@ih_tx: الشخص الذي قتله النبي صل الله عليه وسلم 💚🍂 #تعال #اسمع #يامهموم #دعاء_يريح_القلوب #ارح_سمعك_بالقران #مقاطع_دينية #بدر_المشاري #اذكار #viral #fypシ #يوم_الجمعه #سورة_الكهف #دعاء_يريح_القلوب #رمضان #islamic_video

بدر المشاري 💚🌿
بدر المشاري 💚🌿
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Region: TR
Tuesday 17 December 2024 14:43:18 GMT
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mhmh0431
سبحان الله وبحمده سبحان الله ، :
استغفر الله العظيم واتوب إليه
2024-12-18 05:19:24
4
dohaaaaaaachad2
Amore :
Saw
2024-12-20 20:26:26
1
muslimgirl661
حسناء🍉 :
S.A.W
2025-01-29 08:54:23
0
laila.laila212
Laila Laila :
saw saw saw saw🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2024-12-19 09:44:09
1
user4000tiktok
الـ𓄌ـزعــيم𓄂 :
اخبروا شيخنا بدر المشاري انني انا مجنون في حبي له
2024-12-20 10:46:51
780
e.m.a.n_5
. :
طيب والحروب
2024-12-19 12:55:15
60
m..6kj
➐⓶.. :
الي مايدري ترا بدر المشاري سروري يعني مو سلفي
2025-01-07 23:05:17
25
m2003s1997
BOOM :
احلى شي رفع الرمح ومع رفع الرمح قام رجالا من قوته ❤صلى الله على نبينا الكريم❤
2024-12-18 20:33:06
134
mohmoud.q
mohmoud.q :
اللهم صل وسلم على سيدنا محمد ❤
2024-12-17 16:23:09
191
www.farou
babillo :
ولد في مكة فأصبحت مكرمة ، و هاجر إلى المدينة فأصبحت منورة ، و دخل قلوبنا فأصبحت مطهرة فصلو ع خير خلق الله
2025-01-12 08:47:47
98
fa.407
فهد الويباري🦠 🎓 :
اوبي بن خلف ما ذبحه بلال؟؟
2024-12-19 06:50:14
9
user7318198047526
عبدالله الحامدي :
الهم صلي وسلم وبارك على سيدنا محمد 🥰🥰🥰
2024-12-18 16:43:18
37
hamza.and.the
صلو على النبي ﷺ 🌼 :
طلع فوق 👆
2024-12-19 19:30:51
23
user4917025167349
قلب صافي حظ مافي :
اللهم صلي على سيدنا محمد
2024-12-18 07:22:32
10
user8222598207930
☝🏻فتــاة 𝑨التوحـيـد🍃 :
اللهم صلِ وسلم على نبينا محمد
2024-12-19 08:50:29
20
jassim.1994
jassim.1994 :
:لا اله الا الله والله واكبر لااله الا الله وحده لااله الا الله ولا شريك له لااله الا الله له الملك وله الحمد لااله الا الله ولاحول ولا قوة الا بالله استغفرالله العظيم 🥹
2024-12-18 18:33:15
42
dyfwr2q3ntdc
ابو وسيم :
عليه افضل الصلاة والسلام
2024-12-17 16:11:19
16
a2274819243936
أسد الدراجي :
اللهم صل وسلم على نبينا محمد وعلى آله وصحبه أجمعين
2024-12-19 17:33:18
8
user3465804762858
اسماء موسي،🥰❤️ :
عليه افضل الصلاة والسلام
2024-12-18 10:11:56
6
bintchinkit93
بنت شنقيط :
صلى الله عليه وسلم حبيبي المصطفى كنت مستانسة والضحكة على وجهي وأتخيل الموقف مع كلام الشيخ بدر 🥰 ياحبيبي يارسول الله 🥰🥰🥰🥰
2024-12-17 22:49:07
13
abmwh
عبد من عباد الله :
اللهم صل وسلم على نبينا محمد
2024-12-19 16:16:37
11
nvgbb5
تيم_ارنولد_مدريدي :
لا إله إلا الله☝
2024-12-19 11:11:23
10
noor71359
••• :
اللهم صل وسلم وبارك على سيدنا محمد وعلى آله وصحبه أجمعين صلاة تحسن بها الاخلاق وتيسر بها الارزاق وتدفع بها المشاق وتملأ منها الآفاق وعلى آله وصحبه وسلم صلاة دائمه من يوم ماخلقت الدنيا الى يوم التلاق
2024-12-17 14:53:15
10
n9305219
ياسر🕋💚🩷 :
عليه افضل الصلاة والسلام حبيبي رسول الله 😭♥💚
2024-12-19 08:49:53
8
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When I was in college I loved and wholeheartedly believed the advice “do what you’re passionate about.” Steve Jobs said it in his Stanford commencement speech. I loved Apple, Steve Jobs, and the suggestion that you should buck trends and just do what you love. But reflecting on this advice, 10 years out, I think it’s bad, if not harmful advice. I think there are two problems. First, what you “love” is ill-defined and ever-changing at that age. Most of your time, hobbies and identity is marked by listening to music, doing recreational drugs, hanging with friends, gaming, concerts, school, etc. Just because you’re passionate about festivals doesn’t mean you should become a DJ. Second, if it is defined, it’s likely misleading. You might absolutely love playing tennis. So much so that you think you should become a tennis coach or open a tennis clinic. To be successful in these examples, you have to love teaching or the management and operations of running a business much more than you love tennis. If you go down this path, it’s possible that you come to hate the very thing you loved in the first place, and turn out to be unsuccessful. Instead I think what you love or become passionate about is a result of doing work in a given space over a long period of time. The intrinsic reward of progressing and becoming more skilled in a field, and the extrinsic rewards of recognition and upward mobility, seem, to me, to be far clearer mechanisms for getting to an outcome where you say “oh, I love doing this.” A more accurate answer would be “oh, I love this because I’ve been doing it for 20 years” My dad spent 25+ years in healthcare consulting. He retired for a year, only to go back and advise companies on the very same thing he was doing before. He gets satisfaction from having the skill set, knowledge, and experience to help a business in this space.  If you asked him at 21 what he loved, he would probably respond with the ill defined answer of “computers” and “engineering.” Directionally he went down this path, but he ended up in a different place. So if you are 21, how do you act on this insight and get to a place where at 60 you can say, well, I really do love what I do? I think it comes down to exploring and refining. There are a lot of pressures to identify who you are and what you’re going to do at 21 but the fact is that you don’t have much real-world experience or inputs. I think one solution is to choose, directionally, an area and develop awareness of what you like, what you dislike, and revise forward.   