@axcelere: Réponse à @mills__19.0 Comment se passe les photos durant un sfm #strangerthings #sfm #sfm8

Axel
Axel
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Friday 14 June 2024 17:32:03 GMT
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.lou._.07
user7516094501530 :
Est ce que je peut offrir un cadeau à Millie pendant la pose photo ou pas?
2024-06-14 19:01:57
3
l_tari_
l_tari_ :
pour les autographes , pour 2 personnes il faut 1 extra ou 2 ?
2024-06-15 08:44:51
3
gabrielle.dslv
gabbbbyyyy :
Dcp tu vas à la Sfm8 ?
2024-06-14 17:37:32
2
emlay_lpr
ℰ𝓂𝒾𝓁𝒾ℯ 🪩 :
par exemple moi je suis rangée O, ça veut dire que je dois rester toute la sfm assis à ma rangée ou c juste une genre de code pour savoir quand je dois passer ?
2024-06-16 18:41:39
2
l_tari_
l_tari_ :
les pass pour 4 personnes il faut en prendre 4 ou 1 ?
2024-06-15 08:37:27
1
solfyxi
ı̣xʎɟןos :
First
2024-06-14 17:33:23
0
moonbillsss
moonbillss :
Merci
2024-06-14 18:14:52
0
tom_amca_
Tom_Amca :
Le mec est renseigné
2024-06-14 18:22:37
0
romane_mldr
romane_mldr :
Pour la cession photo ou peut montrer notre pose sur le téléphone ou il faut imprimer ?
2024-06-14 20:13:23
0
uesrname0901
𝐻’✞ :
es ce que les pass genre pass primé gold ect il en faut deux pass pour deux personnes ou un seul pass pour deux personnes
2024-07-10 21:36:57
0
loukaa_aa
•°~•Loukaaa•~°• :
es ce que quand on fait une photo avec un acteur ils vont nous donner directement la photo ?
2024-08-24 18:51:33
0
roro.wwww.0
Idk :
Partie 2 !!!
2024-08-25 22:32:29
0
claracoursierbett
♥︎♡︎ℂ𝕝𝕒𝕣𝕒♡︎♥︎ :
Juste j'ai pris un extra photo donc je dois faire une photo avec 1 des deux ou je peux faire d'abord avec un et apres avec l'autre?
2024-09-18 18:52:26
0
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There is a specific kind of pain in giving someone another chance and watching them choose distance from you again. Because the second time hurts differently. The first rejection shocks you. The second one humiliates your hope. You tell yourself people can change. That maybe they were confused before, scared, emotionally lost, not ready yet. You try to understand them gently because part of you still remembers the version of the connection that once felt meaningful enough to fight for. So you open the door again. Carefully. Despite everything your pride, intuition, and past pain try warning you about. And that choice alone takes vulnerability people rarely talk about. Because giving someone another chance means risking yourself twice. It means believing your heart can survive disappointment again if things go wrong. And for a moment, you allow yourself to hope. You look for signs that this time will be different. That they finally understand your value, your patience, your love. You want to believe the distance between you was temporary instead of fundamental. But then it happens again. The inconsistency. The emotional withdrawal. The silence. The realization that while you reopened your heart sincerely, they still could not meet you with the same certainty. And something inside you breaks quietly. Not only because of them— but because you betrayed your own healing for hope that led you back into the same pain. That’s why repeated rejection cuts deeper than the first one. It attacks your trust in yourself. You start questioning your judgment, your worth, your ability to recognize when someone truly wants you versus when they only return temporarily for comfort, attention, loneliness, or familiarity. And maybe the hardest part is realizing love cannot force willingness. No matter how patient you are. No matter how deeply you understand someone’s fears or emotional confusion. You cannot love a person into choosing you consistently. And maybe that truth is one of the cruelest lessons people learn. Because sometimes someone genuinely cares about you— and still does not choose you fully. Still leaves. Still hesitates. Still fails to hold what you offered them. But maybe their inability to stay is not proof that your love lacked value. Maybe it only reveals the limits of what they were emotionally capable of giving. And maybe healing begins the moment you stop asking: why wasn’t I enough for them? And start asking: why did I keep trying to convince someone to value what should have been obvious? Because love should not constantly require you to reopen wounds just to prove your devotion. The right person will not repeatedly make you question whether they truly want you in their life. They will choose you clearly— before you have to lose yourself trying to be chosen at all.
There is a specific kind of pain in giving someone another chance and watching them choose distance from you again. Because the second time hurts differently. The first rejection shocks you. The second one humiliates your hope. You tell yourself people can change. That maybe they were confused before, scared, emotionally lost, not ready yet. You try to understand them gently because part of you still remembers the version of the connection that once felt meaningful enough to fight for. So you open the door again. Carefully. Despite everything your pride, intuition, and past pain try warning you about. And that choice alone takes vulnerability people rarely talk about. Because giving someone another chance means risking yourself twice. It means believing your heart can survive disappointment again if things go wrong. And for a moment, you allow yourself to hope. You look for signs that this time will be different. That they finally understand your value, your patience, your love. You want to believe the distance between you was temporary instead of fundamental. But then it happens again. The inconsistency. The emotional withdrawal. The silence. The realization that while you reopened your heart sincerely, they still could not meet you with the same certainty. And something inside you breaks quietly. Not only because of them— but because you betrayed your own healing for hope that led you back into the same pain. That’s why repeated rejection cuts deeper than the first one. It attacks your trust in yourself. You start questioning your judgment, your worth, your ability to recognize when someone truly wants you versus when they only return temporarily for comfort, attention, loneliness, or familiarity. And maybe the hardest part is realizing love cannot force willingness. No matter how patient you are. No matter how deeply you understand someone’s fears or emotional confusion. You cannot love a person into choosing you consistently. And maybe that truth is one of the cruelest lessons people learn. Because sometimes someone genuinely cares about you— and still does not choose you fully. Still leaves. Still hesitates. Still fails to hold what you offered them. But maybe their inability to stay is not proof that your love lacked value. Maybe it only reveals the limits of what they were emotionally capable of giving. And maybe healing begins the moment you stop asking: why wasn’t I enough for them? And start asking: why did I keep trying to convince someone to value what should have been obvious? Because love should not constantly require you to reopen wounds just to prove your devotion. The right person will not repeatedly make you question whether they truly want you in their life. They will choose you clearly— before you have to lose yourself trying to be chosen at all.

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