We imagine infidelity as a grand drama—an affair, an apostasy, an explosion. But most unfaithfulness is small: a glance held too long, a promise postponed, a truth softened into a lie, a prayer skipped out of boredom. Missa uses the mundane. The weekly hour of liturgy trains the other 167 hours. Asking to be used means allowing the shape of the Mass to overlay your Tuesday afternoon: the confession before the checkout line, the eucharist in the shared meal, the blessing before the difficult email. Fidelity becomes a habit stitched into the fabric of the dull.
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By saying "use me," the speaker takes responsibility for the other’s potential transgressions. It shifts the burden of loyalty from the person who might stray to the person who provides the "use." If the partner fails to stay faithful, the implication is that they didn’t "use" the speaker effectively enough. This creates a cycle of codependency where righteousness is a shared commodity rather than an individual virtue. The Sacred and the Profane
Prioritize physical closeness to keep the "honeymoon" neurochemistry (oxytocin) high.
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MissaX has built a reputation for elevating taboo genres by treating the subject matter with the visual language of mainstream indie dramas. 1. Subversion of Taboo Tropes