I’ve been looping the 'Blissful' soundtrack non-stop when I need something calming but emotionally rich. It’s not just background music — it’s a set of tiny stories. My favorites are 'Soft Lights' for slow mornings, 'Echoes of Youth' when I’m being nostalgic, and 'Moonlit Carousel' for late-night walks. There’s also the instrumental 'Reminiscence' which is basically a slow, comforting hug in piano form. The OST blends acoustic instruments with subtle synth textures, so it’s great whether you want something organic or slightly electronic.
A couple of neat things fans like to swap: unofficial piano covers of 'Eternal Lullaby' are everywhere on streaming platforms, and there’s a community remix pack that emphasizes ambient beats. For playlist building, I mix 'Whispers in the Rain' and 'City of Quiet' with artists like Ólafur Arnalds or Nujabes (for vibes), and it works surprisingly well. If you’re trying out tracks, start with 'Dawn at the Harbor' to get the tone, then jump to 'Blissful (Main Theme - vocal)' to hear the emotional core. The deluxe tracks and extended mixes are perfect if you want something longer to loop during creative work, while the core 12 songs are great for a 40–50 minute focused session.
Quick, loving guide: the 'Blissful' official soundtrack is a compact, mood-driven OST centered around piano, strings, and soft ambient production. Key tracks I always reach for are 'Dawn at the Harbor', 'Whispers in the Rain', 'Homecoming', and the vocal 'Blissful (Main Theme)'. The standard release typically includes about a dozen to fourteen pieces, and special or deluxe editions add a piano version or extended orchestral mix.
If you’re exploring, start with 'Dawn at the Harbor' to set the scene, then let 'Reverie' and 'Echoes of Youth' carry you through the middle. For studying, the instrumental and piano-only cuts are gold because they’re unobtrusive but emotionally resonant. Fans also tend to create mood playlists pairing these tracks with chill lo-fi, neo-classical artists, or soft electronic producers — it makes for beautiful background music whether you’re reading, gaming, or winding down at night. I usually use it like a soundtrack to small rituals: tea, sketching, and late-night journaling.
Hearing the 'Blissful' official soundtrack felt like being handed a mixtape of sunrises and quiet late-night walks — warm, intimate, and a little bittersweet. The collection usually runs about 14 tracks on the standard release, and here’s the lineup as I know it: Dawn at the Harbor, Soft Lights, Reverie, Echoes of Youth, Moonlit Carousel, Whispers in the Rain, Paper Boats, Homecoming, Sunset Promenade, City of Quiet, Eternal Lullaby, Final Embrace, Blissful (Main Theme - vocal), and Reminiscence (Piano Version). Each one is short enough to be an interlude but rich enough to paint a whole scene in my head.
What makes this OST stand out is how each track doubles as a mood card. 'Dawn at the Harbor' opens with gentle strings and a soft piano motif that feels like steam rising off a cup of coffee; 'Whispers in the Rain' layers electronic droplets over a lullaby melody; the vocal 'Blissful (Main Theme)' is subtle, not overpowering, perfect for credit sequences. There’s often a deluxe edition that tacks on a couple of ambient pieces and an extended orchestral mix of the main theme, plus instrumental mixes for people who like to study or write to music.
If you’re hunting it down, I usually check the streaming platforms first, then the official label shop if I want lossless files or physical media. Vinyl pressings — when they exist — turn the whole thing into a tactile ritual: sleeve art, slow listens, the needle drop. Personally, I tend to loop 'Reverie' while sketching and save 'Final Embrace' for reflective evenings; both bring out different colors in the same world.
2025-08-29 23:00:39
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Files of pleasure (an intimate compilation)
Mitchy writes
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29.1K
WARNING: CLASSIFIED CONTENT
Archives of the Heart is a compilation of dramatic and emotional fiction, intended exclusively for adult readers.
This collection contains themes that some may find challenging or intense, including but not limited to: significant age gaps, complex power dynamics, non-traditional family relationships, and deep connections between various characters. The stories explore intense emotions, internal conflicts, and desires that push conventional boundaries. All characters are adults.
Read at your own discretion. You have been warned.
This book is authored by Dripping Creativity.
“Stay away, stay away from me, stay away,” she shouted, over and over. She kept shouting even though it seemed she had run out of things to throw. Zane was more than a little interested in knowing exactly what was going on. But he couldn’t focus with the woman making a ruckus.
