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# foryoupage #fypage #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp
3:26

# foryoupage #fypage #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp

[MUSIC] [FOREIGN] [MUSIC] [FOREIGN] [MUSIC] [FOREIGN] [FOREIGN] [MUSIC] [FOREIGN] [FOREIGN] [MUSIC] [FOREIGN] [FOREIGN] [FOREIGN] [MUSIC] [FOREIGN...

383May 13, 2026
On realise ensemble une toilette d’exposition pour une confirmation d’un adorable berger australien 🐶❤️✨ #toilettage #shampooing #grooming #chien #dog #puppy #bergeraustralien #bergeraustralienbleumerle #expositioncanine #confirmation
3:26

On realise ensemble une toilette d’exposition pour une confirmation d’un adorable berger australien 🐶❤️✨ #toilettage #shampooing #grooming #chien #dog #puppy #bergeraustralien #bergeraustralienbleumerle #expositioncanine #confirmation

(upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music)

497.1K60.4KMay 26, 2026
Everyone planning to move abroad thinks: sell the house, use proceeds to fund relocation. That's backwards. Selling funds your move once. Keeping it as rental funds your life indefinitely. The visa qualification problem: Most people struggle to qualify for visas because they lack: remote income (don't have portable job/freelance work), passive income (no rental properties, investments, dividends), retirement income (not old enough or don't have pension). Without one of these income types, visa options are extremely limited. Usually means: expensive investment visas (€250k-500k), skilled worker visas (employer sponsorship, very difficult), or no visa at all. Your house IS the solution: That house you're planning to sell? It can become the passive income qualifying you for 54 countries' visas. Passive income visa requirements: typically $1,000-2,500/month from rental properties, investments, or dividends. Your house, rented out, produces: $3,500-6,000+/month (depending on location and mortgage situation). That's literally the visa qualification income you need. Why people don't consider this: Default assumption: moving abroad = selling everything, starting fresh. But selling your house means: one-time cash injection (helps with relocation costs), then zero ongoing income from that asset. Keeping as rental means: ongoing monthly income qualifying you for visas, funding your life abroad, building long-term wealth. The math comparison: Sell house: Get $200k-400k proceeds. Use for relocation, living expenses. Money eventually runs out. Keep as rental: Get $3,500/month passive income = $42,000/year = $420,000 over 10 years, PLUS you still own appreciating asset, PLUS it qualifies you for passive income visas. Which is better long-term wealth strategy? The rental model that works: You don't have to do traditional long-term rental (tenant drama, lease complications, hard to manage from abroad). You don't have to do nightly Airbnb (high maintenance, cleaning coordination, constant turnover). Mid-term rentals: 30+ day stays. This is what we do. It’s how we've lived abroad for 5 years. Why 30+ day rentals are superior: Attracts: travel nurses, corporate relocations, insurance-displaced families, people between homes, digital nomads. These tenants: need furnished housing, stay 1-3 months, pay premium rates for convenience, less turnover than nightly rentals, more income than long-term leases. Management: minimal compared to nightly Airbnb (no constant cleanings, check-ins, guest issues). Legal: in many cities, 30+ days avoids short-term rental regulations and HOA restrictions. Income: typically 30-50% more than long-term rental, with better tenant quality. Our example: We kept our US house. Rent it for 30+ day stays. Earns $6,000/month (mortgage is $1,900). Net passive income: $4,100/month after mortgage, plus building equity. That $4,100/month passive income (combined with other income) qualified us for Portuguese D7 visa. Without the rental income, we wouldn't have had passive income to qualify. We'd have needed remote work visa (requires higher income threshold) or wouldn't have qualified at all. The visa qualification unlock: Passive income visas are often EASIER to qualify for than remote work visas because: lower income thresholds (passive often $1,000-1,500/month vs remote $2,500-3,500/month), more countries offer them, less scrutiny on income source. Your home can be the difference between: qualifying for visa vs not qualifying, easier visa path vs harder path, more country options vs fewer options. What stops people: "I don't want to be landlord from abroad." You're not traditional landlord. You're renting furnished property for 30+ days to corporate/insurance clients. It's different model. "What if something breaks?" Property manager handles it (costs 10-15% of rent, worth it for hands-off management). "Isn't that risky?" Less risky than having zero passive income and struggling to qualify for any visa. Are you planning to sell or rent your house when you move? 🆘🇺🇸
3:26

