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). It’s delicate, the way a song about a thwarted proposal co-written with your real-life boyfriend probably should be. There’s quiet devastation in the pronoun switch — “my picture in your wallet” to “her picture in my wallet” — that embodies the nature of the title phrase: real hurt in the context of, sure, much bigger global problems. The title is a wry, high-level argument for taking in the art of a millionaire; it’s also a small-scale argument for letting yourself feel things that are hard and dramatic and unreasonable, just because they’re your own. “How evergreen, our group of friends/Don't think we'll say that word again,” she observes amid the fallout. Which word does she refer to? “Evergreen”? “Our”? Or maybe the feeling of movement, of reckoning with the idea that not everything that’s written down can be kept, of leaving behind the things you don’t need to remember anymore.ContentView Iframe URLLet us slide into your DMs.Sign up for theTeen Voguedaily emailWant more fromTeen Vogue? Check this out:Taylor Swift New Album “Folklore": Review__Update:Friday, October 9, 12:30pm __ in 1842. “For folks come for their debts then; and if anybody is going to sell a slave, that’s the time they do it; and if anybody’s going to give away a slave, that’s the time they do it; and the slave never knows where he’ll be sent to. Oh, New Year’s a heart-breaking time in Kentucky!” outlines the impact debt loads can have on family planning. TV teaches us that to be fat is to be uncomfortable, that fat women (like all women, of any size) are

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Time: 2026-06-04 23:22:45
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