@nqdir5: #CapCut

🥀💔🙏Nadir 👀 Ali25🫵🥹✌️😱
🥀💔🙏Nadir 👀 Ali25🫵🥹✌️😱
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Sunday 12 October 2025 04:47:38 GMT
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hadir.ali3475
Hadir Ali :
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2025-10-23 16:15:24
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sabanoor70
❤️‍🩹imamuddin Baloch52❤️‍🩹 :
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2025-10-21 16:55:02
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lliqat4
Love :
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user267431962
Tahir Abbas :
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danish.sheikh313
danish sheikh313 :
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msumeer911
karachi king🫅 sameer gangster :
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hadirali12349
🥀ھیدر علی 🥀 :
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2025-10-13 04:05:47
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h19037706
Ladala Rajpoot 🔥 :
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user994244206
🥀Arslanking awan👑💯 :
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03022razi
Raziapqyrhs :
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2025-10-12 09:03:51
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user2323204398495
Nasir ali :
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2025-10-12 05:22:44
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user2323204398495
Nasir ali :
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2025-10-12 05:22:41
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ZahoorAhmed :
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king.baba6472
king BABA :
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user994244206
🥀Arslanking awan👑💯 :
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2025-10-12 04:57:39
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Am I more confident now? Definitely. Do I glow brighter? Yes. Do I carry myself differently? Absolutely. But let’s not pretend that’s the only reason men notice me now. 😏 Can we acknowledge the very specific standard of attractiveness our society holds? Can we be honest that it “makes sense” a man would look right past a 400lb (or even 300lb) woman without making eye contact? Yes, my confidence, my glow, and the way I carry myself impact how people see me. But that’s not the whole story. Men make eye contact now, strike up conversations, hold doors open. It’s not just about my energy; it’s also because I more closely match what society tends to reward. So yes, confidence helps. But the reality is, I didn’t suddenly become more worthy of attention, I just became more visible in the ways society values. It always felt like a cruel irony. Being so big, yet invisible. Impossible to miss, yet completely overlooked. Judged and ignored. In plain sight, but never truly seen. I didn’t become more lovable when I lost weight, I became more visible. This isn’t just about attraction. It’s about how we assign value and who we decide deserves kindness, connection, and simple human acknowledgment. My intention with sharing these thoughts is not from a place of bitterness, but from wanting to bring awareness. I want to say out loud what many of us feel but don’t always say: that the world doesn’t just reward thinness with attention, it often withholds respect and kindness from those who don’t fit that narrow standard. And maybe, if we keep telling the truth about that… we’ll start seeing people for who they really are and not just how they look. We’ll start valuing presence over appearance. And we’ll stop confusing visibility with worthiness. Because everyone deserves to be seen, whether or not they’re in a body that society values.
Am I more confident now? Definitely. Do I glow brighter? Yes. Do I carry myself differently? Absolutely. But let’s not pretend that’s the only reason men notice me now. 😏 Can we acknowledge the very specific standard of attractiveness our society holds? Can we be honest that it “makes sense” a man would look right past a 400lb (or even 300lb) woman without making eye contact? Yes, my confidence, my glow, and the way I carry myself impact how people see me. But that’s not the whole story. Men make eye contact now, strike up conversations, hold doors open. It’s not just about my energy; it’s also because I more closely match what society tends to reward. So yes, confidence helps. But the reality is, I didn’t suddenly become more worthy of attention, I just became more visible in the ways society values. It always felt like a cruel irony. Being so big, yet invisible. Impossible to miss, yet completely overlooked. Judged and ignored. In plain sight, but never truly seen. I didn’t become more lovable when I lost weight, I became more visible. This isn’t just about attraction. It’s about how we assign value and who we decide deserves kindness, connection, and simple human acknowledgment. My intention with sharing these thoughts is not from a place of bitterness, but from wanting to bring awareness. I want to say out loud what many of us feel but don’t always say: that the world doesn’t just reward thinness with attention, it often withholds respect and kindness from those who don’t fit that narrow standard. And maybe, if we keep telling the truth about that… we’ll start seeing people for who they really are and not just how they look. We’ll start valuing presence over appearance. And we’ll stop confusing visibility with worthiness. Because everyone deserves to be seen, whether or not they’re in a body that society values.

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