Everyone planning to move abroad thinks: sell the house, use proceeds to fund relocation. That's backwards. Selling funds your move once. Keeping it as rental funds your life indefinitely. The visa qualification problem: Most people struggle to qualify for visas because they lack: remote income (don't have portable job/freelance work), passive income (no rental properties, investments, dividends), retirement income (not old enough or don't have pension). Without one of these income types, visa options are extremely limited. Usually means: expensive investment visas (€250k-500k), skilled worker visas (employer sponsorship, very difficult), or no visa at all. Your house IS the solution: That house you're planning to sell? It can become the passive income qualifying you for 54 countries' visas. Passive income visa requirements: typically $1,000-2,500/month from rental properties, investments, or dividends. Your house, rented out, produces: $3,500-6,000+/month (depending on location and mortgage situation). That's literally the visa qualification income you need. Why people don't consider this: Default assumption: moving abroad = selling everything, starting fresh. But selling your house means: one-time cash injection (helps with relocation costs), then zero ongoing income from that asset. Keeping as rental means: ongoing monthly income qualifying you for visas, funding your life abroad, building long-term wealth. The math comparison: Sell house: Get $200k-400k proceeds. Use for relocation, living expenses. Money eventually runs out. Keep as rental: Get $3,500/month passive income = $42,000/year = $420,000 over 10 years, PLUS you still own appreciating asset, PLUS it qualifies you for passive income visas. Which is better long-term wealth strategy? The rental model that works: You don't have to do traditional long-term rental (tenant drama, lease complications, hard to manage from abroad). You don't have to do nightly Airbnb (high maintenance, cleaning coordination, constant turnover). Mid-term rentals: 30+ day stays. This is what we do. It’s how we've lived abroad for 5 years. Why 30+ day rentals are superior: Attracts: travel nurses, corporate relocations, insurance-displaced families, people between homes, digital nomads. These tenants: need furnished housing, stay 1-3 months, pay premium rates for convenience, less turnover than nightly rentals, more income than long-term leases. Management: minimal compared to nightly Airbnb (no constant cleanings, check-ins, guest issues). Legal: in many cities, 30+ days avoids short-term rental regulations and HOA restrictions. Income: typically 30-50% more than long-term rental, with better tenant quality. Our example: We kept our US house. Rent it for 30+ day stays. Earns $6,000/month (mortgage is $1,900). Net passive income: $4,100/month after mortgage, plus building equity. That $4,100/month passive income (combined with other income) qualified us for Portuguese D7 visa. Without the rental income, we wouldn't have had passive income to qualify. We'd have needed remote work visa (requires higher income threshold) or wouldn't have qualified at all. The visa qualification unlock: Passive income visas are often EASIER to qualify for than remote work visas because: lower income thresholds (passive often $1,000-1,500/month vs remote $2,500-3,500/month), more countries offer them, less scrutiny on income source. Your home can be the difference between: qualifying for visa vs not qualifying, easier visa path vs harder path, more country options vs fewer options. What stops people: "I don't want to be landlord from abroad." You're not traditional landlord. You're renting furnished property for 30+ days to corporate/insurance clients. It's different model. "What if something breaks?" Property manager handles it (costs 10-15% of rent, worth it for hands-off management). "Isn't that risky?" Less risky than having zero passive income and struggling to qualify for any visa. Are you planning to sell or rent your house when you move? 🆘🇺🇸

A lot of Americans think that they should sell their house immediately when they decide to move abroad and that that money is going to fund their ...