“Will you shut the fuck up!” he roared at her. She fell silent and he saw tears start to fill her eyes, her lips trembled. Oh fuck, he thought. Like most men, a crying woman scared him shitless. He would rather have a gunfight with a hundred of his worst enemies than have to deal with one crying woman.
“And your name is?” he asked.
“Ava,” she told him in a thin voice.
“Ava Cobler?” he wanted to know. Her name had never sounded so beautiful before, it surprised her. She almost forgot to nod. “My name is Zane Velky,” he introduced himself, holding out a hand. Ava’s eyes grew bigger as he heard the name. Oh no, not that, anything but that, she thought.
“You have heard of me,” he smiled, he sounded satisfied. Ava nodded. Everyone who lived in the city knew the name Velky, it was the largest mafia group in the state with its centre in the city. And Zane Velky was the head of the family, the don, the big boss, the huge honcho, the Al Capone of the modern world. Ava felt her panicked brain spin out of control.
Trigger warnings:
Talk about SA
Body image issues
Light BDSM
Descriptive descriptions of assaults
Self harm
Harsh language
Touch me tender, Break me wild: A Steamy Compilation
Mmeso Writes
9.3
6.6K
Warning:
THIS BOOK IS NOT FOR THE FAINT OF HEART.
Inside these pages are stories that will make your pulse race, your skin tingle, and your thoughts turn deliciously wicked.
There’s dominance and surrender, sweetness and sin, soft whispers and rough hands.
If you don’t like being teased, tempted, or broken in the best ways possible… TURN BACK NOW!!!!!
...
Each story is a taste of something different — tender, wild, sweet, rough, soft, filthy. They’ll make you blush, gasp, and crave more.
These are not just tales of lust — they’re stories of connection, of losing yourself in the moment, of bodies that speak louder than words. Some will make you sigh. Some will make you squirm. All of them will leave you wanting another page.
So if you’re ready for a collection that makes your heart flutter and your skin burn…
Step into the world of Touch Me Tender, Break Me Wild.
Because love can be gentle...
But sometimes, it’s so much better when it hurts just right.
"Part OneTracie Hill thought she’d died and gone to heaven when she discovered the stranger who showed up at her office after hours and engaged her in a night of hot sex was none other than her new boss, J. P. ”Pete” Montgomery. Not only that, but he set some very specific rules for her office attire – skirts only and no underwear.Part TwoFor Zane the storm was a reflection of his emotions and the messy condition of his life. He relished the isolation until he had to rescue Zara from the stormy sea. Then the storm reached full level in the cabin.Part ThreeZana and Dara settle into the beginnings of a permanent relationship and she thinks she’s finally found happiness and security. Then her past comes back to smack her in the face. Part FourDealing with a messy and humiliating breakup with her Dom, Bree Donovan welcomed the invitation to leave Chicago for meeting with a potential client in Texas. An impulsive attendance at a private BDSM gathering wiped all other thoughts from her mind the moment Rafe Morales claimed her as his for the evening. The Pleasure Principle is created by Desiree Holt, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author."
I thought I was happy. I thought my life was perfect. I realised how wrong I was when I met her.~~~Melody started a new school 3 years ago and since then she's had a near-perfect life. An amazing group of friends, top grades and a loving, caring boyfriend. But when Thalia shows up and their paths collide her whole world starts to come crashing down.Now only one question is standing in her way. Are you happy?
Life has a lot of things in store for us. We feel we are destined to be with someone or destined to be somewhere but later realise that it was just meant to be for some time.
Avina Walker is the second daughter of the Walker family. Her father owns one of the biggest textile industries in Los Angeles. Despite having all the luxuries at her beck and call, she still felt lonely and sad.
Her mother doesn't like her and her sister switches from being nice to being cold or cruel. She did all she could to be accepted but it feels like she was just meant to be an outcast.
Her elder sister is engaged but Avina was not bothered and kept working hard. As the days turned into weeks and weeks into months and months into years, Avina's father worried about the single status of his daughter and didn't know what to do.
Luck finally smiled at him when one of his friends and business partner also seem to have the same worry concerning his son.
*************
Carter Blake Sanchez is a self-made billionaire and an heir to a conglomerate business, in Los Angeles. His name is known to both the old and young.
His name is always on the front page of business magazines or fashion magazines. He has a few scandals on his name but his reputation and image have never been tarnished/tampered with.
He mostly talks about business and how he got to achieve all he has. Questions about him getting married have always popped up during his interviews but he always ignores them.
