She's Not Gone. She's Just Been Waiting.

How moms rebuild confidence… not by becoming someone new, but by coming back to the woman who's been there all along.

WEEK 19 · CONFIDENCE & MINDSET

By Jennifer Dirksen · Sheer Photography, Youngstown OH · Est. read time: 5 min

A woman in black lingerie lies on dark satin sheets in soft, moody lighting, her head tilted back and arms outstretched.

Let me tell you what I actually see when a woman walks into my studio for the first time.

She's usually a little nervous and unsure. She's been talking herself into this, most likely because she had a moment of “enough is enough”… but there's a part of her that's waiting for someone to confirm that she made a mistake coming here.

And underneath all of that, there's this other energy. Quiet. Patient. Like something in her has been waiting a very long time to be let out.

That's her confidence. It didn't leave. It just stopped getting airtime.

This isn't about becoming a new version of yourself. It's about coming back to the one who's been waiting… and she has been incredibly patient!

Confidence isn't something you lost. It's something you buried.

We talk about confidence like it's a thing you either have or don't. Like some women were born with it and the rest of us are just out here hoping it shows up eventually.

That's not how it works!

Confidence erodes quietly, in small daily choices. Every time you put yourself last. Every time you talked yourself out of the thing you actually wanted. Every time you shrunk to make someone else comfortable, or waited for permission to take up space, or told yourself maybe later until later became never.

None of those moments felt dramatic. But they added up. And now you're standing here wondering where she went… the version of you that felt sure of herself, that moved through rooms differently, that didn't need a reason to feel good.

She didn't go anywhere. You just moved away from her, one small choice at a time.

You don't think your way back. You act your way back.

Here's where most women get stuck: they wait until they feel confident to start acting like it. They want the feeling to arrive first… then they'll wear the thing, say the thing, do the thing!

But it works the other way around, babe!

Confidence is built through action. Specifically through small moments where you choose yourself and then follow through. Where you say you're going to do something and you actually do it. Where you treat yourself like someone worth showing up for, even when nobody else is watching.

It's not loud. It's not a dramatic overnight shift. It's quiet and steady and real. And honestly? That kind of confidence hits completely different than the performative kind. Because it's yours. You built it. And nobody can take it from you.

You don't wait to feel confident and then act. You act (even when it's small, even when it's uncomfortable) and the feeling follows.

What it actually looks like to start

Not a 75 day challenge. Not a total life overhaul. Just five small, non-negotiable shifts that start building the evidence your nervous system needs to believe you again:

  • Do one thing daily that is purely, unapologetically for you… and make it non-negotiable

  • Follow through on something you told yourself you'd do, no matter how small

  • Notice the way you talk to yourself and start talking to her like someone you actually like

  • Get back into your body (movement, presence, touch) on your own terms

  • Let yourself be seen a little more each day, in whatever way feels just slightly outside your comfort zone

None of these are revolutionary. But done consistently, they are quietly radical. Because they all say the same thing: I matter enough to show up for. And once you start believing that, everything else starts to shift around it.

Why boudoir fits here

A session at Sheer isn't a reward you earn once you've figured yourself out. It's a tool for figuring yourself out. It's a few hours where you give yourself full permission to exist outside of every role you play and you get to see yourself (maybe for the first time in years) as a whole woman instead of a collection of flaws.

Women cry at their gallery reveals not because the photos are flattering. They cry because they recognize her. The version of themselves they've been putting off, waiting on, being too busy for.

She was in there the whole time.

She's ready when you are.

Your confidence isn't gone. It's been waiting on you to choose it.

Fill out the form below and I’ll get back to you ASAP!

How to Feel Desired Again (after putting yourself last)

Not by someone else. By yourself first and why that changes everything.

Week 18 - SENSUALITY & SELF-IDENTITY

By Jennifer Dirksen · Sheer Photography, Youngstown OH · Est. read time: 5 min

Woman in a black lace bralette and ripped jeans sits by a window with sheer curtains.

When was the last time you felt truly wanted?

