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A love letter to Los Angeles

Journalist Caroline Ryder immerses us fully in the unique life of this city, the setting for our summer campaign.

People in Los Angeles care a lot about how they look. But we care just as much about how we feel in our bodies.

The neighbor does breathwork on her porch. The barista preps your adaptogenic mushroom latte. The woman at the farmers' market hands you a sample of raw honey and tells you exactly why it's good for your gut.

An infrared sauna, a cold plunge, a sound bath in a yurt in Laurel Canyon: none of these are trends here. They're part of the fabric of daily life in a city where taking care of yourself is more than just a lifestyle. It's what makes you feel at home.

At the coast, a surfer catches early morning waves while the sky is still peach and silver. She comes out of the water with her board under one arm and salt drying on her shoulders. That's the thing about Los Angeles: the best part of your day often happens before most cities have opened their eyes: at dawn, with the first wash of light.

The light made us. It's the reason the artists came. It's why the film industry blossomed. All because of that sunrise, that sunset, that golden hour when the world looks like it's been dipped in honey.

The water healed us. This may be a desert, but the Pacific holds us to its chest. Backyard pools glimmer in the afternoon heat. Hot tubs steam into the cool night air as the stars come out one by one, and somewhere, always, someone is floating.

And into all of this, the people still come. From everywhere, drawn West to the edge of the continent, to a city where every neighborhood feels like its own planet.

Little Tokyo, Thai Town, Historic Filipinotown, Little Armenia, Little Ethiopia, Crenshaw, Compton, East Los, Echo Park, Bel Air, Los Feliz. The names alone tell you everything you need to know about Los Angeles; that it is a mosaic where every tile is distinct, every color is its own.

Venture downtown and watch the light hit the art deco facades of Broadway. This is the city's past made physical: old memories pressing up against towers of glass and steel, baking side by side in the heat.

Head south to the barbershops and beauty supply stores of Crenshaw, where smoke from the Sunday cookout drifts across the sidewalks.

Drive east and the city gets louder and warmer, alive with mariachi music and families spilling out of church on Sunday morning, the scent of elote and chamoy on the breeze.

Go north where the roads wind into hills that make no sense. Don't be surprised to find a glass box hanging over a cliff: this is a landscape built by dreamers who were never afraid of a conceptual edge. People possessed by the willingness to build something impossible.

Travel west for the salt air and the spectacle. Skateboarders carving the concrete. Muralists working the walls along the boardwalk. The bodybuilders flexing under the open sky.

Buskers playing to crowds that gather and dissolve around them. When the canals catch the afternoon light, for a moment it feels like you could be somewhere in Europe, if Europe had palm trees and taco trucks on the corner.

Keep driving along the coastline, where the mountains drop straight into the Pacific. From there you can take a winding road inland, climbing up into an otherworldly canyon where the air smells like sage and eucalyptus. Musicians, painters, writers, and mystics come here to live quietly among the oaks.

You could spend a lifetime getting lost in Los Angeles and never see the same thing twice. That's the magic of it.

And yet for all its sprawl, all its contradictions, there is a defining thread running through this city. Its own specific way of moving through the world. An aesthetic that seems effortless, born of the freedom of a place that has always made its own rules.

It shows up everywhere, if you know how to look. On the boardwalk and in the canyon, on the rooftop and at the farmers market, in the hills and down by the shore. The same instinct, expressed a thousand different ways.

The linen shirt unbuttoned just so. A vintage slip dress with bright white sneakers. The faded band tee tucked into wide-leg trousers. The perfectly broken-in leather jacket. The yoga teacher who walks into a restaurant in white cotton and a bejeweled turban. The actress who throws a vintage fur over her swimsuit and calls it an outfit.

There's a kind of confidence that comes from living in a body that spends time in the sun, that looks at the stars, swims in cold water, hikes dusty trails and sleeps with the windows open. It gets into the way you carry yourself. The way you reach for something simple and striking, over something complicated.

We dress for the life we actually live, the weather we actually walk through. Not performing sophistication, but inhabiting it. Knowing that the most beautiful thing you can wear is the sureness that you belong exactly where you are.

We come to Los Angeles to start something new. To let something go. Or just to find a life that fits the shape we actually are, not the shape we were told to be. And the city lets us. It doesn't ask for a plan. It just gives us the weather and the space and the light and it says, be you.

Be the brightest version of that, inside and out.

Perhaps that is why Angelenos seem to glow from within. Not because of what we wear or how we look, but because of how we feel inside. Because somewhere between the salt air and the sunsets, we forgot about who we were supposed to be, and became something better.

Ourselves.

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