@a12____2022: لو الفرج عند الرخوم المطافيق ماعاد عينا على الرزق مدخال #القاء @ابو صبا

𓅓Al, Yafei✍︎
𓅓Al, Yafei✍︎
Open In TikTok:
Region: SA
Friday 12 July 2024 17:06:00 GMT
9404
304
4
51

Music

Download

Comments

mimi1119908
ميمي الشمري :
فعلا والله
2024-07-28 03:31:46
1
mimi1119908
ميمي الشمري :
اي والله ونعم بالله
2024-07-28 03:31:38
0
vzxlq_
عــذاري 🇦🇪 :
😔😔
2024-07-25 22:03:29
0
s.o.9.1
سہـمـــ• 𝒮𝒜ℳℛ𝒜 ـــــڒٍآ 𓅓 :
😔🌷
2024-07-12 18:05:10
0
To see more videos from user @a12____2022, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

I have a special relationship with a tree. I use that word,’relationship,’ very carefully. The tree in question is a vast, centuries-old chestnut #tree and it dwarfs everything nearby. My four-year-old son has taken to calling it ‘Our Guardian Tree,’ because we say it’ll protect him from bad dreams, and so far it has. When I find myself suffocating inside my head, I will often attend Our Guardian Tree. It’ll usually push its roots inside my densely packed thoughts and loosen the soil a bit. That word, ‘attending,’ is not a common one. And when the philosopher Iris #Murdoch says ‘attending to things,’ it’s different to simply seeing them. Murdoch refers to it as a ‘just and loving gaze’ that involves a kind of unselfing. When you attend to something, you leave behind your own life and your own problems to reorientate yourself entirely to focus on what’s in front of you. No roaming eyes or cheeky glances at your phone. Attending is undistracted focus. It’s a kind of gift. It’s that sounds a lot like #Love; it’s not without cause. Because Murdoch believes that attending to someone is the first step to loving them. In a recent essay I wrote in collaboration with Commune, I explore how far we can attend to things. Yes, we attend our loved ones, but we can also attend the #natural world. To love a tree is an odd thing to say, and that’s because we don’t talk like that anymore. We don’t #animate the world, and we don’t ensoul it. And in my opinion, I think we’re much worse off because of it. #philosophy #phenomenology #relationships #nature #getoutdoors
I have a special relationship with a tree. I use that word,’relationship,’ very carefully. The tree in question is a vast, centuries-old chestnut #tree and it dwarfs everything nearby. My four-year-old son has taken to calling it ‘Our Guardian Tree,’ because we say it’ll protect him from bad dreams, and so far it has. When I find myself suffocating inside my head, I will often attend Our Guardian Tree. It’ll usually push its roots inside my densely packed thoughts and loosen the soil a bit. That word, ‘attending,’ is not a common one. And when the philosopher Iris #Murdoch says ‘attending to things,’ it’s different to simply seeing them. Murdoch refers to it as a ‘just and loving gaze’ that involves a kind of unselfing. When you attend to something, you leave behind your own life and your own problems to reorientate yourself entirely to focus on what’s in front of you. No roaming eyes or cheeky glances at your phone. Attending is undistracted focus. It’s a kind of gift. It’s that sounds a lot like #Love; it’s not without cause. Because Murdoch believes that attending to someone is the first step to loving them. In a recent essay I wrote in collaboration with Commune, I explore how far we can attend to things. Yes, we attend our loved ones, but we can also attend the #natural world. To love a tree is an odd thing to say, and that’s because we don’t talk like that anymore. We don’t #animate the world, and we don’t ensoul it. And in my opinion, I think we’re much worse off because of it. #philosophy #phenomenology #relationships #nature #getoutdoors

About