Not needed. Not depended on. Not the person who holds everything together because if you don't, it falls apart. Not the one everyone comes to with their problems, their hunger, their laundry.

Wanted. Desired. Like someone (like you) saw yourself and thought: damn!

Yeah. It's been a minute, hasn't it?

I'm not asking to make you feel bad. I'm asking because most women can't actually remember, and I think that matters more than we let ourselves admit.

"Being needed is constant. Being desired is something different entirely and you deserve to feel both."

Needed and desired are not the same thing

Here's the thing nobody says clearly enough: being needed is exhausting. It's relentless. It asks everything of you and gives very little back.

Being desired is the opposite energy. It's generative. It lights something up in you instead of draining it. It says: you are more than what you do for people. You are someone worth wanting just for existing in your own skin.

Most of us have been operating almost entirely in "needed" mode for so long that we've forgotten the other one exists. We've traded desire for dependability and called it being a good woman. A good mom. A good partner.

And then we wonder why we feel invisible.

You didn't stop being desirable. You stopped seeing yourself.

This is the part I really need you to hear: you didn't become less attractive when life got heavy. You didn't lose your magnetism when you had kids, or hit a certain age, or stopped fitting into a size you used to wear.

You just stopped looking at yourself. Really looking… not the critical inventory scan you do in the mirror before you leave the house. Not the comparison spiral on social media. Actually seeing yourself the way someone who loved you would.

Your focus shifted entirely outward. Kids. Partner. Home. Work. Everyone else's needs got catalogued and managed and met. And you, slowly moved yourself to the bottom of the list until you weren’t even on it anymore.

"You didn't stop being worth wanting. You just stopped acting like it and eventually, you started believing it."

The part no one tells you: desire starts with you

Here's where I'm going to say something that might feel uncomfortable: waiting for someone else to make you feel desired before you feel it yourself is working backwards.

You don't feel desired first, then reconnect with yourself. You reconnect with yourself first and then you feel desired. By yourself. By others. By life.

That shift in order changes everything.

When you stop waiting for external validation to feel good in your own body, something opens up. You stop shrinking. You stop the constant self-monitoring. You start moving through the world differently… with a presence that people feel before they can explain why. That's not a mystical concept. That's just what it looks like when a woman is actually inhabiting herself instead of performing a version of herself she thinks is acceptable.

And that energy? That is the most magnetic thing in any room.

Five ways to start reclaiming it

These aren't spa day suggestions. These are small, real, daily choices that say: I exist. I matter. I'm not waiting anymore.

  • Spend time looking at yourself without fixing anything… just looking, without the running critique

  • Do one thing daily that makes you feel attractive, even if no one ever sees it

  • Move your body slowly and intentionally… not to burn something, just to feel yourself in it

  • Stop waiting for someone else's validation before you decide you feel good

  • Ask yourself honestly: "Do I feel good in my own presence right now?" and get curious about the answer

What a boudoir session actually does

I want to be direct about this, because I think it gets misunderstood.

Women don't book sessions at Sheer because they already feel desired and want photos to prove it. They book because something inside them is done waiting to feel that way. They're tired of being last. Tired of being invisible. Tired of moving through life as a function instead of a woman.

What happens in a session is simple and also kind of profound: for a few hours, you get to be seen. Completely. Intentionally. Without apology or performance. And through the lens (through the whole experience) you start to see yourself the way you've been waiting for someone else to.

Not because the photos make you look different than you are. Because they show you exactly as you are and you realize she was always worth wanting.

You just had to look.

Feeling desired doesn't start with someone else. It starts with how you see yourself.

Fill out the form below and I’ll get back to you ASAP!

Everyday Mom by Day... Seductress by Night

Week 17 - SENSUALITY & SELF-IDENTITY

By Jennifer Dirksen · Sheer Photography, Youngstown OH · Est. read time: 5 min

Woman in a black dress lounges on a chair by a window, surrounded by candles, with warm, moody lighting and a soft atmosphere.