College is partially the time to narrow the direction. If you come in as a freshman unsure of whether you want to do medicine or business, you should have a much clearer idea of that by the time you graduate. Those are two fairly distinct paths, and the consequence of pursuing the former can be high — many years of med school, debt, career lock-in, etc. But say you get to graduation and you generally want to do “business” and like the idea of “marketing.” Great. That’s directionally choosing. Within that direction, there’s far more to explore. What type of products do you want to market — SaaS, consumer, services, CPG? Do you want to work in-house, or at an agency? Do you want to specialize in channel marketing (FB, Email, SEO), or do you want to do brand marketing? To explore, maybe you get a job at a large digital / ad agency and get broad exposure for a couple years. After that, maybe you go in house as a marketing manager at a smaller company. After that, maybe you work at a marketing agency for a specific niche. Over time, you revise what you like, what you’re good at, what you dislike, and what you want to work on. I don’t think there’s ever a moment where you have a hyper crystalized answer, but I also think it’s important to have some flexibility. If you get to a place where you say “I'm great at marketing B2B software,” well, you can certainly do that for a very long time, and most likely as a result will love what you  #advice
When I was in college I loved and wholeheartedly believed the advice “do what you’re passionate about.” Steve Jobs said it in his Stanford commencement speech. I loved Apple, Steve Jobs, and the suggestion that you should buck trends and just do what you love. But reflecting on this advice, 10 years out, I think it’s bad, if not harmful advice. I think there are two problems. First, what you “love” is ill-defined and ever-changing at that age. Most of your time, hobbies and identity is marked by listening to music, doing recreational drugs, hanging with friends, gaming, concerts, school, etc. Just because you’re passionate about festivals doesn’t mean you should become a DJ. Second, if it is defined, it’s likely misleading. You might absolutely love playing tennis. So much so that you think you should become a tennis coach or open a tennis clinic. To be successful in these examples, you have to love teaching or the management and operations of running a business much more than you love tennis. If you go down this path, it’s possible that you come to hate the very thing you loved in the first place, and turn out to be unsuccessful. Instead I think what you love or become passionate about is a result of doing work in a given space over a long period of time. The intrinsic reward of progressing and becoming more skilled in a field, and the extrinsic rewards of recognition and upward mobility, seem, to me, to be far clearer mechanisms for getting to an outcome where you say “oh, I love doing this.” A more accurate answer would be “oh, I love this because I’ve been doing it for 20 years” My dad spent 25+ years in healthcare consulting. He retired for a year, only to go back and advise companies on the very same thing he was doing before. He gets satisfaction from having the skill set, knowledge, and experience to help a business in this space. If you asked him at 21 what he loved, he would probably respond with the ill defined answer of “computers” and “engineering.” Directionally he went down this path, but he ended up in a different place. So if you are 21, how do you act on this insight and get to a place where at 60 you can say, well, I really do love what I do? I think it comes down to exploring and refining. There are a lot of pressures to identify who you are and what you’re going to do at 21 but the fact is that you don’t have much real-world experience or inputs. I think one solution is to choose, directionally, an area and develop awareness of what you like, what you dislike, and revise forward. College is partially the time to narrow the direction. If you come in as a freshman unsure of whether you want to do medicine or business, you should have a much clearer idea of that by the time you graduate. Those are two fairly distinct paths, and the consequence of pursuing the former can be high — many years of med school, debt, career lock-in, etc. But say you get to graduation and you generally want to do “business” and like the idea of “marketing.” Great. That’s directionally choosing. Within that direction, there’s far more to explore. What type of products do you want to market — SaaS, consumer, services, CPG? Do you want to work in-house, or at an agency? Do you want to specialize in channel marketing (FB, Email, SEO), or do you want to do brand marketing? To explore, maybe you get a job at a large digital / ad agency and get broad exposure for a couple years. After that, maybe you go in house as a marketing manager at a smaller company. After that, maybe you work at a marketing agency for a specific niche. Over time, you revise what you like, what you’re good at, what you dislike, and what you want to work on. I don’t think there’s ever a moment where you have a hyper crystalized answer, but I also think it’s important to have some flexibility. If you get to a place where you say “I'm great at marketing B2B software,” well, you can certainly do that for a very long time, and most likely as a result will love what you #advice

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