T'Nasha Thomas
Bio
Idk, this life is super weird but when I write I tend to create a new world <3
IG: thetanae_
Stories (3)
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I Turned My Art Project into My Passion
Have you ever heard the saying "before Alice got to wonderland, she had to fall."? Well, that was me a year ago. I was in a place where I felt stuck and didn't know what to do with my life anymore until I started working on a crafty project that changed my life, opened my eyes, and helped me tune into my true self.
By T'Nasha Thomas5 years ago in Lifehack
Thrifting and I became... a Thing
It was after a stressful day of work, and I needed a good drink and some retail therapy. This particular day, as soon as I got off, I drove to the nearest daiquiri shop. To my convience, there was a thrift shop across the street, yet a few stores down from the daiquiri shop. Now, this would be my very first time going into a thrift store. My grandma introduced me to them because for some reason she would get a kick out of "bagging" items that were "brand new" in her eyes. Sometimes I wanted to say "Lady, if it's in the thrift store, do you really think it's new?" But she loved it, and today I decided to get a taste of the thrill she gets out of thrift shopping.
By T'Nasha Thomas5 years ago in Styled
The Power of Black Women in the Music Industry
"You got it going on? wha wha. You got it going on? wha wha." "T'Nasha, turn that off right now," screams my mother. Yeah, that was fifteen year old me standing infront of the TV reciting and listening to little Kim. Everyday after school, I would throw my booksack down and turn on 106 and Park. I can vividly remember little me, listening to music I had no business listening to. What's funny is, sometimes I had no clue how inappropriate the lyrics were for my age because the beats were always so catchy. I heard my older cousins, mom, aunts listening certain tunes by my favorite female black women so I figured it was okay for me to listen to it too. See, black women in the music industry is like a sprinkle of magic that rains over us, not only in the black community, but over everyone - no matter age, or race. They grant us with ingenious culture, advocate sexuality, artistic creativity, and power.
By T'Nasha Thomas5 years ago in Beat