30415May 29, 2026
You aren’t moving abroad to please your followers, your friends, or your family. The choice to pack up your life and leave the United States is about getting YOU into alignment. Clients tell me their dream country to live in and almost always it’s based on seeking approval from others. They don’t want to live in countries nobody has ever heard of or places that are thought of as underdeveloped. Even though public perception and reality are often sooooo far apart, it sways people away from very viable options. My dream country to live in isn’t somewhere that checks arbitrary boxes, it is anywhere I feel at home. Don’t focus too much on your pre-conceived notions of a place. Keep an open mind and an open heart. Just remember, anyone sitting back in America judging your decisions is not on your level. You are making a badass bold choice that they could never be brave enough to make. 🆘🇺🇸  #creatorsearchinsights
3:26

You aren’t moving abroad to please your followers, your friends, or your family. The choice to pack up your life and leave the United States is about getting YOU into alignment. Clients tell me their dream country to live in and almost always it’s based on seeking approval from others. They don’t want to live in countries nobody has ever heard of or places that are thought of as underdeveloped. Even though public perception and reality are often sooooo far apart, it sways people away from very viable options. My dream country to live in isn’t somewhere that checks arbitrary boxes, it is anywhere I feel at home. Don’t focus too much on your pre-conceived notions of a place. Keep an open mind and an open heart. Just remember, anyone sitting back in America judging your decisions is not on your level. You are making a badass bold choice that they could never be brave enough to make. 🆘🇺🇸 #creatorsearchinsights

The funny thing is you're starting at the hardest step, picking your dream country to live in. That mindset of where you want to live and if you c...

57246May 18, 2026
الحلقة 16 - البطل و ماماه ❤️ #Vlog #cat #catlover #المغرب🇲🇦تونس🇹🇳الجزائر🇩🇿تركيا🇹🇷_العراق🇮🇶 #شعب_صيني_ماله_حل😂😂
3:26

الحلقة 16 - البطل و ماماه ❤️ #Vlog #cat #catlover #المغرب🇲🇦تونس🇹🇳الجزائر🇩🇿تركيا🇹🇷_العراق🇮🇶 #شعب_صيني_ماله_حل😂😂

I heard that you were married. How did you get married? Last time you were with her. Why did you get married? You were married to her when you wer...

1.2M61.2KJun 14, 2026
Take a peek into how I’ve structured my multi-six figure digital marketing agency 👀👯‍♀️  #onlinebusinesstips #delegationtips #outsourcingexperts #outsourcingservices #scalingabusiness #smallbusinessfemaleowner #6figurebusinessowner #marketingagencyowners #worklifebalancegoals #automateyourbusiness
3:25

Take a peek into how I’ve structured my multi-six figure digital marketing agency 👀👯‍♀️ #onlinebusinesstips #delegationtips #outsourcingexperts #outsourcingservices #scalingabusiness #smallbusinessfemaleowner #6figurebusinessowner #marketingagencyowners #worklifebalancegoals #automateyourbusiness

This is what my team looks like right now as a multi-six figure at digital marketing agency owner. I am huge about outsourcing and only working in...

38.5K1.6KApr 8, 2026
Most advice on international travel on a budget focuses on: cheaper hotels, street food, free activities, walking instead of taxis. That's optimizing the wrong variable. Accommodation and food costs are fixed within narrow ranges. Flights? Flights vary 500-1000% based on destination flexibility. The expensive way to travel: locked destination + locked dates. "We want to go to Paris for spring break" = you'll pay whatever airlines charge because you have zero negotiating power. The cheap way to travel: flexible destination + locked dates (or locked destination + flexible dates). "We want to go SOMEWHERE for spring break, wherever's cheapest" = you have maximum negotiating power. Google Flights: search "anywhere" with your dates locked. Shows cheapest destinations globally from your airport. Skyscanner: search "everywhere" with date flexibility. Shows cheapest times to travel to specific places. Result: $1,000/person flights become $50-150/person flights. Not by finding "deals" on expensive routes. By choosing routes that are cheap by design. International travel on a budget isn't about suffering through hostels and skipping meals. It's about flexible destination selection that makes flights *the most expensive component* dramatically cheaper. My kids have been to 20+ countries. Not because I have unlimited money. Because I optimize for cost by choosing destinations based on flight prices, not Instagram popularity. You can travel extensively. Or you can travel to specific places on specific dates. Pick one. Comment if you want the credit card points advanced strategy. 🆘🇺🇸 #TikTokCreatorSearchInsightsIncentive
3:25

