@soldiexi: #nbayoungboy #nbayoungboyedits #edit #fyp #aftereffects

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Saturday 11 October 2025 22:29:41 GMT
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dylpoppedaperc
dyl ?💚 :
song?
2025-10-12 07:48:59
14
itz.trstn92
itz.trstn :
2025-10-12 20:39:17
14
queenbee_topretty
queenbee_topretty :
I love my fyppppp 🤪🤪🤪
2025-10-13 06:46:46
0
yourbelow_lanaa
lanaa.xxtoic_ :
2025-10-12 01:39:54
448
gmouneyy
xo :
what r they feeding these editors 😫😫😫😂
2025-10-13 03:06:31
1
ytk_burrrr967
ytk_burrrr967 :
2025-10-12 15:46:13
79
plan.bri_
︎ ︎ :
my fyp is perfect so many yb edits😫
2025-10-12 08:29:49
57
np._edgar
محب :
prob best song on dont try this at home
2025-10-13 05:57:03
0
__.mariaa_m
ꩇׁׅ݊ :
2025-10-13 06:41:27
4
meowxasia
𝒶 🧚‍♀️ྀི :
ayy ts harddd!!🔥😮‍💨
2025-10-11 23:12:18
11
kyiiscool1234
Hzjs🥷🏾🐦‍⬛⚔️ :
2025-10-12 05:34:10
116
staytruelork
isolated :
2025-10-13 02:10:36
7
laiplaysfnn
lai! :
ayeee , this is tufff !!!
2025-10-11 23:12:18
4
kerothezeroxz
kero :
sooo fyee see
2025-10-11 23:56:29
14
carmen_whoisu0
carmen🤍 :
2025-10-13 00:41:43
6
kaiikiim
kai :
2025-10-12 07:57:04
51
star.jackson40
………? :
2025-10-13 00:47:31
3
prttyface_kela
Kela 👸🏾🎀 :
my husband look goodd
2025-10-13 03:48:05
1
kaidence.ware
Kaidence Ware :
2025-10-13 01:06:53
2
dbp_777
 D B Parkes 🇮🇪  :
2025-10-13 07:29:05
0
theemahree
Slimretta💋!! :
2025-10-12 14:40:17
9
nbaslime1027
𝖘𝖑𝖆𝖙𝖙🥷 :
2025-10-13 00:59:06
1
twizzy_2093
⚠️🩻Twizzy R🩻⚠️ :
YB the GOAT
2025-10-12 12:58:51
4
love4nbayoungb0y
𝑬𝒎𝒐𝒏𝒊💸💚 :
2025-10-13 08:04:20
0
wyo.al3x
alex :
she had a attitude wit me 😩
2025-10-12 16:14:23
8
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Imagine you finally get what you wanted. You get the keys to that amazing house, you get the new job, you get a new phone, and you feel amazing for about a week. And then, bit by bit, you start to feel roughly the same as you were before. And here you are again, restless and searching for the next thing. This is what the psychologists Brickman and Campbell in the 1970s called the hedonic treadmill. It's the idea that no matter what happens to us, whether we win the lottery or whether we break a leg, we tend to return to the same baseline level of happiness. From an evolutionary perspective, this makes sense, because our ancestors couldn't afford to be content for long. When you're content, you stop hunting, you stop moving, and you stop competing. And so our brains are wired to carry on running and looking for something more. The trouble is, in our modern world, this restlessness is directed towards things which are either unattainable or will have no lasting happiness whatsoever. It's easy to think that happiness lies in the next pay rise, the next purchase, the next achievement. And yet, each time we get those, the novelty fades and we need another hit. There is no solution to the treadmill, but it does allow us to appreciate that the human brain was not wired to be happy all of the time. You will not experience peaks of euphoria at every minute of the day, but neither will you experience a great and sustained nadir. You can enjoy moments of life, and you can enjoy life as a whole, but you will not enjoy everything all of the time.
Imagine you finally get what you wanted. You get the keys to that amazing house, you get the new job, you get a new phone, and you feel amazing for about a week. And then, bit by bit, you start to feel roughly the same as you were before. And here you are again, restless and searching for the next thing. This is what the psychologists Brickman and Campbell in the 1970s called the hedonic treadmill. It's the idea that no matter what happens to us, whether we win the lottery or whether we break a leg, we tend to return to the same baseline level of happiness. From an evolutionary perspective, this makes sense, because our ancestors couldn't afford to be content for long. When you're content, you stop hunting, you stop moving, and you stop competing. And so our brains are wired to carry on running and looking for something more. The trouble is, in our modern world, this restlessness is directed towards things which are either unattainable or will have no lasting happiness whatsoever. It's easy to think that happiness lies in the next pay rise, the next purchase, the next achievement. And yet, each time we get those, the novelty fades and we need another hit. There is no solution to the treadmill, but it does allow us to appreciate that the human brain was not wired to be happy all of the time. You will not experience peaks of euphoria at every minute of the day, but neither will you experience a great and sustained nadir. You can enjoy moments of life, and you can enjoy life as a whole, but you will not enjoy everything all of the time.

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