@lornab.ugc: skin is irritated and breaking out.. @Abib Cosmetics to the rescue 🥹 get them on Amazon [link in bio] Yesstyle: LORNABA11 [gifted] #heartleaftoner #abib #tonerpads #irritatedskin #skincare #skincareroutine #tiktokviral #yesstyle #yesstyleinfluencers #amazonbeauty

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Region: US
Thursday 29 May 2025 01:01:29 GMT
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aramkive
Ishal🍀 :
need it
2025-05-30 17:47:07
0
storiesofskincare_
storiesofskincare :
love it girl 😍😍
2025-05-29 17:13:19
0
kathy_ball
kathy_ball :
Nice product 🥰
2025-05-29 20:05:49
0
ugc_lamis
UGC Lamis :
so nice ❤️
2025-05-29 13:21:50
0
anja.ajna
Rainbowcloud :
Abib products are so good 💚
2025-05-29 14:37:36
0
soricloud
🎀 Soricloud | UGC :
I’m almost out of my abib pads, SO GOOD 😍
2025-05-29 15:50:05
0
reviews_lynwrotes
Reviews_LynWrotes :
Love ABIB. All their products that I’ve tried so far are great 😊
2025-05-29 13:30:01
0
sfami.us
BooYang :
Love this routine 😍
2025-05-30 07:12:17
0
beautyby_stay
stay :
I need more abib products😍
2025-05-29 06:47:09
1
hazeltan146
Hazel Tan :
Wow 😍💖
2025-05-29 02:43:24
0
plainjane1687
Plain Jane🇵🇭🇺🇸 :
Definitely need this for summer 😍
2025-05-29 02:47:20
1
pjsa.justlife
Pjsa | Just Life :
wait I wanna try. also love the edit. is it an app you use?
2025-05-29 01:05:28
1
fanny.gla
Fanny :
perfect Duo ever 💚
2025-05-29 02:36:22
0
apeksha132
Apeksha :
I love Abib❤️
2025-05-29 01:13:49
0
shilpa0sapkota
Shilpa Sapkota :
Perfect combo❤️
2025-05-29 02:41:55
0
skinstantglow
Julie ✿ :
Ooohh I have the pads ☺️
2025-05-29 02:01:15
0
ab.abiglowy
Abigail :
yess abib works so well when my skin needs soothing!!💕
2025-05-29 01:52:13
0
lifewithkpan
kelsey ✨🐣💛 :
okay I need to try
2025-05-29 02:54:30
1
miri_miryori
miri_miryori :
Looks so hydrated💜
2025-05-29 01:06:09
0
the0nlyymiracle
Miracle K. :
Looks good need to try these!
2025-05-29 16:30:01
1
beautiesland
beautiesland :
I love this toner pad too 😍😍
2025-05-29 06:01:04
1
glowwithme190
Abbie🕊️ :
Wow 🤩
2025-05-29 01:04:25
0
imsyneathita2
I’m Syneathita :
Love toner pad 💕
2025-05-29 07:56:05
1
clariseu
clarise :
so hydrated 🥰
2025-05-29 01:42:30
1
staceysdiaries
staceysdiaries :
Love this 💚
2025-05-30 22:08:08
0
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Other Videos

Why Do Kind and Helpful People Sometimes Die Young? By Crispin Faryangan 🔍 Research Insights — What Studies Really Say 1. Generosity and Longevity Volunteering out of genuine altruism (not self-promotion) has been linked to substantially lower mortality risk, especially in older adults. One meta-analysis found such volunteers could live notably longer than non‑volunteers  . 2. Happiness and Health Go Hand in Hand Research on nuns and psychologists has shown that individuals who are optimistic and positive tended to live 6–10 years longer than their negative counterparts  . Positive emotions support better cardiovascular and immune function  . 3. Social Connectedness Reduces Mortality Strong social ties—like family, community, volunteering—are associated with a 50% higher likelihood of survival compared to those with weak social integration  . 4. Community-wide Generosity Enhances Survival Nations with higher levels of intergenerational resource sharing—family care, societal support—showed lower mortality rates across 34 countries  . 5. Altruism May Protect, Not Endanger Psychological frameworks suggest altruism generally bolsters health and longevity, unless it's pathological—meaning excessive or neglectful self-sacrifice, which can lead to burnout or mental harm  . 🧠 So Why Does It Feel Like “Good People Die Early”? Perception Bias: Sudden or tragic losses among kind individuals feel more poignant and memorable, even if statistical data shows altruists tend to live longer. Pathological Altruism: Extreme self-sacrifice without care for one's own needs may backfire, undermining health and happiness  . Storytelling Effects: Tragedies and “martyrdom” often get amplified in narratives and history, skewing our emotional memory. ✅ Real Takeaways Insight	Summary Good people don’t die earlier—data says they often live longer.	Genuine altruism, optimism, and strong social bonds correlate with longer, healthier lives. Pathological altruism is rare and harmful.	When kindness becomes no self-care, health can suffer. Feeling like the good die young is often emotional, not factual.	Our perception is shaped by stories, not statistical reality. 🧩 Conclusion If you've wondered why it seems that good, kind, helpful people die young while others live long, peace-loving lives—the reality is more nuanced. Research strongly supports that kindness, volunteering, positive emotions, and deep social ties are more likely to extend life rather than shorten it. Your value doesn’t shorten your life—it enriches it.
Why Do Kind and Helpful People Sometimes Die Young? By Crispin Faryangan 🔍 Research Insights — What Studies Really Say 1. Generosity and Longevity Volunteering out of genuine altruism (not self-promotion) has been linked to substantially lower mortality risk, especially in older adults. One meta-analysis found such volunteers could live notably longer than non‑volunteers . 2. Happiness and Health Go Hand in Hand Research on nuns and psychologists has shown that individuals who are optimistic and positive tended to live 6–10 years longer than their negative counterparts . Positive emotions support better cardiovascular and immune function . 3. Social Connectedness Reduces Mortality Strong social ties—like family, community, volunteering—are associated with a 50% higher likelihood of survival compared to those with weak social integration . 4. Community-wide Generosity Enhances Survival Nations with higher levels of intergenerational resource sharing—family care, societal support—showed lower mortality rates across 34 countries . 5. Altruism May Protect, Not Endanger Psychological frameworks suggest altruism generally bolsters health and longevity, unless it's pathological—meaning excessive or neglectful self-sacrifice, which can lead to burnout or mental harm . 🧠 So Why Does It Feel Like “Good People Die Early”? Perception Bias: Sudden or tragic losses among kind individuals feel more poignant and memorable, even if statistical data shows altruists tend to live longer. Pathological Altruism: Extreme self-sacrifice without care for one's own needs may backfire, undermining health and happiness . Storytelling Effects: Tragedies and “martyrdom” often get amplified in narratives and history, skewing our emotional memory. ✅ Real Takeaways Insight Summary Good people don’t die earlier—data says they often live longer. Genuine altruism, optimism, and strong social bonds correlate with longer, healthier lives. Pathological altruism is rare and harmful. When kindness becomes no self-care, health can suffer. Feeling like the good die young is often emotional, not factual. Our perception is shaped by stories, not statistical reality. 🧩 Conclusion If you've wondered why it seems that good, kind, helpful people die young while others live long, peace-loving lives—the reality is more nuanced. Research strongly supports that kindness, volunteering, positive emotions, and deep social ties are more likely to extend life rather than shorten it. Your value doesn’t shorten your life—it enriches it.

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