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I Traded My Sandwich for Edward Cullen: A Tragicomedy in Acrylic & Hormones

You know what I’m strangely grateful for?

That my mum gave me a paintbrush instead of a phone when I was little. I was at home, passionately mixing acrylics like a tiny Victorian orphan with unresolved emotions and delusions of gallery grandeur. Honestly, if glitter glue counted as fine art, I would’ve peaked at 11.

She bought me everything oils, brushes, paints that smelled like migraines in a tube. Did I have formal training? Absolutely not. I was self-taught, self-deluded, and wildly expressive painting fruit bowls like they held the secrets to the universe.

Then… books.

Enter: Twilight.

I was 14, hormonal, and fully convinced Edward Cullen was my soulmate. Buying books became my new obsession. My mum would give me lunch money, and instead of spending it on food like a normal teen, I’d starve for fiction. Who needs calories when you’ve got chapters and cheekbones?

By 17, painting had left me on read.

At 18, I moved in with my dad. He bought me an iPhone. That was the beginning of the end.

Books? Ghosted.

Painting? Dead.

Me? Posting filtered selfies and Googling “how to be hot and mysterious without trying.”

I had become the girl my mum specifically warned me about. Untamed. “Over-accessorized”. Slightly “feral”.

Fast-forward to 22.5 years old (yes, the half matters I’d just figured out how taxes work), and boom: “he enters into my life”. One of first date? We went to a bookshop. Like absolute nerds in love.

He bought 12 Rules for Life.

I bought The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F**k by Mark… somthing..(sorry Mark)

He can draw. Like, properly. With pencils and patience. He introduced me to stippling (which sounds like a foot disease but is actually just… drawing with a stupid number of dots).

Then he asked me, “Why did you stop painting?”

Cue emotional damage.

In 2025, he bought me a new set of acrylics. I bought canvases. I picked up the brush like it was Excalibur. First attempt? Looked like a clown funeral. But the spark was back and this time, it felt like me. Not just some childhood coping mechanism.

Now, our home is unintentionally transforming into an art gallery. (Seriously. There’s a canvas in the kitchen. We’re one brushstroke away from charging an entry fee.) But good lord canvases are expensive. Like, absurdly expensive. So I’m now pacing myself before I accidentally bankrupt us in the name of “artistic expression.”

Moral of the story:

  • Paint more.
  • Read more.
  • Don’t trust phones.
  • Most importantly marry someone who buys you paint and calls your weird clown art “expressive.”
  • And never waste lunch money on actual lunch that’s what personal growth is for.

Loads of luv

Hannah

6 responses to “I Traded My Sandwich for Edward Cullen: A Tragicomedy in Acrylic & Hormones”

  1. Sound advice! A true love story as well!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. This is lovely Darling, thank you for that. You make me sound like a proper gentleman. I think about the nice things you say, it is very much needed and appreciated. I love you Pup, and don’t stop painting ever. I want a lot of them when we’re old.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Love your painting style! 😍
    You should do something with it…
    I don’t know if it is your ambition and I am sure it has a different feel to it, but you could try digital drawing too.There are plenty of paint brushes.
    It could be easier to sell things, if youd want that.

    One day I am going to learn how to balance as that lady in the painting in the first photo! 😀

    My childhood hobbies include chess, books and drawings. And then the teenage and social media years hit.
    I won’t say they were a complete waste, but I am happy I am now back to those childhood passions. They feel so much more “me”.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. First off, thank you for thinking that…truly chuffed, because you’re a brilliant artist yourself (yes, I’m blushing, shush now). I’ve honestly never considered turning painting into a proper living… mostly because the moment you slap a deadline on me, my brain promptly goes on strike, sips tea, and refuses to lift a finger. Zero productivity, maximum existential dread. As for digital painting look, I’ve dabbled. But give me the glorious chaos of real paint any day. I like the mess. I like ending up with blue fingernails and mysterious streaks of magenta in my hair.

      And chess? Oh, go on then spill your rating. I’m mildly terrified but wildly intrigued. Dustin plays too x

      Like

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