Well I can see why Taylor would reference Dianna in the new album if it's part of her journey to came out, I don't think any of the rep songs were for her though and you seem to think that some are but only because of Dianna Sms posts and I don't think that's enough to prove that the songs were about her tbh
While we can agree to disagree, thereâs this about NYD:
This quote:
Before playing âNew Yearâs Day,â Swift explained she had a few lyrics rattling around in a notebook that sheâd wanted to put into a song: âPlease donât ever become a stranger/ Whose laugh I could recognize anywhere.â She explained that she was enamored with peopleâs obsession with who theyâd kiss on New Yearâs Eve, when in reality the person that matters is the one who will give you the Advil the next day.â Billboard on Taylorâs performance of NYD at siriusxm (x)
Some more context:
anonymous  asked:
Hi! Happy New Year! This isnât really an analysis question on Taylorâs lyrics, but do you know what âDonât read the last page.â means on her New Yearâs Day song? Thanks!
A very (late) Happy New Year to you too, anon <3 I have always assumed that that particular lyric refers to Taylorâs construction of her romantic relationships as story-books (or, more appositely, fairy-tales) with a distinct beginning, middle and (happy) ending. It means, in short, donât read the last page in the story of our relationship â not because it is a tragedy in the making, but rather because it is better to experience life in the moment without skipping ahead (much like it is better to read a book without knowing the ending in advance.)
Interestingly, this is a lyrical device which Taylor has employed several times before â Â most obviously it provides the conceptual framework for The Story of Us, but it appears also in Holy Ground (âand the storyâs got dust on every pageâ). If we understand those songs to have been inspired by her only other serious relationships [1] â with Emily and Dianna, respectively â neither of which had a happy conclusion, this choice of imagery is possibly deliberate. Certainly, I think, it can reasonably be argued that a direct comparison is being made to the subject of Holy Ground â a position, incidentally, which sits well with an interpretation of New Yearâs Day as about Karlie specifically in the context of Taylorâs past experience with Dianna, the real stranger âwith a laugh [she] could recognise anywhere.â Â
[1] Taylor told InStyle in 2014, that she has only had three ârealâ relationships.
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Some more circumstantial evidence:
anonymous  asked:
how does everyone know dianna proposed
Itâs an assumption â arising in the first instance from an anonymous source supplied by @larrienation in July 2016 â albeit, one for which there is circumstantial âevidenceâ in support.
(i.) There is good reason to suspect that Taylor wanted to marry Dianna:
This is consistent with Taylorâs writing in the period of their relationship: the lyrics to How You Get the Girl â âI want you for worse or for betterâ âI would wait for ever and everâ (cf. Wonderland, for the aftermath, âwe pretended it could last forever (last forever)â âAnd life was never worse but never better (never better)â) â suggest that she anticipated marriage (to Dianna).
Taylor performed Speak Now, a song about interrupting an exâs wedding, live on the first tour date (6th September 2013) after attending a Fun concert with Dianna (4th September â this was not only two years to the day since their reintroduction to each other at Fairfax Flea Market, but the first time they had communicated publicly since Diannaâs birthday in April, when their engagement supposedly was broken-off.)
According to an interview with Global News in December 2014, Style was written about âthat one person who you feel like might interrupt your wedding and [who would] be like donât do it because weâre not over yet.âStyle, on my conception, is about Dianna.
Taylorâs reaction to Diannaâs marriage in 2016 was interesting â at her only concert of that year (in Austin, in October) she changed the lyrics to I Knew You Were Trouble for a second time, from âyou never loved meâ to âshe never loved me.â (x)
(ii.) It is an idea which seemingly is endorsed by the music video to Look What You Made Me Do:
Significantly, there is a ring box in shot in the bank-heist scene â a scene in which Taylor appears with a cat mask as a literal pussy bandit. âpussy banditâ is a popular nickname of Diannaâs, pre-dating her relationship with Taylor. Â [Note: the swiftlife debuted a âpussy banditâ taymoji in the âbetter than revengeâ pack on the day that the music video for Babe, another song associated with Dianna, was released.]
ETA (27/04/2019)
(iii.) It is also tacitly endorsed by the visuals for Clean, a song popularly associated with Dianna, on the 1989 tour:
Taylor wears a white dress, while the rain-water substitutes for a veil (here).
ETA (21/05/2019)
(iv.) On one interpretation of the music video to ME!, Brendonâs three attempts to woo Taylor on the rooftop represent Taylorâs three âreal relationships.â The second in sequence (Brendon as Dianna) involves Taylorâs rejection of a proposal.
ETA (12/06/2019)
(v.) It is arguable that the lyric  /a circus ainât a love story/  in Getaway Car (again, a song associated with Dianna)  alludes to Taylorâs non-acceptance of a proposal. It is, after-all, apparent that in (an actual) Love Story, an affirmative answer is assumed (/itâs a love story, baby just say yes/).
