@abdfazil58: #CapCut #الشعب_الصيني_ماله_حل😂😂 #جيل_الطيبين #فعلا👌❤❤

عــبــدالــلــه الــنــجــفــي
عــبــدالــلــه الــنــجــفــي
Open In TikTok:
Region: IQ
Sunday 25 May 2025 19:03:16 GMT
267
61
4
1

Music

Download

Comments

non.3822
كوافيره نايا بيوتي للتجميل :
المريض اذا يتمرض ياخذ علاج وبفضل الله يصير زين بس تعب النفسي صعب وينراد وقت مع الاسف 😔💔
2025-05-26 05:48:41
1
jenan.mhamed8
313 (عجل الله فرجه الشريف) :
نفس الشي ونفس الوجع اثنينهم
2025-05-25 19:22:47
1
To see more videos from user @abdfazil58, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Defeating Self-Doubt with Kim-Julie | Gunjung Tteokbokki | I’ve never had what some might call a “typical” body. I outgrew my mother’s bras and panties when I was only 9 years old, and therefore never got to borrow her skirts or blouses in high school. Going to the Korean grocery store was terrifying: I felt like an oversized beast, always worried I’d bump knock a tiny, little Asian woman off her feet with my girth. Despite the near constant pressure to diet throughout my childhood, in college I gained the freshman 15—3x over, and so many people didn’t bother to hide how my atypical Asian woman’s body affected their opinions of me. . By the time I started running nearly a decade later, I was conditioned to believe that my body was not just a source of discomfort to myself, but that I would always be viewed as somehow “less than” those with lean, long bodies. People may look at me and think “well, she can’t be a serious runner, she’s not skinny,” when, in fact, I’ve been running marathons for 6 years. Maybe it’s just me, the criticism I’ve internalized over the course of my life. Regardless, the struggle to accept my body—as it is—remains ongoing. . The “typical” body takes on yet another dimension when people discover I’m vegan. “Oh wow, so healthy!” But I don’t have a body that would grace the cover of “healthy” magazines and I definitely don’t look like a spokesperson for smoothie bowls (though mine are quite good!).  Again, I may be projecting my own stereotypes of what “typical” means, but I recently had the chance to speak with Kim-Julie Hansen (@kimjuliehansen)—a vegan for 12 years—who also struggles with judgments (real or imagined) arising out of her “atypical” body. . Typical, atypical, or stereotypical should be irrelevant. Our value as women, runners, vegans, or humans should be a function NOT of what we weigh, but what we do. Our choices to eat, move, or sit on the couch and binge Netflix should inform our pursuit of joy, not approval. This is a lesson I am trying to learn. . #koreanfood #tteokbokki #areyoureadypodcast #foodtiktok
Defeating Self-Doubt with Kim-Julie | Gunjung Tteokbokki | I’ve never had what some might call a “typical” body. I outgrew my mother’s bras and panties when I was only 9 years old, and therefore never got to borrow her skirts or blouses in high school. Going to the Korean grocery store was terrifying: I felt like an oversized beast, always worried I’d bump knock a tiny, little Asian woman off her feet with my girth. Despite the near constant pressure to diet throughout my childhood, in college I gained the freshman 15—3x over, and so many people didn’t bother to hide how my atypical Asian woman’s body affected their opinions of me. . By the time I started running nearly a decade later, I was conditioned to believe that my body was not just a source of discomfort to myself, but that I would always be viewed as somehow “less than” those with lean, long bodies. People may look at me and think “well, she can’t be a serious runner, she’s not skinny,” when, in fact, I’ve been running marathons for 6 years. Maybe it’s just me, the criticism I’ve internalized over the course of my life. Regardless, the struggle to accept my body—as it is—remains ongoing. . The “typical” body takes on yet another dimension when people discover I’m vegan. “Oh wow, so healthy!” But I don’t have a body that would grace the cover of “healthy” magazines and I definitely don’t look like a spokesperson for smoothie bowls (though mine are quite good!). Again, I may be projecting my own stereotypes of what “typical” means, but I recently had the chance to speak with Kim-Julie Hansen (@kimjuliehansen)—a vegan for 12 years—who also struggles with judgments (real or imagined) arising out of her “atypical” body. . Typical, atypical, or stereotypical should be irrelevant. Our value as women, runners, vegans, or humans should be a function NOT of what we weigh, but what we do. Our choices to eat, move, or sit on the couch and binge Netflix should inform our pursuit of joy, not approval. This is a lesson I am trying to learn. . #koreanfood #tteokbokki #areyoureadypodcast #foodtiktok

About