In the sweltering heat of summer, there's no better anthem to get you moving and grooving than Robyn's infectious dance track, "If I Feel Myself". The Swedish pop sensation's 2010 hit is more than just a catchy beat; it's a declaration of independence, a celebration of self-love, and a liberating expression of female desire.
Moreover, both Robyn’s work and Ifeelmyself challenge the sanitized, male-directed depictions of female desire found in mainstream media. Pop culture has long taught women that their bodies are for looking at, and their pleasure is secondary to a partner’s. Robyn disrupts this by centering her own perspective — her voice is raw, her rhythms are unpredictable, and her emotions are unfiltered. Similarly, Ifeelmyself uses a first-person, documentary-style approach, often filmed by the women themselves or a trusted female collaborator. There is no soundtrack, no lighting rig, no script. The result is a quiet, powerful normalisation of self-intimacy as a natural, healthy practice rather than a taboo. ifeelmyself robyn
In conclusion, while Robyn may never have made an appearance on Ifeelmyself , her artistic identity lives in the same emancipatory current. She dances on her own; they touch on their own. Both reject the script that female desire must be reactive, decorative, or hidden. Instead, they offer a quiet, joyful revolution: the simple, profound act of feeling oneself — body, heart, and mind — without apology. In a world that still struggles to take women’s autonomy seriously, that is nothing short of essential. In the sweltering heat of summer, there's no
"If I feel myself, I let go. If I feel myself, I lose control." Let's all take a page from Robyn's book and learn to let go, lose control, and celebrate the beauty of self-love. Pop culture has long taught women that their