https://www.tumblr.com/auroradite/809412449492156416/anyways-im-gonna-keep-posting-thank-you-to?source=share
Than apologize if you really changed, you sicko.
We’ll dissect this bit by bit.
Auroradite, your recent statement frames this situation as people refusing to move on from “things you did as a teenager seven years ago.” That description does not match the actual record, and that mismatch is exactly why people are still asking for accountability.
The issue has never been limited to teenage behavior. You publicly admitted in a later deleted video that you dated a 16-year-old while you were 20 in a polyamorous relationship with another abusive adult, which is preserved here. That was not something you did as a teenager, and describing the situation as teenage mistakes avoids the serious concerns about the safety of minors that people have raised. Your recent statement never addresses this admission at all, and doubled with the obsessive censoring of anyone asking about this on your profile, overall makes the attempt to reduce everything to “old drama” difficult to take seriously.
You also claim that you have not “beaten the dead horse in years,” but the timeline shows otherwise. You created and published a callout video targeting Tearzah, later retracted your apology to Tea and stated that it was not genuine and was only meant to stop backlash, and released the “I Made the Video on Tearzah, Let’s Talk” video, reopening the situation and shifting responsibility elsewhere, namely your religious upbringing and your parents for actions you made as an adult. When a situation is repeatedly reopened and re-explained by the same person, it cannot reasonably be described as something others are refusing to let go.
This is part of a broader pattern that people have observed over time. 1. Public accusations , 2. escalation, 3. partial retractions, and 4. later reversals. That pattern is why the situation persists. It is not a matter of strangers refusing to move on; it is a matter of unresolved actions and inconsistent accountability entirely of your own doing.
Telling people to block you does not resolve the problem. Blocking works for personal disagreements, but this situation involves public accusations and public statements that affected real people. Those actions created consequences that do not disappear simply because time has passed.
You have said that people change with age, and that may be true. But change is demonstrated through clear acknowledgment and consistent responsibility. What people have seen instead are shifting explanations, withdrawn apologies, and key issues left unaddressed. That is why your claim that this is all settled does not match the reality others remember.
If you want this situation to end, the way forward is straightforward. It requires a clear public acknowledgment of the actions that caused harm, including the false accusations, the harassment that followed them, the retracted apology, and the relationship with a minor that you admitted to as an adult. Without that clarity, requests to “move on” will continue to sound less like closure and more like avoidance.
This situation has persisted for years not because people are obsessed with you, but because the issues themselves have never been resolved in a direct and consistent way. The conversation will end when those issues are addressed plainly.
Right now, what stands out most in your statement is not growth or reflection, but a consistent effort to compress a long and complicated record into something small and harmless. Describing years of repeated conflicts as a single period of “teenage mistakes” is not an accurate summary of events, and people recognize the difference. Time passing does not automatically turn unresolved actions into history, especially when those actions continued into adulthood and were revisited more than once.
It is also important to be clear that the people asking for accountability are not demanding that you disappear or stop existing online. What people have consistently asked for is much simpler than that: honesty about what happened and acknowledgment of the harm that resulted. The idea that the only alternative is silence or exile creates a false choice that avoids the actual issue.
The frustration you are encountering now did not appear out of nowhere. It exists because earlier attempts at resolution ended in reversals, deleted statements, or explanations that shifted responsibility elsewhere. When apologies are later withdrawn and conflicts are reopened, it becomes difficult for anyone to trust that the situation has truly been put to rest. That loss of trust is not something that can be repaired by asking people to forget; it can only be repaired by addressing the past in a way that remains consistent over time.
If you are serious about wanting this to end, then the next step is not another request to be left alone. The next step is demonstrating that you understand why these events still matter to the people affected by them and to the communities where they occurred. The artist you admitted to stealing from because you admired them was transformed into a spectacle and had their trauma dissected under a microscope and their safety threatened by doxxing directly due to your involvement in kiwifarms. You are now actively posting under tags known to be browsed by children such as # princess with a documented history of endangering minors, the red flags there are obvious. A clear and consistent statement acknowledging what happened would accomplish far more than another attempt to reduce the situation to old drama.
Until then, the gap between how you describe these events and how they actually unfolded will continue to be the reason this conversation does not fully disappear.