Language
English
عربي
Tiếng Việt
русский
français
español
日本語
한글
Deutsch
हिन्दी
简体中文
繁體中文
Home
How To Use
Language
English
عربي
Tiếng Việt
русский
français
español
日本語
한글
Deutsch
हिन्दी
简体中文
繁體中文
Home
Detail
@pop.ice_uyuu:
pop.ice_uyuu
Open In TikTok:
Region: ID
Saturday 24 June 2023 03:08:57 GMT
8329
957
9
207
Music
Download
No Watermark .mp4 (
0.18MB
)
No Watermark(HD) .mp4 (
0.3MB
)
Watermark .mp4 (
0.21MB
)
Music .mp3
Comments
︎ :
@Fazilaaa knp bang?
2023-08-28 16:06:12
1
luhung idgaf era. :
di rumah pendiem di sekolah kayak org gila😁
2023-06-24 03:23:20
12
ZhakiFtSbl :
di rumah pendiam di sekolah kayak orang gila
2023-08-20 13:21:33
0
To see more videos from user @pop.ice_uyuu, please go to the Tikwm homepage.
Other Videos
So many parents tell me, “I don’t even remember how my parents handled things when I was little. Is that normal?” Yes, it’s completely normal. We often think of memory as the things we can recall in words, but our bodies hold memories too. Sometimes the way we respond to our kids - the tone, the tension, the urge to shut things down - is our body remembering what it once lived through. You don’t need a clear picture of your childhood to do this work. Your reactions are the clues. They’re the breadcrumbs that help you understand what your body learned long ago. In the most recent episode of the Good Inside podcast I'll break down the science behind yelling, snapping, and shutting down. Find it wherever you stream your podcasts!
تحبون التساريح المفتوحة او المرفوعة😍😍✅❌
Does anyone else remember when watching a movie wasn't instant?! It was a whole process - planning with a friend, driving to Blockbuster, walking through aisles, hoping the movie we wanted was there. Sometimes it wasn’t. Sometimes we had to choose something else. Back then, disappointment was built into everyday life. It was frustrating, but it also prepared us for the bigger disappointments that come later - the ones that don’t resolve in a day. Our kids live in a different world. There’s barely any space between wanting and having. Between “I want to watch that” and “it’s playing right now.” That gap - the waiting, the hoping, the not getting - is almost gone. And while I love the convenience of our world (I really do), I also think about what disappears when that space disappears. Waiting taught us resilience. It taught us how to sit in discomfort, how to hope, how to cope. Maybe it’s not about going back to Blockbuster. Maybe it’s just about remembering that waiting isn’t wasted time, it’s where some of the most important growth happens. This clip is from the most recent episode of the Good Inside podcast where I break down why our kids get less practice waiting and tolerating frustration than previous generations - and how parents can intentionally build resilience in a world of convenience. Find it wherever you stream your podcasts!
It is never too late to repair. Whether the moment happened ten minutes ago or ten years ago, the longing for a parent to come back doesn’t fade with time. That longing is proof that repair always matters. And often, that’s how cycles begin to break: when we go back, acknowledge the hurt, and choose to do it differently. This is an episode of the Good Inside podcast I think every parent should listen to. Find it wherever you stream your podcasts!
one day i’m going to grow wings #icarus #greekmythology #radiohead #letdown #freedom
About
Robot
Legal
Privacy Policy