Saturday, July 11, 2026 · Issue 02 for women who only answer to themselves

The Archive

Everything, in order

Every piece Voice has published — most recent first. Voice publishes slowly and on purpose, so the archive is meant to be read, not scrolled past.

25 pieces

July 2026

Body · Essay

The Jewel Worn Within - French Luxury for the Wild Woman’s Fullest Embodiment

A personal reflection on wearing luxury anal jewellery as daily practice - shifting between sizes, training the body, and unlocking fuller, more ecstatic experiences of double penetration and embodied power.

Roots · Essay

The Howl Awakens: 10 Anthems of Feral Femininity in 2025–2026 Pop

In 2025–2026, feral femininity breaks the charts. These 10 songs channel primal sensuality, ancestral rage, and unfiltered rebirth - a sonic invocation for the wild woman who refuses to be tamed.

Roots · Essay

The Perfumed Garden: An Invitation to Sovereign Sensuality

In this opening essay to a new series for Feral Voice, we step into the 15th-century Arabic erotic classic The Perfumed Garden. Through scent, story, and unashamed sensuality, Sheikh Nefzawi offers a lush invitation to reclaim embodied pleasure as an essential part of sovereign feminine living.

Roots · Essay

Feral Eros: Kama Sutra as a Map for the Modern Woman’s Embodied Sovereignty

Vatsyayana’s Kama Sutra saw female desire as powerful, intelligent, and worthy of deep attention. In this long-form essay, we explore how its teachings on embodiment, mutuality, and erotic sovereignty offer a radical map for the modern woman who refuses to abandon herself in intimacy.

Roots · Essay

Mythic Inheritance: Becoming the Archetype You Need

From the Morrígan’s sovereignty and Isis’s ritual power to Draupadi’s unyielding dignity and the Dark Goddess’s necessary destruction - reclaiming the fierce, multifaceted feminine archetypes our lineage offers when polite templates are no longer enough.

Self · Essay

Becoming the Woman She Needed

A tender yet fierce reflection on healing the younger self, releasing old patterns, and stepping into the woman we were always meant to become.

Bonds · Essay

Loving Without Losing Yourself: The Art of Sovereign Attachment

How to build deep, passionate relationships without abandoning yourself - the path from anxious or avoidant love into secure + feral attachment.

Roots · Essay

The Yakshi, The Kannagi & The Demoness: Untold Stories of Sri Lanka’s Fierce Feminine Archetypes

From the seductive power of the Yakshi to the burning rage of Kannagi - reclaiming Sri Lanka’s wild, untamed feminine forces that were never meant to be tamed.

Alone · Essay

The Long Quiet: Cultivating Interior Solitude in a Noisy Age

Physical solitude is easy. True interior solitude - the undistracted silence within your own mind - has become revolutionary. This essay explores why the Long Quiet is essential for sovereign women and how to cultivate it in the loudest era in human history.

Roots · Essay

Body as Temple, Desire as Art: The Ganika and Her 64 Kalās

In ancient India, the Ganika stood as a sovereign force - a courtesan who mastered not just pleasure, but the full spectrum of feminine power. Through the legendary 64 Kalās, she transformed her body into a living temple and her desire into refined art. She answers the modern woman’s call: to no longer split herself between sacred and sensual, but to claim both in full sovereignty.

Self · Essay

Killing the Good Girl Politely: The End of Performative Virtue

The Good Girl was never about real goodness. She was about being digestible, agreeable, and safe. This essay explores how to politely but decisively end the performance of virtue - so you can finally live as a whole, feral, self-authored woman.

Body · Essay

Like a Virgin, Like a Whore: Madonna and the Sacred-Profane Power of Reinvention

By taking the sacred name “Madonna” and deliberately colliding it with raw sexuality, provocation, and constant reinvention, she didn’t just shock the world - she dismantled the virgin/whore binary and claimed total ownership of her body, desire, and image. This is the story of how one woman turned religious iconography against itself and forged a blueprint for feral feminine power.

June 2026

Bonds · Essay

The Sovereign Harem: Desire, Jealousy, and Curating Your Orbit

True sovereignty in relationships is not about monogamy or polyamory as trends. It is about becoming the unshakable center of your own life. This essay explores how to own your desire fully, alchemize jealousy into power, and consciously curate who gets access to your energy - while remaining fiercely your own.

