@motdoancover: và giờ đây tôi muốn khóc thật lớn ..” #trucnhan #cover #xuhuong #muonkhocthatto

một đoạn cover.
một đoạn cover.
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Sunday 24 July 2022 14:09:08 GMT
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tuongvi_ngochieu
Tường Vi Phạm🍀 :
Chưa kịp trưởng thành thì đã ở cái tuổi này.. thì ra lớn lên là như vậy.. 🥺
2024-05-19 16:12:45
6
quangvinh868
Quang Vinh :
Cảm xúc của tôi🥺🥺
2022-08-22 16:00:40
1
nguoingoaihanhlang220712
bôngg :
Tui mê bài này lắm lun đó 🥰🥰
2024-10-08 05:16:02
0
v.duc.19
Đức :
Ai lấy đi những muộn phiền được kh 😓
2024-09-17 01:33:37
0
mit.011012
mit :
và tiếng cười ngày ấu thơ giờ đã biến mất 🙉
2025-01-28 01:48:49
0
thtrnh740
Kiều Thư🌊 :
Thì ra lớn lên mệt như vậy
2024-09-09 18:08:50
0
tran_.kiwi.nie1412
𝙱𝚊𝚘𝚃𝚛𝚊𝚗🕷 :
bạn cho mình clip up lên nha😊😊
2024-06-04 10:17:42
0
i_am_ljnk
VANLINH :
@TrucNhan11 chua co tick xanh nhung ma hat hay lam
2022-09-06 12:16:45
4
dyfzs8api50n
270797 :
🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺
2022-07-30 13:22:34
1
hoang16081996
Hoàng Nguyễn :
😅
2025-05-09 06:08:04
0
ihateeverything143
ko quen đc 🍏 😶‍🌫️ :
@nhi 485
2024-05-11 14:47:16
0
dauvatnhahopham
Quân tay ngắn :
😳
2025-05-08 05:02:21
0
anng.1004
иɢнẹтᝰ.ᐟ :
😁
2025-03-21 14:48:03
0
ihateeverything143
ko quen đc 🍏 😶‍🌫️ :
☺️☺️
2024-05-11 14:47:48
0
gattouzolifestyle
Con Đò Lỡ Hẹn :
🥺
2025-01-20 15:00:57
0
nbii_067
Hoàii Như :
😇
2025-05-08 05:20:57
0
_bopbop.02
alo?? :
💗
2025-06-12 11:30:40
0
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At a recent conference, I had the privilege of hearing Dr Richard Harris speak, and it’s not often you see a room full of professionals reach for tissues. Before he was at the centre of one of the most complex rescue missions in modern history, Dr Richard Harris was simply a doctor by day a cave diver by passion. Two worlds that, on paper, have nothing to do with each other. One clinical and controlled. The other dark, unpredictable and physically demanding. Yet it was the combination of both years spent mastering medicine and years spent navigating underwater caves that uniquely positioned him for what came next. During the Tham Luang cave rescue, Dr Harris was faced with an almost unimaginable decision: whether to sedate the trapped boys to bring them out through a flooded cave system.  It was controversial. There was risk. There was no 100% guarantee. He spoke about the reality of the options. Attempt the rescue, knowing not every variable could be controlled or leave them in the cave, where they would almost certainly be recovered months later. When framed that way, the choice became clear. Listening to him recount those moments the weight of responsibility, the calculated risk, the humanity behind the headlines you could feel the room shift. This wasn’t bravado. It was courage grounded in competence. What moved me most was this: his “hobby” wasn’t separate from his career. It was preparation. The skills he built outside his job title became the very reason he could step forward when it mattered most. On No Censorship, we often explore the parts of ourselves we build quietly, the interests, passions and side pursuits that don’t always make sense on a CV. But what if they’re not extras? What if they’re training? If you haven’t already make sure to check out Thai Cave Rescue on Netflix So I’ll leave you with this;  What are you building on the side that might one day become the reason you’re ready when the moment finds you?
At a recent conference, I had the privilege of hearing Dr Richard Harris speak, and it’s not often you see a room full of professionals reach for tissues. Before he was at the centre of one of the most complex rescue missions in modern history, Dr Richard Harris was simply a doctor by day a cave diver by passion. Two worlds that, on paper, have nothing to do with each other. One clinical and controlled. The other dark, unpredictable and physically demanding. Yet it was the combination of both years spent mastering medicine and years spent navigating underwater caves that uniquely positioned him for what came next. During the Tham Luang cave rescue, Dr Harris was faced with an almost unimaginable decision: whether to sedate the trapped boys to bring them out through a flooded cave system. It was controversial. There was risk. There was no 100% guarantee. He spoke about the reality of the options. Attempt the rescue, knowing not every variable could be controlled or leave them in the cave, where they would almost certainly be recovered months later. When framed that way, the choice became clear. Listening to him recount those moments the weight of responsibility, the calculated risk, the humanity behind the headlines you could feel the room shift. This wasn’t bravado. It was courage grounded in competence. What moved me most was this: his “hobby” wasn’t separate from his career. It was preparation. The skills he built outside his job title became the very reason he could step forward when it mattered most. On No Censorship, we often explore the parts of ourselves we build quietly, the interests, passions and side pursuits that don’t always make sense on a CV. But what if they’re not extras? What if they’re training? If you haven’t already make sure to check out Thai Cave Rescue on Netflix So I’ll leave you with this; What are you building on the side that might one day become the reason you’re ready when the moment finds you?

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