Most advice on international travel on a budget focuses on: cheaper hotels, street food, free activities, walking instead of taxis. That's optimizing the wrong variable. Accommodation and food costs are fixed within narrow ranges. Flights? Flights vary 500-1000% based on destination flexibility. The expensive way to travel: locked destination + locked dates. "We want to go to Paris for spring break" = you'll pay whatever airlines charge because you have zero negotiating power. The cheap way to travel: flexible destination + locked dates (or locked destination + flexible dates). "We want to go SOMEWHERE for spring break, wherever's cheapest" = you have maximum negotiating power. Google Flights: search "anywhere" with your dates locked. Shows cheapest destinations globally from your airport. Skyscanner: search "everywhere" with date flexibility. Shows cheapest times to travel to specific places. Result: $1,000/person flights become $50-150/person flights. Not by finding "deals" on expensive routes. By choosing routes that are cheap by design. International travel on a budget isn't about suffering through hostels and skipping meals. It's about flexible destination selection that makes flights *the most expensive component* dramatically cheaper. My kids have been to 20+ countries. Not because I have unlimited money. Because I optimize for cost by choosing destinations based on flight prices, not Instagram popularity. You can travel extensively. Or you can travel to specific places on specific dates. Pick one. Comment if you want the credit card points advanced strategy. 🆘🇺🇸 #TikTokCreatorSearchInsightsIncentive

I know it's perceived that traveling internationally can be very expensive, and while that sometimes is true, specific destinations on specific da...

40020May 28, 2026
If you’re always feeling broke and poor watch this #poor #broke #advice
3:25

If you’re always feeling broke and poor watch this #poor #broke #advice

[MUSIC] [MUSIC]

8.1K574May 4, 2026
Most addictive substance in the world? Not alcohol. Not nicotine. Not drugs. It’s your own emotions. Stress, worry, anxiety… they come with a chemical payoff. And your body gets hooked. Cortisol and adrenaline create intensity. Your brain reads that as important. So you replay, overthink, and loop. Then it becomes familiar. And what’s familiar feels safe… even when it hurts. Over time, stress chemistry blunts dopamine. So normal life feels flat. And you need more intensity just to feel something. That’s the loop. Break it in 60 seconds. Name it. Breathe slow. Feel your hands. Shift out of the story… and back into your body. Because the emotion isn’t the problem. The addiction to the chemistry is. #StressRelief #anxietyhelp #nervoussystem #mentalhealthtools #emotionalregulation
3:25

Most addictive substance in the world? Not alcohol. Not nicotine. Not drugs. It’s your own emotions. Stress, worry, anxiety… they come with a chemical payoff. And your body gets hooked. Cortisol and adrenaline create intensity. Your brain reads that as important. So you replay, overthink, and loop. Then it becomes familiar. And what’s familiar feels safe… even when it hurts. Over time, stress chemistry blunts dopamine. So normal life feels flat. And you need more intensity just to feel something. That’s the loop. Break it in 60 seconds. Name it. Breathe slow. Feel your hands. Shift out of the story… and back into your body. Because the emotion isn’t the problem. The addiction to the chemistry is. #StressRelief #anxietyhelp #nervoussystem #mentalhealthtools #emotionalregulation

Here's how to disarm painful emotions in about 60 seconds. Did you know the most addictive substance in the world is not alcohol, it's not nicotin...

12.2K832Apr 22, 2026
The Reason You’re Not Taken Seriously in Conversations | #CommunicationSkills #Confidence #SocialSkills #SelfImprovement #Psychology
3:25

The Reason You’re Not Taken Seriously in Conversations | #CommunicationSkills #Confidence #SocialSkills #SelfImprovement #Psychology

If you often use phrases like "I might be wrong", "but" or "does that make sense?" I'm afraid you're rarely going to be taken seriously behind-out...

33.3K2.5KMay 31, 2026
Ask questions in the comments!! #ai #openclaw
3:25

Ask questions in the comments!! #ai #openclaw

Everybody wants to know how I have my AI agents living inside of this ecosystem that I put them inside of my AI slaves So that I could watch them ...