Why balancing motherhood and sensuality isn't a contradiction… it's the most honest thing you can do for yourself.

Somewhere between the snack requests, the school drop-offs, and the full-time job of keeping tiny humans alive and reasonably emotionally intact... she got quiet.

Not gone. Not dead. Just tucked away in a drawer somewhere, under the grocery lists and the permission slips and the mental load that never actually turns off.

Because "mom" became your whole identity. And nobody told you that was a problem… because from the outside, you were crushing it. Present, capable, selfless. The gold standard.

But inside… something felt missing. Not your kids. Not your love for them. Just... you! The layered, complex, sensual, fully-expressed version of you that existed before the title.

"Motherhood was never meant to erase the woman underneath it. She was always supposed to come with you."

You didn't lose her. You just stopped letting her out.

Here's what I want you to hear clearly: you didn't become less sexy when you became a mom. You didn't suddenly stop being desirable, magnetic, or worth wanting. You just stopped accessing that part of yourself… because at some point, it stopped feeling appropriate. Safe. Necessary.

So you packed her up. Put her in the back. Told yourself "maybe later" so many times that later started to feel like never.

And the disconnect you feel now? That low-level restlessness, that sense that you've been performing a version of yourself rather than actually living inside of one? That's not a failure of motherhood. That's the cost of abandoning yourself to do it.

The myth of the "one-thing" woman

We have this cultural story that a good mom is a certain kind of woman. Soft. Selfless. Consumed by the role. Like being fully present for your kids requires being absent from yourself.

It doesn't. That's a lie that mostly benefits everyone around you.

You were never meant to be just one thing. Not just mom. Not just partner. Not just caretaker. You are a woman who also happens to be those things… and the more you squeeze yourself into a single identity, the more disconnected you feel from all of them.

You can be soft and magnetic. Nurturing and a little dangerous. The person who packs the lunches and the person who walks into a room and makes people look. Those things don't cancel each other out. They actually make each other better.

"The most grounded, joyful moms I know aren't the ones who gave everything up. They're the ones who kept themselves… on purpose."

Sensuality isn't what happens at midnight. It's how you move through your whole day.

I think when most women hear "sensual," they go straight to lingerie and candlelight. And listen… yes please!! But that's not what I'm actually talking about here.

Sensuality is a way of being in your body. It's how you carry yourself through a Tuesday. It's the difference between moving through your day on autopilot… checking boxes, managing chaos… and actually inhabiting your life.

It's in the way you let yourself enjoy something without immediately feeling guilty about it. The way you wear the thing that makes you feel alive, not just functional. The way you pause for five seconds and actually feel the warm coffee in your hands instead of inhaling it in the carpool line.

That energy isn't something you unlock at 10pm when the house is quiet. It's something you allow… or don't allow… all day long.

Five small ways to let her back in

You don't have to overhaul your life. You just have to start making small, deliberate choices that say: I'm still here. I still matter. I'm not just a function.

  • Take 5 minutes alone just to feel your body… no task, no phone, no performance

  • Put on music while doing something mundane and let yourself move differently in it

  • Wear something under your clothes just for you… nobody else needs to know

  • Look at yourself in the mirror without immediately fixing something

  • Ask: "What would feel good right now?"… and actually listen to the answer

What this has to do with boudoir

Everything. Because what I do at Sheer isn't about creating a "sexy mom" aesthetic for your husband's benefit. It's about carving out a few hours where you exist completely outside of every role you play… and getting to see yourself as a full, complex, beautiful woman who is so much more than what she does for other people.

The women who cry during their gallery reveal? It's not because the photos are pretty. It's because they finally see the version of themselves they put away. And she looks better than they remembered.

You don't have to choose between being a devoted mom and feeling like her. You get to be both. You always did.

Ready to stop putting yourself in the back of the drawer? Fill out the form below and I’ll get back to you ASAP!

Why Being “Nice” Is Blocking Your Confidence & Sexiness

Week 16 - Burn the Good Girl

By Jennifer Dirksen · Sheer Photography, Youngstown OH · Est. read time: 4 min

A person touches their lips with fingers, wearing a wedding ring on their finger in dim, moody lighting.

Why your "nice girl" era isn't your sexy era… and what it looks like to finally close that chapter.

Let's just say what everyone's thinking but nobody posts: the version of you that kept the peace, made everyone comfortable, and stayed perfectly likable? She worked hard. She kept a lot of plates spinning. And she was completely, quietly, suffocating the part of you that actually wants to be felt.

This isn't a callout. It's a recognition. Because most women who walk into my studio have spent years being good. Good daughters, good employees, good partners, good moms. And somewhere in the middle of all that goodness… they lost the version of themselves that takes up space without apologizing for it.

"Nice is filtered. Measured. Careful. Sexy is expressed. Unapologetic. Present. You can't fully inhabit one while clinging to the other."

The difference between nice and expressed

Here's what nobody tells you in the self-help aisle: confidence isn't something you build. It's something you stop blocking.

Nice girl energy shows up as shrinking. Qualifying your opinions before you give them. Laughing off the compliment instead of just saying "thank you." Wearing the outfit that's acceptable instead of the one that makes you feel like that b*tch!

But expressed energy is when you stop filtering yourself for the comfort of the room. You say what you mean… kindly, clearly, and without the three sentence apology attached. You let people actually see you instead of the carefully managed version of you.

That's not coldness. That's not selfishness. That's just... realness. And real is magnetic in a way that "nice" never gets to be.

You can be kind and still be fully yourself

I want to be really clear here because this gets misread: burning the good girl doesn't mean becoming a b*tch. It doesn't mean blowing up your relationships or showing up reckless. It means giving yourself the same permission to be seen that you so freely give everyone else.

It means saying "actually, I don't love that" instead of "oh no it's fine, totally fine." It means wearing the thing that makes you feel alive, not just the thing that won't cause a comment. It means asking yourself, before you shrink again… am I being liked right now, or am I being real?

"The women you look at and think…. damn!!! They're not perfect. They're expressed. They're in their bodies. They're not asking for permission. And that energy is completely undeniable."

Five small shifts that change everything

You don't have to overhaul your personality. You just have to start letting more of yourself through. Here's where to begin:

  • Say what you actually mean… kindly, but without the qualifiers that make it smaller

  • Let yourself be seen in low stakes moments first: a photo, a conversation, a room you walk into differently

  • Wear something that feels like you… not just the version of you that's trying to not be too much

  • Move your body in a way that feels good, not performative, for you

  • Ask yourself honestly: "Am I being liked right now... or am I being real?"

What this has to do with boudoir

Everything. Literally everything.

Women don't come to Sheer because they already feel confident. They come because somewhere inside them, they know there's a version of themselves they've been quietly managing and they want, for one day, to just let her out. No filtering. No apologizing. No performing comfort for the people around them.

The magic of a boudoir session isn't the photos. (Though babe, the photos are something.) It's what happens when you spend a few hours being seen… fully, intentionally, without apology… and you realize she was there the whole time. You were just being too nice to let her show up.

That's the version of you that's been waiting. She's the one you've wanted to feel for years.

It's time to stop being so polite about it.

Ready to meet the version of yourself you've been keeping behind glass?

Fill out the form below and I’ll get back to you ASAP!

How to Set Boundaries • Ohio Best Boudoir

Week 15 - Burn the Good Girl

A close-up of a person lying down in black lace lingerie, showing a tattoo and a puddle of whiskey on their abdomen.

Let’s talk about the thing that makes most women instantly uncomfortable:

Boundaries.

Because somewhere along the way…you learned that saying no = being selfish.

But last week, you stopped apologizing. So now you actually start choosing yourself!

🔥 Boundaries Aren’t Mean

They’re not punishments. They’re not rejection. They’re clarity.

They tell people: “This is what works for me. This is what doesn’t.”

And the right people will respect that. And if they don’t, that tells you more about them than yourself.

🔥 Why You Feel Guilty

Because you’re used to being the one who says yes. The reliable one. The accommodating one.