Body · Essay

She Wore the Crown of Thorns and Gold: Feral Queens, Body, and the Untamed Mic

Lil’ Kim, Cardi B, Megan Thee Stallion, Doja Cat, and Nicki Minaj didn’t just rap about sex — they weaponized their desire. This is the story of how five feral queens turned “wet-ass pussy” and unfiltered hunger into cultural power, empires, and a blueprint for women who refuse to shrink.

Self · Essay

The Goddess Who Asked for Permission

Doja Cat's Woman invokes Mother Earth, divine femininity, and goddess mythology - then spends the chorus asking a man to let her be his woman. The divine feminine has become the most sophisticated packaging available for the same old ask. This essay is about the gap between the aesthetic of power and the actual architecture of it: why the goddess on the pedestal is still waiting to be placed there, and what sovereign femininity actually looks like when no one is watching.

Alone · Essay

The Room Is Not Enough

In 1929, Virginia Woolf told women they needed money and a room of their own. She was right. She was also writing for a century that no longer exists. A woman in 2026 can have the room - and she fills it immediately with her phone, her notifications, her continuous availability to everyone who might need her. Physical solitude is now trivially achievable. Interior solitude is what has become structurally impossible.

Roots · Essay

The Witch They Couldn't Name

History preserved the queens. It mostly forgot the other woman - the one the village sent for when the fever wouldn't break, the one men consulted privately and denied publicly, the one whose knowledge passed between women because it couldn't be carried any other way. In Tudor England they called her the cunning woman. In southern Chile she was the Machi. In the colonial Caribbean, the obeah woman. The names changed. The power, and the empire's fear of it, did not.

Roots · Essay

She Wore the Wings of Isis: Cleopatra’s Ritual Power and the Shame Rome Tried to Attach

Cleopatra didn’t just love powerful men. She performed Isis on earth. In a world that demanded women split themselves, she fused ritual, desire, and political power without apology. This is the story of a feral queen Rome had to reduce to a seductress.

Alone · Essay

I Am Not Lonely. I Am Unclaimed

When a woman lives without a primary partner, she is often described as lonely - as though solitude is automatically a state of lack. But there is another way of naming this condition. To be unclaimed is not to be missing something. It is to stand outside the structures of belonging that still shape how women’s lives are expected to unfold. This essay examines the difference between the two.

Bonds · Essay

On Being Loved by More Than One

Two framings of non-monogamy dominate public discourse - the mainstream one that treats it as a trend, and the community's own vocabulary that makes it sound like project management. Neither asks the only question worth answering: what does it feel like to be loved by more than one person simultaneously? What it demands, what it reveals, and what it honestly costs.

Bonds · Essay

I Am Not the Hinge

There is a woman who holds everything together - everyone's first call, the one who absorbs the friction, the connective tissue of every room she enters. She is indispensable. She is also, at the structural level, held by nothing. This essay is about the difference between being the hinge and being the keystone - and what it takes to stop being one and become the other.

Self · Essay

Kali Didn't Smile Through It

Wellness culture gave Kali a candle line and a journaling prompt. The actual myth gave her a bowl for blood and a battlefield she refused to leave. This essay is about the difference - and what happens when a woman stops processing her rage and lets it do what it came to do.

Roots · Essay

From Draupadi’s Fire to the Queen’s Stone

In the Mahabharata and in a 14th-century Sri Lankan inscription, women stood at the centre of multi-partner bonds. These stories do not romanticise the past - they remember ways of loving and sharing that colonial law and modern ownership tried to erase. What can they teach us now?

Body · Interview

The Vampire Woman: Maria Jose Cristerna on Body Modification, Inner Strength, and Raising Her Voice

She doesn’t drink blood - she reclaims it. Maria Jose Cristerna, the world-famous “Vampire Woman,” reveals how extreme body modification became her way of healing from domestic violence, rejecting the legal system, and turning her skin into both armor and a voice for women who have been silenced. In this powerful conversation, she explains why she chose fangs over a gavel and why the inside will always matter more than the surface.

Body · Essay

Feral Siren: Cher, Music’s Eternal Sex Icon and the Living Embodiment of Dark Feminine Energy

She didn’t just survive the music industry - she seduced it, burned it down, and rose from the ashes wearing chains, feathers, and zero apologies. At 80, Cher remains the feral goddess who proved that dark feminine power isn’t about being soft or small. It’s about owning your body, your voice, your shadow, and your endless capacity for reinvention. This is the story of the woman who turned “too much” into an art form.