@jemegss_3rd: Sabi ko sayo eh🥰 #sawako #asuka #sweetlife #fypシ゚ #sawakokuronuma #fypageシ #foryou #fypage #trend #foryoupage❤️❤️ #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp

𝐒𝐂𝐄 • Jemegss Editzy
𝐒𝐂𝐄 • Jemegss Editzy
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Region: PH
Sunday 17 November 2024 10:32:01 GMT
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akotochukiepot_24
C :
Asuka is very beautiful
2024-11-17 22:13:25
9
armanalbuna
Arman :
sweet life tv
2024-11-17 12:51:02
2
shiang_official_acc
Shiangxie` :
wow my same profile
2025-01-07 07:15:13
0
0karunnnnnnnnnnn
O K A R U N :
Jabami Yumeko (Anime: Kakegurui)
2024-11-19 16:01:33
0
iamlulufy3
Lulufy :
late😕
2024-11-18 09:33:17
0
0karunnnnnnnnnnn
O K A R U N :
[sticker]
2024-11-19 16:01:41
0
senpaikun.2
Shinie Nouzen :
ang layu
2024-11-17 12:42:46
2
paned70
junboy love you :
Ang Ganda talaga ni ate asuka 🥰
2024-11-17 10:55:02
3
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Other Videos

Your Ex’s Silence Isn’t Strength—It’s Stubbornness. Here’s Why No Contact STILL Wins! So, you’ve been in no contact. You’ve done the hard part—walking away, resisting the urge to reach out, giving them space to realize what they lost. But… nothing. No call, no text, no sudden realization on their part. And now you’re sitting here wondering… “Is no contact even working?” Let me tell you something: Just because your ex hasn’t cracked yet doesn’t mean no contact isn’t working. It just means they’re stubborn. And that? That’s exactly why no contact is the best thing you could possibly do. See, stubborn people operate on control. They like feeling like they’re the ones making the decisions, that they’re in charge of how things play out. When you go no contact, you’re taking that control away. They expected you to chase. They expected you to fold. And when you don’t? That creates cognitive dissonance—a psychological discomfort that happens when reality doesn’t match their expectations (Festinger, 1957). The research is clear: The best way to handle a stubborn person is to remove the reinforcement they’re used to (Skinner, 1953). Meaning, the more you give in, the more they dig their heels in. But when you don’t engage? When you don’t feed their need for power? That’s when the discomfort builds. Now, here’s the key: You don’t break no contact just because they haven’t responded yet. Some people take longer to feel the weight of your absence. Some will never admit they were wrong because their ego won’t let them. But that doesn’t mean no contact isn’t working—it means it’s exposing the truth. Because think about it: If someone is so stubborn that they’d rather lose you than take accountability, do you really want them back? Or do you just want them to prove they care? No contact isn’t about controlling their reaction—it’s about giving you clarity. If they come back, it’s because they chose to, not because you begged. And if they don’t? Then you have your answer: It was never about their stubbornness. It was about their unwillingness to fight for what you had. So if you’re in no contact and they refuse to come back? Let them stay gone. Because the right person won’t let pride cost them something real. And you? You deserve someone who values you more than they value being “right.” #nocontact #nocontactrule #ex #exes #selfrespect
Your Ex’s Silence Isn’t Strength—It’s Stubbornness. Here’s Why No Contact STILL Wins! So, you’ve been in no contact. You’ve done the hard part—walking away, resisting the urge to reach out, giving them space to realize what they lost. But… nothing. No call, no text, no sudden realization on their part. And now you’re sitting here wondering… “Is no contact even working?” Let me tell you something: Just because your ex hasn’t cracked yet doesn’t mean no contact isn’t working. It just means they’re stubborn. And that? That’s exactly why no contact is the best thing you could possibly do. See, stubborn people operate on control. They like feeling like they’re the ones making the decisions, that they’re in charge of how things play out. When you go no contact, you’re taking that control away. They expected you to chase. They expected you to fold. And when you don’t? That creates cognitive dissonance—a psychological discomfort that happens when reality doesn’t match their expectations (Festinger, 1957). The research is clear: The best way to handle a stubborn person is to remove the reinforcement they’re used to (Skinner, 1953). Meaning, the more you give in, the more they dig their heels in. But when you don’t engage? When you don’t feed their need for power? That’s when the discomfort builds. Now, here’s the key: You don’t break no contact just because they haven’t responded yet. Some people take longer to feel the weight of your absence. Some will never admit they were wrong because their ego won’t let them. But that doesn’t mean no contact isn’t working—it means it’s exposing the truth. Because think about it: If someone is so stubborn that they’d rather lose you than take accountability, do you really want them back? Or do you just want them to prove they care? No contact isn’t about controlling their reaction—it’s about giving you clarity. If they come back, it’s because they chose to, not because you begged. And if they don’t? Then you have your answer: It was never about their stubbornness. It was about their unwillingness to fight for what you had. So if you’re in no contact and they refuse to come back? Let them stay gone. Because the right person won’t let pride cost them something real. And you? You deserve someone who values you more than they value being “right.” #nocontact #nocontactrule #ex #exes #selfrespect

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