@nguyenthuyhien1007: [NEW] v2 TORANO Bộ Quần Áo Gió nam #nguyễn_thuý_hiền

NGUYỄN THUÝ HIỀN ✅
NGUYỄN THUÝ HIỀN ✅
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Monday 01 December 2025 00:34:42 GMT
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Replying to @robertcarlin You take one look and you’re scared. Makes total sense. When you try something new, your body’s first job is to protect you. It’s not judging you, it’s keeping you alive. In survival mode, your system is built for efficiency. That means repeating what’s familiar, even when familiar doesn’t feel good. So when something new shows up, your body reads it as threat. Not because it’s bad, but because it’s different. Different can feel unsafe. Different can feel too much. That’s why so many people retreat after one uncomfortable experience and never try again. But the discomfort isn’t proof that something’s wrong. It’s information. It’s your nervous system saying, “This is new. I don’t know this yet.” Growth requires tolerance for that unknown. The goal isn’t to push past fear or shame it. That only makes the system brace harder. The goal is to meet it with compassion. To say, “Yeah, this makes sense.” Because when you validate your body’s response instead of fighting it, it starts to soften. It starts to trust you. And that’s how change actually happens. This applies everywhere. In play. In relationships. In career. In your daily routines. When you start inviting in something new, your system has to learn it’s safe to expand. That’s the foundation of the Pleasure Quotient — your PQ. PQ is your body’s ability to hold and share pleasure. The higher your PQ, the more space you have for new sensations, new emotions, new experiences. Pleasure isn’t just about feeling good. It’s about building capacity. It’s about learning to stay present when your system wants to shut down. It’s about trusting yourself enough to explore the edges of what’s possible. So if you take one look and feel scared, good. That means you’re standing at the edge of change. Just don’t shame yourself for it. Meet the fear, stay curious, and build the capacity to stay open. Not sure where to start. Book a consult. Let’s rewire your body for safety, curiosity, and pleasure.
Replying to @robertcarlin You take one look and you’re scared. Makes total sense. When you try something new, your body’s first job is to protect you. It’s not judging you, it’s keeping you alive. In survival mode, your system is built for efficiency. That means repeating what’s familiar, even when familiar doesn’t feel good. So when something new shows up, your body reads it as threat. Not because it’s bad, but because it’s different. Different can feel unsafe. Different can feel too much. That’s why so many people retreat after one uncomfortable experience and never try again. But the discomfort isn’t proof that something’s wrong. It’s information. It’s your nervous system saying, “This is new. I don’t know this yet.” Growth requires tolerance for that unknown. The goal isn’t to push past fear or shame it. That only makes the system brace harder. The goal is to meet it with compassion. To say, “Yeah, this makes sense.” Because when you validate your body’s response instead of fighting it, it starts to soften. It starts to trust you. And that’s how change actually happens. This applies everywhere. In play. In relationships. In career. In your daily routines. When you start inviting in something new, your system has to learn it’s safe to expand. That’s the foundation of the Pleasure Quotient — your PQ. PQ is your body’s ability to hold and share pleasure. The higher your PQ, the more space you have for new sensations, new emotions, new experiences. Pleasure isn’t just about feeling good. It’s about building capacity. It’s about learning to stay present when your system wants to shut down. It’s about trusting yourself enough to explore the edges of what’s possible. So if you take one look and feel scared, good. That means you’re standing at the edge of change. Just don’t shame yourself for it. Meet the fear, stay curious, and build the capacity to stay open. Not sure where to start. Book a consult. Let’s rewire your body for safety, curiosity, and pleasure.

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