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In 2023 actor Sophia Bush made headlines when she filed for divorce one year after a storybook wedding. By the fall it was public knowledge that she was in a new relationship. With a woman. The internet seemed to be foaming at the digital mouth for a scandal, but to those who knew her, it was clear sheâd never been more herself. Here, in her own words, Bush speaks to the power of finally learning to listen to her intuition.
In April of 2022 I was close to calling off my wedding. Instead of running away, I doubled down on being a model wife. In 2023 my now ex-husband posted a lovely tribute to our first anniversary on Instagram. When I saw it, I felt the blood drain from my face. Fans and friends were telling me how exciting this milestone was and how happy I looked. I felt nothing. Things hadnât been easy at home, but everyone says marriage is hard, right? As the day wore on, I felt mounting pressure from strangers online waiting for me to post somethingâwhat a strange part of public life to have to navigateâso I sat myself down and chose a picture.
It was a black-and-white photograph of us running away from the camera. Yes, I see the bittersweet irony now. I wrote a really nice story about the people in that picture. Except it was just that: a story. I typed something about how incredibly happy I was and tried to drown out the familiar voice in my head. Make it look easy. Make it look perfect. If your smile is shiny enough, maybe no one will notice that up close all of your teeth are broken. But sometimes broken is just broken.
I hit post. And then I walked into the bathroom and threw up.
I believe in people and ideas so deeplyâand those feelings are often so powerful to meâthat I hadnât realized Iâd spent the last two decades moving through life showing up for others but often turning my back on myself. This time things felt different. Maybe itâs just cold feet, I told myself. Maybe I was too sensitive. Maybe this was the feeling you get when you settle down later in life and have to make space for another person. There have been moments in my life when it feels like the universe is screaming at me to pay attention. This was one of them, but I didnât listen.
I kept repeating the adages we all know so well: Relationships are hard. Marriage takes compromise. You know the rest. And so I got married. We threw one of the greatest wedding weekends ever. We had an amazing time with our closest friends and family. It was truly one of the best parties Iâve ever been to, and we raised a ton of money for charity. I donât regret any of that.
But after the wedding I found myself in the depths and heartbreak of the fertility process, which was the most clarifying experience of my life. It feels like society is finally making space for brutally honest conversations about how hard and painful any fertility journey is, but I kept mine private. I was trying to get through months of endless ultrasounds, hormone shots, so many blood draws that I have scar tissue in my veins, and retrieval after retrieval, while simultaneously realizing the person I had chosen to be my partner didnât necessarily speak the same emotional language I did.
As I lost track of how many examination tables I had lain on alone, I felt something in me seismically shift. Six months into that journey, I think I knew deep down that I absolutely had made a mistake. It would take my head and heart a while longer to understand what my bones already knew.
And thatâs why, when I got an opportunity to do a play in London, I had to go. I had to get out of our house. I had to get onstage. I had to get back in my body. Maybe that could shift things. Maybe that would jump-start the joy Iâd been chasing. The play slowly began to put me back together. It was grueling, and it was also the most exhilarating experience. I loved every second of it.
But the book doesnât lie. The body does, in fact, keep the score. When half of our company went down with a virus, everyone recovered fast except for me. I continued to decline. I would put every fiber of my being into my performance onstage, and then be packed in bags of ice as soon as the curtain closed. I spent multiple nights in the hospital, I was pumped with endless amounts of fluids, I underwent cardiac testing and organ monitoring. It was clear that my body was screaming and I had to listen. It was hard for me to accept. I was part of a team. But I needed to go home, where my doctors (and, truthfully, my health insurance) could get a better handle on my symptoms. My time in London was over. So was my marriage. It all came crashing down at once.
During the summer of 2023, I moved back into my empty home in LA. I was separated and preparing to file for divorce, and groups of women in my life started opening up about issues they were going through in their own homes. It seemed like every week there were more of us, including [former US soccer player] Ashlyn [Harris], whom Iâd first met in 2019 and who was in the process of figuring out her own split from her wife. Sheâd been such a kind ear for those of us who opened up about our problems during a shared weekend of speaking engagements at a fancy conference in Cannes, and soon it became clear that she needed our ears too.
For those of us who had no solution in sight or Hail Marys left, having this community changed everything. We really wrapped one another up in support. It was tragic and hard. But it was also beautiful. There were moments of incredible sadness because no one signs up to get married thinking itâll end. The days when we knew people needed to laugh, we sent inspirational memes and silly TikToks. We read books written by great therapists and shared emo quotes from poets. Our âBegin Againâ Amazon shopping list, which we created for the ones moving out and starting over, has now been forwarded to so many other women.
I didnât expect to find love in this support system. I donât know how else to say it other than: I didnât see it until I saw it. And I think itâs very easy not to see something thatâs been in front of your face for a long time when youâd never looked at it as an option and you had never been looked at as an option. What I saw was a friend with her big, happy life. And now I know she thought the same thing about me.
It really took other people in our safe support bubble pointing out to me how weâd finish each otherâs sentences or be deeply affected by the same things. When youâre so in the trenches of hardshipâplus you have the added weight of having to go through it on a public stageâit can be hard to see anything but whatâs right in front of you.
