her the private heartbreak, the blurred lines between performance and person it raises a strange question: why do people still get her face inked into their skin, frozen forever in a pose she may have never truly felt? Maybe it's not homage, but a kind of forgetting dressed up as tribute.
My YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/@NELIRAMUSE
My Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/61563410034042/posts/pfbid02zHfMPC4L6FabKLy2zBZfBvxTANziuHLLaUcA7C6WVBTrME5Ycf6NRCqbrauCQno6l/?mibextid=wwXIfr
My only two books, written by Ashley Marshall (aka NELIRA MUSE) : Available on Amazon.com
Tin Foil Central is a modern forum for thinkers, dreamers, and explorers of all kinds. It's a space where open hearts and curious minds come together to share ideas, challenge assumptions, and imagine new possibilities. Whether you're passionate about philosophy, science, or the mysteries of the universe, we invite you to join the conversation. This is where diverse perspectives meet, and where every idea has a place at the table, as long as you're ready to think big and explore the unknown.