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Midway through the interview she leaned back and laughed, surprised by how comfortable she felt telling the truth. "People think the camera flattens you," she said, "like a stamp pressed into wax. But it can also be a lantern. You get to decide what it lights." She spoke about the responsibility she felt toward viewers who confided in her: a worried teen, a parent waking up at three a.m., a retiree learning to love again. She read some private messages aloud—always anonymized—small notes about courage and survival. Each was a reminder that sharing had consequences and gifts.
"I used to think showing myself for money would be the end of privacy," she began. Her voice was steadier than she felt. "Turns out it taught me where my edges are." camshowrecord exclusive
"People think it's about the camera," she said. "It's not. It's about how you show up when it's the only mirror some people have." Her viewers—those who'd been with her since the days when the chat numbered in the dozens—flooded the window with hearts and quick lines of encouragement. Somewhere beyond the screen her moderator kept the chat kind; moderation, she explained, was the scaffolding that kept her performances from collapsing under the weight of strangers. Midway through the interview she leaned back and