Divorced But Still Desired Mariskax Mariska X Exclusive
Indian food is hyper-regional. A meal from Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, and Bengal look completely different.
By [Author Name] – Senior Lifestyle Correspondent
In the glossy, high-speed world of influencer culture, we are used to seeing curated perfection. We see the lavish proposals, the fairytale weddings, and the “couple goals” hashtags. What we rarely see—at least not willingly—is the fallout. We rarely see the woman who walks away from the table, the prenup, and the picket fence, carrying only her passport and her pride.
Until now.
In an explosive and deeply intimate exclusive with MariskaX, the digital creator and entrepreneur known for her unapologetic sensuality, we dismantle the oldest stigma in the book: that a divorced woman is somehow less desirable. Spoiler alert: She is not. She is divorced but still desired—and MariskaX is proving it every single day.
Before our time was up, we asked Mariska to give one piece of advice to the woman currently sleeping on the couch of her new apartment, crying into a tub of ice cream.
The playful vixen vanished for a moment, replaced by a woman who has truly seen the depths. She said: divorced but still desired mariskax mariska x exclusive
“Get up tomorrow and buy the lingerie. Not for a man. For you. Wear it under your work clothes. Look at yourself in the elevator mirror and say, ‘I am divorced but still desired.’ Because the moment you believe it, the world has no choice but to agree.”
MariskaX is currently working on a memoir and a tour titled “The Un-Mrs.” Given the explosive reaction to this exclusive, it seems the world is ready for the desirability of the divorced woman.
India is the birthplace of four major world religions – Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism – and home to large Muslim and Christian populations. Indian food is hyper-regional
| Religion | Key Practices Visible in Lifestyle | |----------|-------------------------------------| | Hinduism (79.8%) | Daily prayers (puja) at home altar, temple visits, fasting on certain days (Ekadashi, Shivaratri), vegetarianism common. | | Islam (14.2%) | Five daily prayers, Friday congregational prayers at mosque, celebrating Eid, halal diet. | | Sikhism (1.7%) | Five Ks (uncut hair, comb, steel bracelet, dagger, undergarment), serving free meals at Gurudwara langar, no tobacco/alcohol. | | Christianity (2.3%) | Sunday church, prayer meetings, Christmas and Easter celebrations, especially strong in Kerala, Goa, Northeast. | | Jainism (0.4%) | Strict vegetarianism (no root vegetables), fasting up to 8 days (Paryushan), non-violence even to insects. |
Common spiritual habits across religions: