What began as a single tattoo at fourteen slowly became a full-body declaration of identity. Now, with nearly every inch of her skin covered in ink, jet-black eyeballs, a heart-shaped implant in her hand, and a tongue split in two, Orylan walks through the world as living artwork. Each modification, from fang-shaped veneers to spontaneous new tattoos, reflects the person she always felt she was inside, long before the world could see it.
The cost hasn’t just been financial or physical; it’s emotional. People stare. Some recoil. Online, anonymous critics insist she “looked better before,” projecting their fears onto her face and body. Yet she leans into self-acceptance, not away from it. Supported by over 143,000 Instagram followers, she urges others to chase whatever form of beauty feels true to them, to choose self-love over approval, and to build a life that fits their skin, not anyone else’s expectations.