69.4K3.7KMay 14, 2026
Partie 1: Elle élèvé le bébé d’une sirène des années plus tard……
3:25

Partie 1: Elle élèvé le bébé d’une sirène des années plus tard……

- If you like, can you help me to take care of my child? I want him to live as a normal human. The story opens in the clart of a certain of the Af...

9.1M612.5KJun 17, 2026
قصة وقصيدة الدكتور محمد العمري في الشيخ والأديب محمد بن عبدالله بن ناشع الشهري مدير تعليم النماص سابقاً #الدكتور_محمد_العمري #الشيخ_محمد_بن_عبدالله_بن_ناشع #بني_شهر #بني_عمرو #نبض_القصيد @بني شهر رجال الحجر 🇸🇦🫡 @بني عمرو ٧٠١
3:24

قصة وقصيدة الدكتور محمد العمري في الشيخ والأديب محمد بن عبدالله بن ناشع الشهري مدير تعليم النماص سابقاً #الدكتور_محمد_العمري #الشيخ_محمد_بن_عبدالله_بن_ناشع #بني_شهر #بني_عمرو #نبض_القصيد @بني شهر رجال الحجر 🇸🇦🫡 @بني عمرو ٧٠١

This is the Sheikh Muhammad bin Adela bin Asha Rahim Allah, he is the Imam of the West. This was a very important meeting with the Imam of the Wes...

25.5K251Mar 26, 2026
Les reproches de sa mère sont finalement devenus toute sa force
 #famille #amourmaternel #grandir
3:24

Les reproches de sa mère sont finalement devenus toute sa force #famille #amourmaternel #grandir

Since his childhood, Satan heard every day the same words. He was the light in short, not gasping, not letting the television light up in a empty ...

1.0M61.9KApr 13, 2026
TikTok Video
3:24

TikTok Video

[MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC] [MUSIC]

15.4K489Apr 15, 2026
#pourtoii #film #movie #fyp
3:24

#pourtoii #film #movie #fyp

To be able to be with Garçon, Dante was secretly in love. This girl transformed the soul of this last Nannus. Every time the night we see that eve...

16010May 16, 2026
Why Single Mothers Struggle to Raise Sons (and even daughters) #psychology  #SelfImprovement  #mindset
3:24

Why Single Mothers Struggle to Raise Sons (and even daughters) #psychology #SelfImprovement #mindset

The first one is that some mothers are too afraid to discipline their kids or tell the kids the reality in order to make their lives easier. And s...

2748Apr 8, 2026
Replying to @nicolegarman5 You don’t need a remote job to become a digital nomad. Creating remote income is entirely within your control. The barrier you have to cross in order to create remote income is doing things you have never done. A lot of people struggle with the embarrassment of visibility or putting themselves out there in order to get clients. But, in order to create something you’ve never had before, you must do things you’ve never done before. In most cases people simply refuse to do countless things that could earn them remote income. That’s fine to have preferences on what you do, but if you refuse to do everything, you should stop claiming you want to become a digital nomad. 🆘🇺🇸 #TikTokEncyclopediaContest
3:24

Replying to @nicolegarman5 You don’t need a remote job to become a digital nomad. Creating remote income is entirely within your control. The barrier you have to cross in order to create remote income is doing things you have never done. A lot of people struggle with the embarrassment of visibility or putting themselves out there in order to get clients. But, in order to create something you’ve never had before, you must do things you’ve never done before. In most cases people simply refuse to do countless things that could earn them remote income. That’s fine to have preferences on what you do, but if you refuse to do everything, you should stop claiming you want to become a digital nomad. 🆘🇺🇸 #TikTokEncyclopediaContest

I think there's a lot of confusion about what a digital nomad is and isn't. A digital nomad isn't just somebody who has a remote job and is able t...

