Not everyone is convinced. Dr. Helena Voss, a clinical psychologist and director of the Digital Ethics Board at Johns Hopkins, calls the trend "profoundly reckless."
"What Anastangel is doing is deliberately inducing an artificially accelerated therapeutic transference. The subscriber transfers maternal, romantic, or idealizing feelings onto her. In real therapy, we analyze that transference. She exploits it for subscription revenue. There is no containment, no long-term follow-up, and if a patient spirals into a dissociative episode at 2 AM after watching her gaze work, there is no crisis hotline. That’s not therapy. That’s a parasocial relationship weaponized." OnlyFans 2025 Anastangel A Therapy Thats Sure T...
Anastangel responded via a cryptic post on her paid feed: "Tell Dr. Voss that my DMs are full of people who stopped self-harming after our attachment repair module. Does your ‘ethics board’ have a waitlist? I didn’t think so." Not everyone is convinced
Anastangel (real name undisclosed, age 27 as of mid-2025) began her OnlyFans journey in 2022 as a traditional adult model. With a background in psychology coursework and crisis hotline volunteering, she noticed a pattern in her direct messages. Subscribers weren’t just asking for explicit content. They were confessing loneliness, job loss, divorce, grief, and suicidal ideation. There is no containment, no long-term follow-up, and
“I became an accidental night therapist,” Anastangel told Wired in a rare December 2025 interview. “People paid $15 a month not to see my body, but to feel seen.”
By early 2024, She rebranded her page from explicit content to “intimate life coaching with adult themes permitted.” The shift was controversial but prescient.
As we look ahead to 2025, it's clear that online communities will continue to play a significant role in how we connect, share, and support one another. Platforms like OnlyFans are likely to remain key players in this space, evolving to meet the changing needs of both creators and their audiences.