His handsomeness was enough to help him get a get but he was heartbroken and preferred to work. This got his parents worried and they played the role of matchmakers.
I got hooked the first time I heard 'The Blissful' on a late-night playlist — it felt like someone bottled up a summer dusk and poured it into a song. The person behind it is Maya Rivers, an indie singer-songwriter who used to post lo-fi demos on tiny music forums before getting picked up by a small label. She wrote 'The Blissful' after a stretch of sleepless nights spent riding trains between cities, scribbling lines on the back of ticket stubs. The lyrics reflect that hazy in-between feeling: nostalgia and hope tangled together.
What really inspired her, from what I dug up in interviews and fan chats, were small, tactile images — damp pavement smelling like jasmine after rain, the hush of a nearly-empty café, and the warmth of a hand you suddenly realize you’ve been holding for years. She also mentioned being influenced by synesthetic moments, where chords felt like colors and voices felt like textures. You can hear echoes of those influences in the production: intimate vocals, warm analog synths, and field recordings that place you right in the middle of a scene. For me, it’s the sort of song that makes ordinary evenings feel cinematic; I’ve replayed it walking home under streetlights and felt both comforted and strangely brave.
Whenever I hit play on the 'Breakup to Bliss' soundtrack, it feels like stepping into a perfectly timed montage — you get heartbreak, slow-burn hope, and the small victories in one sitting. The official soundtrack is a neat mix of vocal indie tracks and score pieces by Maya Kato, and here’s the full lineup as it appears on the standard release:
1. "Breaking Dawn" — Luna Hart (Opening Theme)
2. "Let It Go (Reprise)" — Atlas & Vale
3. "Half-Moon Café" — Riko Torres
4. "Unfinished Pages" — Score (Maya Kato)
5. "Soft Landing" — The Paper Planes
6. "Night Train" — Solene
7. "Bloom Again" — Jun Park
8. "Quiet Apology" — Aria Bloom
9. "Between Cities" — Score (Maya Kato)
10. "Secondhand Smile" — Soren Wells
11. "Remind Me" — Cass + The Compass
12. "Homeward" — Score (Maya Kato)
13. "End Credits (Main Theme)" — Luna Hart & Maya Kato
14. "Bloom Again (Acoustic)" — Jun Park (Bonus Track)
There’s also a deluxe edition that tacks on a couple of instrumentals and a demo version: "Soft Landing (Instrumental)" and "Breaking Dawn (Demo)". The balance between full songs and shorter score cues is what sells the soundtrack for me — the vocal tracks carry the emotional beats (montage, confrontation, the small reconciliation scenes), while Kato’s cues sew everything together with motifs that reappear in subtle variations. For example, the piano motif in "Unfinished Pages" reappears as a string swell in "Homeward," which makes the final scenes land harder. I love how "Bloom Again" gets both a full production and an acoustic bonus; the stripped version really emphasizes the lyrics about starting over.
If you want to recreate the show's pacing at home, I recommend playing the tracks in order and giving yourself a little ritual — dim lights, a cup of something warm, and let the transitions carry you. The soundtrack pairs nicely with late-night walks or rainy afternoons, and every time I listen I find a new lyric or instrumental hook I’d somehow missed. It’s one of those soundtracks that keeps unfolding, and honestly, it still gives me goosebumps at the credits.
This soundtrack feels like a tiny movie about healing, and I adore how every track builds a small scene. I’m listing the full 'Breakup to Bliss' tracklist below, with running times and a couple of quick notes because I can’t help but gush a little about my favorites.
1. Shattered Morning — 3:45
2. Empty Apartment Echoes — 2:50
3. Text at 2 AM — 3:15
4. Coffee and Regret — 4:05
5. Walk in the Rain — 3:30
6. Half-Pack of Cigarettes — 2:40
7. You Were My Map — 4:20
8. First Solo Grocery Run — 2:55
9. Sunlight Through Blinds — 3:35
10. Slow Dance in Public — 3:05
11. New Playlist, New Me — 3:50
12. Letter Never Sent — 4:10
13. Dancing in the Kitchen — 2:48
14. Bliss (Reprise) — 5:00
I picture the composer, Mia Alvarez, weaving piano and subtle synths throughout, while Elliot Hart’s production gives it a warm, lived-in texture. Tracks like 'Sunlight Through Blinds' and 'Bliss (Reprise)' are my go-to when I need hopeful background music for chores or sketching — they’re oddly comforting and cinematic all at once.