2108May 22, 2026
American moms know things are bad. They're not blind. They're not stupid. They see school shooting statistics. They see healthcare bankruptcies. They see their kids practicing hiding from gunmen. They see the data. They know the reality. But knowing and acting are completely different things. Because acting requires admitting that all the things you've been told about how you're supposed to live - stay close to family, stability above all else, American schools are best, raising kids here builds character - might be lies designed to keep you compliant. Easier to keep believing lies while managing anxiety than confront that you're keeping your kids somewhere actively harming them because leaving feels too hard. The cognitive dissonance is real. You watch your kids do active shooter drills and tell yourself it's teaching resilience. You see news about another school shooting and tell yourself your district is safe. You feel constant baseline fear and tell yourself that's just motherhood. None of that is normal motherhood. That's American motherhood. And you've been conditioned to accept it as unavoidable reality instead of specific circumstance you could change by changing location. The moms who moved their families abroad aren't braver. They just hit point where staying felt more dangerous than leaving. Where keeping kids in America to maintain family proximity or avoid judgment felt more selfish than relocating them to safety. You're waiting for perfect time, perfect plan, perfect circumstances. You're waiting to feel ready. You're waiting for guarantee it'll work out. You're waiting for permission from people who will never give it. Meanwhile your kids are getting older in environment you know isn't serving them. Every year you wait is another year they're absorbing trauma you have power to prevent. The things you've been told about why you should stay - family, stability, American excellence, duty to fix broken country - sound noble until you examine whether they're actually serving your children or just keeping you stuck. Link in bio for moms ready to trust their judgment over societal expectations. What are you supposed to believe that you actually disagree with? 🆘🇺🇸
3:24

American moms know things are bad. They're not blind. They're not stupid. They see school shooting statistics. They see healthcare bankruptcies. They see their kids practicing hiding from gunmen. They see the data. They know the reality. But knowing and acting are completely different things. Because acting requires admitting that all the things you've been told about how you're supposed to live - stay close to family, stability above all else, American schools are best, raising kids here builds character - might be lies designed to keep you compliant. Easier to keep believing lies while managing anxiety than confront that you're keeping your kids somewhere actively harming them because leaving feels too hard. The cognitive dissonance is real. You watch your kids do active shooter drills and tell yourself it's teaching resilience. You see news about another school shooting and tell yourself your district is safe. You feel constant baseline fear and tell yourself that's just motherhood. None of that is normal motherhood. That's American motherhood. And you've been conditioned to accept it as unavoidable reality instead of specific circumstance you could change by changing location. The moms who moved their families abroad aren't braver. They just hit point where staying felt more dangerous than leaving. Where keeping kids in America to maintain family proximity or avoid judgment felt more selfish than relocating them to safety. You're waiting for perfect time, perfect plan, perfect circumstances. You're waiting to feel ready. You're waiting for guarantee it'll work out. You're waiting for permission from people who will never give it. Meanwhile your kids are getting older in environment you know isn't serving them. Every year you wait is another year they're absorbing trauma you have power to prevent. The things you've been told about why you should stay - family, stability, American excellence, duty to fix broken country - sound noble until you examine whether they're actually serving your children or just keeping you stuck. Link in bio for moms ready to trust their judgment over societal expectations. What are you supposed to believe that you actually disagree with? 🆘🇺🇸

Here are eight things I will never agree with as a mom who moved her family abroad five years ago. Number one is that moving away is running away....

39331Jun 7, 2026
A recaída raramente começa pelo desejo de prazer… ela nasce, muitas vezes, da tentativa desesperada de silenciar uma dor. Por trás do uso, existe um vazio, uma angústia, um desconforto que parece insuportável. Não é sobre “querer usar”, é sobre “não saber como lidar com o que está sentindo”. A substância vira um alívio momentâneo, uma fuga rápida… mas que cobra um preço alto depois. Entender isso muda tudo. Porque a recuperação não é só parar de usar — é aprender a sentir sem fugir, é desenvolver novas formas de lidar com a dor, é construir recursos internos para enfrentar a vida de forma mais saudável. A dor faz parte do processo… mas ela não precisa te controlar. Você pode aprender a atravessar ela sem se destruir. A verdadeira liberdade não está em não sentir dor… Está em não precisar mais fugir dela. ⸻ 💬 Acredito no seu potencial, você consegue! Vamos juntos? 🤜🤛 📲 WhatsApp: (15) 99823-0532 Entre em contato para apoio e orientação na sua recuperação. #recuperação #dependenciaquimica #sobriedade #recaida #saudemental
3:24