It took me confronting a lot of things, what felt like countless sessions of therapy, and some prodding from loved ones, but eventually I asked Ashlyn to have a non-friend-group hang to talk about it.
And that meal was four and a half hours long and truly one of the most surreal experiences of my life thus far. In hindsight, maybe it all had to happen slowly and then suddenly all at once. Maybe it was all fated. Maybe it really is a version of invisible string theory. I donât really know. But I do know that for a sparkly moment I felt like maybe the universe had been conspiring for me. And that feeling that I have in my bones is one Iâll hold on to no matter where things go from here.
But there was a lot that quickly turned ugly too. People looking in from the outside werenât privy to just how much time it took, how many painful conversations were had. A lot of effort was made to be graceful with other peopleâs processing, their time and obligations, and their feelings. What felt like seconds after I started to see what was in front of me, the online rumor mill began to spit in the ugliest ways. There were blatant lies. Violent threats. There were accusations of being a home-wrecker. The ones who said Iâd left my ex because I suddenly realized I wanted to be with womenâmy partners have known what Iâm into for as long as I have (so thatâs not it, yâall, sorry!).
The idea that I left my marriage based on some hysterical rendezvousâthat, to be crystal-clear, never happenedârather than having taken over a year to do the most soul crushing work of my life? Rather than realizing I had to be the most vulnerable Iâve ever been, on a public stage, despite being terrified to my core? It feels brutal. Just because I didnât want to process my realizations in real time on social media and spell them out for the world doesnât mean the journey wasnât long and thoughtful and exhaustive.
Itâs painful to be doing deep work and have it picked apart by clueless strangers. Everyone that matters to me knows whatâs true and what isnât. But even still thereâs a part of me thatâs a ferocious defender, who wants to correct the record piece by piece. But my better self, with her earned patience, has to sit back and ask, Whatâs the fucking point? For who? For internet trolls? No, thank you. Iâll spend my precious time doing things I love instead.
I donât believe itâs my place to discuss details of Ashlynâs circumstances or her children, but I will say that I am absolutely in awe of her relentless integrity. The way she prioritizes and centers her kids, not only in her life but in the core of her being, is breathtaking to behold. Falling in love with her has sutured some of my own childhood wounds, and made me so much closer to my own mother. Seeing Ashlyn choose to not simply survive, but thrive, for her babies has been the most beautiful thing Iâve ever witnessed a friend do. And now I get to love her. How lucky am I?
I sort of hate the notion of having to come out in 2024. But Iâm deeply aware that we are having this conversation in a year when weâre seeing the most aggressive attacks on the LGBTQIA+ community in modern history. There were more than 500 anti-LGBTQIA+ bills proposed in state legislatures in 2023, so for that reason I want to give the act of coming out the respect and honor it deserves. Iâve experienced so much safety, respect, and love in the queer community, as an ally all of my life, that, as I came into myself, I already felt it was my home. I think Iâve always known that my sexuality exists on a spectrum. Right now I think the word that best defines it is queer. I canât say it without smiling, actually. And that feels pretty great.
Would I have liked to make the public part of this journey a choice for myself, and not have it taken from my lips and set ablaze by gossip blogs and bottom-feeder online bots? Of course. Iâm very aware, though, as we discuss bullying and harassment and being outed without consentâthat Iâm incredibly lucky this happened in my adulthood. I really love who I am, at this age and in this moment. Iâm so lucky that my parents, having spent time with Ash over the holidays, said, âWell, this finally looks right.â I know it could have gone differently.
Weâve all learned about kids who have taken their own life after being outed or who have been killed simply for being who they are in a place or time that is threatened by their expressed joy. I am so lucky to be here, now. I have real joy. It took me 41 years to get here. And while I marvel at it, I will also make space for peopleâs pain. But I will not carry anyoneâs projected shame. When I take stock of the last few years, I can tell you that I have never operated out of more integrity in my life. I hope thatâs clear enough for everyone speculating out there, while being as gentle as I possibly can be.
After the news became public, my mom told me that one of her friends called her and said, âWell, this canât be true. I mean, your daughter isnât gay.â My mom felt that it was obvious, from the way her friend emphasized the word, that she meant it judgmentally. And you know what my mom said? âOh honey, I think sheâs pretty gay. And sheâs happy.â
I finally feel like I can breathe. I don't think I can explain how profound that is. I feel like I was wearing a weighted vest for who knows how long. I hadnât realized how heavy it was until I finally just put it down. This might sound crazyâbut I think other people in trauma recovery will get itâI am taking deep breaths again. I can feel my legs and feet. I can feel my feet in my shoes right now. It makes me want to cry and laugh at the same time.
It is so, so scary to do the brave thing, to say, âIâm just not happy.â Especially if youâre in a partnership and you have to say it first. But if you do it, you get the chance to be happy. To find your joy. I turned 41 last summer, amid all of this, and I heard the words I was saying to my best friend as they came out of my mouth. âI feel like this is my first birthday,â I told her. This year was my very first birthday.
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