@yatzil.xi: Me la paso súper bien ❤️ amo estar ahí ✨ #cycle #rider #indoorcycling #indoor #biciantro

Yatzil
Yatzil
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Region: MX
Friday 22 August 2025 05:48:42 GMT
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guzmn.conmigo.sie
Guzmán👑 conmigo siempre ganas :
comencé desde los 15 y es una de las mejores decisiones que pude elegir siuuuu me encanta ahora tengo 20 y me facina como me voy viendo eso convidando con Gimnasio Nono lo que me cargo 🤤😍 me enamoro de mi misma
2025-09-15 15:56:26
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perlitarodriguez24
Perlita Rodriguez :
Así si dan ganas de hacer ejercicio 🤭🚲💪🏻
2025-08-22 21:53:40
1
saraargz
Sara A.R :
Soy tu fan bb 🤩✨
2025-08-23 05:26:11
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juanluisbrch
juanluisbrch :
¡Uff y el sentimiento el día siguiente es incomparable ! 🔥 también recomiendo a @Edith Brambila por sus tips prácticos de indoor cycling y su energía increíble 🚴‍♀️💪 #IndoorCycling
2025-08-23 00:37:20
1
karlaford1
Karla 🦀🌞🧿 :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-09-17 01:02:33
1
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Replying to @jamesmcbride508 When you have an active Pennsylvania workers’ comp claim, the insurer can ask for an Independent Medical Examination (IME) at a reasonable time and place. The examiner is chosen and paid by the employer/insurer, and refusing without reasonable cause can suspend your compensation for as long as the refusal continues.   How often? Practice in PA has long treated every six months (about twice a year) as typical—but the Commonwealth Court declined to make “two per year” an automatic rule. Frequency is ultimately within a workers’ comp judge’s discretion under Section 314. Translation: yes, you’ll often see two IMEs a year, but a judge can say more, less, or no, depending on the facts.     Why it matters: an IME is a second look the insurer can use to try to cut, suspend, or terminate benefits. If you miss an IME, your wage loss can be suspended from the scheduled date until the day you attend, and you’re entitled to immediate reinstatement once you go.   A couple pro tips: an IME done more than six months before a job referral isn’t automatically “stale”—judges look at context. You don’t have a right to bring your attorney into the exam room, but your own health-care provider may attend and observe (no videotaping or interfering). If travel is unreasonable (e.g., you’ve moved out of state and can be examined locally), judges can adjust location.       Bottom line: IMEs are routine and can be pivotal. Get a workers’ comp lawyer to prep you, protect your rights, and make sure one exam doesn’t tilt your whole case. Not legal advice  #worker#workerscompr#workerscompensation
Replying to @jamesmcbride508 When you have an active Pennsylvania workers’ comp claim, the insurer can ask for an Independent Medical Examination (IME) at a reasonable time and place. The examiner is chosen and paid by the employer/insurer, and refusing without reasonable cause can suspend your compensation for as long as the refusal continues. How often? Practice in PA has long treated every six months (about twice a year) as typical—but the Commonwealth Court declined to make “two per year” an automatic rule. Frequency is ultimately within a workers’ comp judge’s discretion under Section 314. Translation: yes, you’ll often see two IMEs a year, but a judge can say more, less, or no, depending on the facts. Why it matters: an IME is a second look the insurer can use to try to cut, suspend, or terminate benefits. If you miss an IME, your wage loss can be suspended from the scheduled date until the day you attend, and you’re entitled to immediate reinstatement once you go. A couple pro tips: an IME done more than six months before a job referral isn’t automatically “stale”—judges look at context. You don’t have a right to bring your attorney into the exam room, but your own health-care provider may attend and observe (no videotaping or interfering). If travel is unreasonable (e.g., you’ve moved out of state and can be examined locally), judges can adjust location. Bottom line: IMEs are routine and can be pivotal. Get a workers’ comp lawyer to prep you, protect your rights, and make sure one exam doesn’t tilt your whole case. Not legal advice #worker#workerscompr#workerscompensation

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