
kit! - 31 - genderfucky gal pal - loves big plushies, cute pokemon, cool speedruns, and my wonderful partners:
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π¨ may contain some suggestive shares, including mild kink stuff like tf, plush, and scantily clad furries π¨
This might be weird to say but I get the sense that going yinglet drove a huge amount of development in your art/style/technicals, like you've come a long way since I was first aware of your work many many years ago, and the yinglet stuff in particular feels like it's on another level to me. I feel like your lines are just more expressive and confident, idk!
Aw, that's so nice of you to say, and it's nice to hear from you in general!
I'm hesitant to assign any benefits specifically to being a yinglet, I think that just happens to be very very right for me on a personal level. But it did drive an obsession with a specific physical form and organic state of being, which made me want to try and recreate those things in art. There are a number of other factors (including using streaming as an accountability system and finally getting diagnosed with ADHD, both of which drastically improved my followthrough), but I'm very pleased that all this seems to have worked out well for my art in any case.
i think there's a lot to be said about self-actualization. you're better at everything when you're content and happy and comfortable, and if being a yinglet does that for you, then it'll make you better at art (or whatever you strive to do) too, more or less.
Late to this, but -- that makes a lot of sense, and I think my original explanation is kind of clinical/detatched, overlooking a major factor. It's fun to be a yinglet, and having fun makes me better at art; simple as that -v-