So when you shift, it feels wrong. But it’s not wrong… it’s just new.

🔥 Boundaries Build Confidence

Every time you honor yourself…you trust yourself more.

And confidence is built through those tiny moments. Not big, dramatic changes. Just quiet decisions where you choose you.

✨ Practical Shifts

  • Start small: say no to one thing this week

  • Don’t over-explain your no

  • Use simple language: “That doesn’t work for me”

  • Notice who respects your boundaries (and who doesn’t)

  • Remind yourself: “I’m allowed to protect my energy”

When you start choosing yourself… everything about you shifts. Click the button below to send me a quick email for more info on a boudoir session and take that first step towards doing something for YOURSELF!

Own Your Confidence and Space • Ohio Best Boudoir

Week 14 - Burn the Good Girl

Woman in lingerie arching her back on the floor in a sunlit room with sheer curtains and large windows.

Be honest…

How many times have you said “sorry” today?!?!

Sorry for being late.
Sorry for asking a question.
Sorry for needing something.
Sorry for literally just… being a human.

Last week, we talked about the rules you’ve been living by.

This week…We’re breaking one of the biggest ones. I hope you’re ready!

🔥 You Were Taught to Soften Yourself

Apologizing became your way of staying likable.

It makes you easier to handle.
Less intimidating.
More… acceptable.

But every unnecessary “sorry” sends a message: “I don’t fully deserve to be here.”

And that’s just not true.

🔥 You’re Not “Too Much”

You’re not too loud, too emotional or too opinionated.

You’ve just been surrounded by people who were more comfortable when you were quieter.

Read that again.

🔥 Confidence Doesn’t Apologize

Confident women don’t shrink themselves to fit.

They take up space.
They ask for what they want.
They speak without cushioning every sentence.

And no… that doesn’t make them rude. It makes them grounded.

✨ Practical Shifts

  • Replace “sorry” with “thank you” (Thank you for waiting vs. sorry I’m late)

  • Catch yourself mid-apology and pause

  • Practice saying what you want without over-explaining

  • Stand taller, speak slower

  • Remind yourself: “I don’t need to earn my space here”

You don’t need permission to take up space… but you might need practice feeling it. Click the button below to send me a quick email for more info on a boudoir session.

The Good Girl Rules You Need to Break Now

Week 13 - Burn the Good Girl

You ever say yes… and immediately feel that tight little knot in your chest?

Yeah. That’s your body calling you out.

Last month, we started reconnecting to your body. Listening to her. Not ignoring her every time she whispered “this doesn’t feel right.”

And now we talk about why you’ve been ignoring her in the first place.

Because somewhere along the way… you learned how to be a good girl.

🔥 Be Easy to Love (aka Don’t Have Needs)

You learned to be chill. Easy. Low maintenance.

The girl who doesn’t ask for too much.
The one who “just goes with the flow.”

But let’s be real… are you feeling exhausted??

Because being “easy to love” usually means you’re quietly abandoning yourself.

🔥 You Don’t Get a Gold Star for Overgiving

You show up for everyone.
You remember everything.
You carry more than you should.

And people probably tell you, “You’re amazing.”

But what they don’t see is the resentment building underneath it.

Because giving everything doesn’t make you lovable…
It just makes you empty.

🔥 The “Don’t Be Too Much” Lie

This one runs deep.

Don’t be too loud.
Too emotional.
Too sexual.
Too confident.

So you shrink.

And here’s the problem…

You cannot feel sexy when you’re trying to be small.

Confidence requires space.
Desire requires expression.

And you’ve been told to mute both.

✨ Practical Shifts

  • Pause before saying yes. Give yourself space to feel.

  • Start using: “Let me think about it.” (your new power move)

  • Notice where your body tightens… that’s your truth

  • Look at yourself in the mirror and say: “I’m allowed to take up space.”

  • Wear something at home that makes you feel a little bold, a little seen

The version of you who stops playing “good”… is the one who finally feels powerful in her body.