@boomshadowace: Let's do Legs and Feet! 🦵🦶❤️ #shadowace #fyp

𝗕𝗢𝗢𝗠𝗦𝗛𝗔𝗗𝗢𝗪𝗔𝗖𝗘
𝗕𝗢𝗢𝗠𝗦𝗛𝗔𝗗𝗢𝗪𝗔𝗖𝗘
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Region: PH
Tuesday 07 June 2022 09:49:07 GMT
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symbionictitan2
Sym_Jer :
Goes pretty hard
2022-06-07 10:20:57
97
s_guthrie
S_Guthrie :
This with “These Boots Are Made For Walking”
2022-07-10 02:52:57
16
pengagum_bogum
Cacau :
WOW
2022-07-05 07:53:20
16
gr00vymomma
Aubs 🎀 :
needs more recognition bro
2022-07-09 15:21:00
13
perrywilliams703
perryboy :
too Kool bro
2022-06-07 11:51:43
4
420brandy
Brandy W :
awesome 💚💚💚
2022-06-07 10:33:04
4
trevorbells
trevorbells :
the fingers got some legs 😳
2022-06-07 10:49:55
4
grac3..19
grace🤍 :
So now I’m influenced to learn this-
2022-07-13 16:51:56
4
pugs_are_cool_
Daniel67317 :
@julies.a.simp
2022-07-09 02:22:20
4
amirlanamirlan267
♡MIKO♡ :
wow
2022-07-12 04:53:18
3
elisia_s
elisia🐋 :
Looking like som m 'n ms tho
2022-06-07 10:32:12
3
ricecuppfamily
RiceCuppFamily :
galing talaga!!
2022-06-07 22:48:36
3
michie3683
Jamaica Mich :
4m
2022-06-07 10:42:45
2
javin131
Javin125 :
lets see how sturdy u r
2022-07-12 00:38:52
2
jiromielmacalindongsale
jiromielmacalindongsale :
are you pilipino😅
2022-06-22 09:57:06
2
koketgurly
unknown :
whoaaa
2022-06-09 04:20:54
2
tiktokhazy
HazyIRL :
INSANE 😁✨️
2022-07-14 02:26:05
2
kelliemeader
Kellie Meader :
You are super talented! I could watch your videos forever! You don’t see this much anymore made me smile to see it! ❤️
2022-07-16 07:07:32
2
topi_topisima
Topi :
@agu_corvaln1503 Waaaaa
2022-07-09 02:42:52
2
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Approximately every 50 seconds, someone somewhere in the world dies by suicide. That’s over 700,000 lives lost each year as per World Health Organization (WHO) records; each one a silent battle that ended too soon. In Kenya, a lower-middle-income country, we share in the staggering 77% of global suicides occurring in similar economies. The World Bank places our national suicide mortality rate at 6 per 100,000 people; a figure that continues to rise and stir alarm across communities, institutions, and families. So, what can we do? How do we begin to change the narrative? The answer lies in prevention. A powerful, life-saving approach championed by the WHO. This article, “The Silent Battles We Cannot Ignore,” is my call to action. It’s a reflection, a reality check, and a journey through two transformative mental health models: The Garden of Mental Health—a concept I’ve developed inspired by nature, healing, and community—and The Clinic Model by mental health champion John Njoroge. Let’s talk about the stories we don’t tell, the wounds we can’t see, and the hope we can still grow.  Please don’t scroll past this article. Because behind too many smiles lie invisible scars. Behind too many strong faces, silent wars are waged daily, quietly, painfully. We’re living in a time where mental health crises are no longer distant stories; they’re right next to us, inside our homes, our friendships, our communities. And yet, we barely whisper about them. The invisible war within. Every day, countless people wake up and face a battle we cannot see. They carry the weight of past trauma, emotional wounds that haven’t healed, and the kind of pain that words fail to capture. From the outside, everything may seem “fine” but inside, it’s a different world entirely. The world judges what it doesn’t understand. It points fingers. It shames. It ignores. But what if we could see it differently? What if we stopped asking, “Why would someone take their own life?” and started asking, “How can I be a lifeline for someone in pain?” Because unless you’ve sat in the darkness, or watched someone you love spiral into it, you may never truly grasp the depths of despair. As Kenyan health leader Mutahi Kagwe once said during the COVID-19 outbreak : “If we treat this normally, it will treat us abnormally.” We can no longer afford silence. And that’s why I’m introducing a Mental Health Garden. A living metaphor that some of you might have come across or heard of in your life.  Mental health, to me, is a garden; delicate, sacred, and deeply personal… Continue reading the article using this link: https://yc4integritybuilding.org/the-silent-battles-we-cannot-ignore/
Approximately every 50 seconds, someone somewhere in the world dies by suicide. That’s over 700,000 lives lost each year as per World Health Organization (WHO) records; each one a silent battle that ended too soon. In Kenya, a lower-middle-income country, we share in the staggering 77% of global suicides occurring in similar economies. The World Bank places our national suicide mortality rate at 6 per 100,000 people; a figure that continues to rise and stir alarm across communities, institutions, and families. So, what can we do? How do we begin to change the narrative? The answer lies in prevention. A powerful, life-saving approach championed by the WHO. This article, “The Silent Battles We Cannot Ignore,” is my call to action. It’s a reflection, a reality check, and a journey through two transformative mental health models: The Garden of Mental Health—a concept I’ve developed inspired by nature, healing, and community—and The Clinic Model by mental health champion John Njoroge. Let’s talk about the stories we don’t tell, the wounds we can’t see, and the hope we can still grow. Please don’t scroll past this article. Because behind too many smiles lie invisible scars. Behind too many strong faces, silent wars are waged daily, quietly, painfully. We’re living in a time where mental health crises are no longer distant stories; they’re right next to us, inside our homes, our friendships, our communities. And yet, we barely whisper about them. The invisible war within. Every day, countless people wake up and face a battle we cannot see. They carry the weight of past trauma, emotional wounds that haven’t healed, and the kind of pain that words fail to capture. From the outside, everything may seem “fine” but inside, it’s a different world entirely. The world judges what it doesn’t understand. It points fingers. It shames. It ignores. But what if we could see it differently? What if we stopped asking, “Why would someone take their own life?” and started asking, “How can I be a lifeline for someone in pain?” Because unless you’ve sat in the darkness, or watched someone you love spiral into it, you may never truly grasp the depths of despair. As Kenyan health leader Mutahi Kagwe once said during the COVID-19 outbreak : “If we treat this normally, it will treat us abnormally.” We can no longer afford silence. And that’s why I’m introducing a Mental Health Garden. A living metaphor that some of you might have come across or heard of in your life. Mental health, to me, is a garden; delicate, sacred, and deeply personal… Continue reading the article using this link: https://yc4integritybuilding.org/the-silent-battles-we-cannot-ignore/

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