May 13 2026 | By: Sweet · Raw · Sticky™ by Velvet Lenae
I want to tell you about a moment I had recently. I was in my new space, finally settled enough to breathe, and I sat down in my favorite olive green lounge chair with a glass of Cava Champagne out of Spain, music that had nothing to with anybody else's mood, and absolutely nowhere to be be. And I just...stayed there. In my own company. On purpose.
It sounds simple. And it was. I enjoy my own company. Always have. This was one of those moments that just hit different and needed to be embraced.
We talk a lot about self-care. Bubble baths. Spa days. The occasional glass of wine with your girls. And those things are lovely, honestly. But I want to talk about something a little deeper than that. I want to talk about building a relationship with your own pleasure that does not require a special occasion, a partner, or a reason to justify it.
A pleasure practice. Something that's entirely, unapologetically yours.
Here is what I have learned about pleasure: most of us have spent so long prioritizing everyone else's comfort that we genuinely do not know what we like anymore. Or we never learned in the first place. We know how to perform enjoyment. We know how to make other people feel like they did a good job. But knowing what actually lights us up, in our bodies, in our quiet moments, in our intimate lives? That takes practice. Actual, intentional practice.
A pleasure practice is a consistent space you create to check in with your body and your senses and ask the simple but radical question: what do I actually want right now? It is showing up for yourself with the same energy you give everybody else. Presence. Attention. Care.
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Your body has been carrying you through everything. The least you can do is pay attention to it once in a while. ~ Velvet Lenae
The reason me time gets labeled as selfish is the same reason pleasure gets labeled as indulgent. We were raised in a culture that measured our worth by how much we gave. How available we were. How little we asked for in return. Rest was laziness. Solitude was antisocial. Wanting things for yourself was greedy when there were people around you who needed something.
So we learned to shrink the wanting. We learned to put it at the bottom of the list and call it humility. And then we wondered why we felt so disconnected from ourselves, so far from our own desire, so exhausted in ways that a good night of sleep never quite fixed.
The exhaustion has a name. It is what happens when you spend years pouring out without ever pouring back in.
Sweet is the tenderness you show yourself when you finally slow down enough to listen. Raw is being honest about how long you have gone without doing it. Sticky is the way it changes everything once you start, because you realize this is what you should have been doing all along.
I am in a season of this right now. New home, new environment, new rhythms. I am loving what pleasure currently looks like in this chapter of my life, and I am not afraid of evolving into wherever it takes me next. Some of what I am discovering is familiar. Some of it is surprising. All of it is mine.
And that is the part I want for you. Not a checklist. Not a twelve-step program for self-care. Just the simple, ongoing practice of coming back to yourself. Asking what you want. Honoring what you hear. Doing it again tomorrow.
Pleasure has been waiting on you. Patient, quiet, right there. All it needed was for you to finally show up. ~ Velvet Lenae
Claiming your me time, your pleasure, your space to just be...that's where everything else begins. Your relationships. Your intimacy. The way you move through the world. All of it gets better when you know yourself well enough to know what you actually need.
Give yourself that. You have earned it and then some.
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