A recaída raramente começa pelo desejo de prazer… ela nasce, muitas vezes, da tentativa desesperada de silenciar uma dor. Por trás do uso, existe um vazio, uma angústia, um desconforto que parece insuportável. Não é sobre “querer usar”, é sobre “não saber como lidar com o que está sentindo”. A substância vira um alívio momentâneo, uma fuga rápida… mas que cobra um preço alto depois. Entender isso muda tudo. Porque a recuperação não é só parar de usar — é aprender a sentir sem fugir, é desenvolver novas formas de lidar com a dor, é construir recursos internos para enfrentar a vida de forma mais saudável. A dor faz parte do processo… mas ela não precisa te controlar. Você pode aprender a atravessar ela sem se destruir. A verdadeira liberdade não está em não sentir dor… Está em não precisar mais fugir dela. ⸻ 💬 Acredito no seu potencial, você consegue! Vamos juntos? 🤜🤛 📲 WhatsApp: (15) 99823-0532 Entre em contato para apoio e orientação na sua recuperação. #recuperação #dependenciaquimica #sobriedade #recaida #saudemental

Do you know that most of the deputies don't come back to use drugs because they want to feel pleasure? Most of the deputies come back to use drugs...

3.1K126Apr 9, 2026
TikTok Video
3:24

TikTok Video

I spent the last eight months building my fitness page to 95,000 followers and this is the advice that I'd give to somebody who was starting a fit...

4.4K186Jun 16, 2026
The childhood your kids could have in America - same town, same school, same peers, same cultural context from birth through graduation - isn't objectively better than childhood that spans continents. It's just the default you're accepting without considering the alternative. American parents agonize over: which school district, which extracurriculars, which experiences will give kids advantages, which opportunities will set them up for success. All optimization within single geographic and cultural context. Meanwhile parents raising kids internationally are giving them: direct experience with how different cultures function, friendships spanning continents, perspectives on history and current events from multiple vantage points, adaptability from navigating change, identity that isn't tied to single nationality. The concern that moving kids internationally will harm them assumes stability and consistency are highest values in childhood development. But research on third culture kids shows: higher cultural intelligence, greater adaptability, broader worldview, stronger language acquisition, deeper understanding of global systems. These aren't theoretical benefits. These are observable outcomes in adults who were raised internationally as children. They navigate complexity better, adapt to change faster, connect across cultural differences more easily than peers who grew up in single location. The grief that comes with this lifestyle - missing places, leaving friends, constantly adapting to new contexts - is real. But grief and growth coexist. Kids can miss Japan while loving Portugal while being excited about next adventure. Capacity to hold complexity is itself valuable skill. American education teaches about world through textbooks and videos. International childhood teaches about world through direct experience. Reading about how different cultures approach education versus experiencing three different educational systems produces different depth of understanding. The friendships formed across countries aren't less meaningful because they're maintained digitally. They're often more intentional because distance requires effort. Kids choosing to maintain connection across time zones and continents are learning that relationships worth having are worth working for. The identity formation is different too. Instead of absorbing single national identity as default, third culture kids actively construct identity from multiple cultural influences. They choose what resonates, what feels true, what serves them - rather than inheriting single predetermined cultural package. This doesn't make them rootless or confused. It makes them flexible about what home means and confident that they can create belonging anywhere rather than believing belonging only exists in one specific place. The American parents keeping kids in America to provide stability are choosing known quantity over unknown possibility. That's valid choice. But it's choice, not requirement. And other choice produces different outcomes worth considering. Watch video for specific ways international childhood shapes kids differently than American childhood. Link in bio for parents ready to give kids global perspective instead of single-culture experience. 🆘🇺🇸
3:23

The childhood your kids could have in America - same town, same school, same peers, same cultural context from birth through graduation - isn't objectively better than childhood that spans continents. It's just the default you're accepting without considering the alternative. American parents agonize over: which school district, which extracurriculars, which experiences will give kids advantages, which opportunities will set them up for success. All optimization within single geographic and cultural context. Meanwhile parents raising kids internationally are giving them: direct experience with how different cultures function, friendships spanning continents, perspectives on history and current events from multiple vantage points, adaptability from navigating change, identity that isn't tied to single nationality. The concern that moving kids internationally will harm them assumes stability and consistency are highest values in childhood development. But research on third culture kids shows: higher cultural intelligence, greater adaptability, broader worldview, stronger language acquisition, deeper understanding of global systems. These aren't theoretical benefits. These are observable outcomes in adults who were raised internationally as children. They navigate complexity better, adapt to change faster, connect across cultural differences more easily than peers who grew up in single location. The grief that comes with this lifestyle - missing places, leaving friends, constantly adapting to new contexts - is real. But grief and growth coexist. Kids can miss Japan while loving Portugal while being excited about next adventure. Capacity to hold complexity is itself valuable skill. American education teaches about world through textbooks and videos. International childhood teaches about world through direct experience. Reading about how different cultures approach education versus experiencing three different educational systems produces different depth of understanding. The friendships formed across countries aren't less meaningful because they're maintained digitally. They're often more intentional because distance requires effort. Kids choosing to maintain connection across time zones and continents are learning that relationships worth having are worth working for. The identity formation is different too. Instead of absorbing single national identity as default, third culture kids actively construct identity from multiple cultural influences. They choose what resonates, what feels true, what serves them - rather than inheriting single predetermined cultural package. This doesn't make them rootless or confused. It makes them flexible about what home means and confident that they can create belonging anywhere rather than believing belonging only exists in one specific place. The American parents keeping kids in America to provide stability are choosing known quantity over unknown possibility. That's valid choice. But it's choice, not requirement. And other choice produces different outcomes worth considering. Watch video for specific ways international childhood shapes kids differently than American childhood. Link in bio for parents ready to give kids global perspective instead of single-culture experience. 🆘🇺🇸

Here are five things you didn't know about raising third culture kids. A third culture kid is raised in a country outside of where their parents a...

2187May 31, 2026
Crabs pull each other back into the bucket because evolution wired them for group survival. If one escapes, the rest might die. Humans do the same thing. But we don't actually need the group to survive anymore. We just think we do. Your family isn't trying to destroy you. They're trying to protect themselves from the discomfort of watching you leave the safety of the known. Because if you can leave and survive, it means they could too. And if they could but didn't, that means they chose this. And choosing this means accepting responsibility for their own stuck situation. That's terrifying for them. So instead of sitting with that discomfort, they pull you back. They disguise their fear as love. They call your courage reckless and their stagnation reasonable. And if you let them, they'll convince you that staying stuck together is safer than climbing out alone. But it's not. It's just more comfortable for them. You can love your family and still refuse to drown with them. Those aren't contradictory positions. Link in bio if you're ready to stop shrinking yourself to make others comfortable. 🆘🇺🇸 #creatorsearchinsights
3:23

Crabs pull each other back into the bucket because evolution wired them for group survival. If one escapes, the rest might die. Humans do the same thing. But we don't actually need the group to survive anymore. We just think we do. Your family isn't trying to destroy you. They're trying to protect themselves from the discomfort of watching you leave the safety of the known. Because if you can leave and survive, it means they could too. And if they could but didn't, that means they chose this. And choosing this means accepting responsibility for their own stuck situation. That's terrifying for them. So instead of sitting with that discomfort, they pull you back. They disguise their fear as love. They call your courage reckless and their stagnation reasonable. And if you let them, they'll convince you that staying stuck together is safer than climbing out alone. But it's not. It's just more comfortable for them. You can love your family and still refuse to drown with them. Those aren't contradictory positions. Link in bio if you're ready to stop shrinking yourself to make others comfortable. 🆘🇺🇸 #creatorsearchinsights

When you will tell your friends and family that you're moving abroad, it's very common for them to react negatively to that information. They will...

38630May 22, 2026
i hope this helps..lmk if you guys have more questions #transfer #upenn #premed #ivyleague #stats
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i hope this helps..lmk if you guys have more questions #transfer #upenn #premed #ivyleague #stats

hey guys I've had a few people ask me like based on the video that I posted on like my transfer transfer into pen and I've had a few people ask me...

3.4K161Mar 11, 2026
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