@zz478489: Celing Fan light Hanging/Desktop 2 in 1 LED Portable Fan. Rechargeable, lightweight, quiet with remote. #camping #tent #tentcamping #fan #portablefan #campingessentials #Outdoors #TikTokShop #tiktokmademebuyit

zz478489
zz478489
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Thursday 26 June 2025 14:41:33 GMT
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skyhighetress
Crystal :
Does it charge by usb or is it solar?
2025-07-17 17:02:43
0
ronnieandaya82
ronnieandaya82 :
try again turn off get open speed 4
2025-09-19 14:17:01
0
lahweird12
Lori💛🌻💛 :
How fast is shipping? We are going camping next weekend??
2025-06-30 20:54:16
0
prettygaychey
Cheesy Mac :
@Erynn Mattos
2025-07-15 16:40:52
1
444jamimi
Jami🪼 :
@kylacanoo need
2025-07-13 14:55:11
1
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Had to cut the video short from expanding on the inferiority complex, but I’m going to explain what I mean here. What I’m pointing at isn’t something every Sudanese person experiences the same way, but there is a pattern I keep noticing in how identity is carried. It can show up as internalised colourism, where lighter skin is unconsciously treated as higher status. It can show up in tribal thinking, where identity gets narrowed instead of unified. And more broadly, it can show up as an acceptance of low expectations hence way everyone just kicks a rock and relies on god. A lot of it gets tied into ideas of patience, fate, and relying on God, which on its own isn’t the issue. That can be a healthy coping mechanism, especially in difficult conditions. But it gets to a point where that mindset can slide into passivity. Where instead of “this is what I’m going through right now,” it becomes “this is just how things are meant to be,” even when it’s something that could be challenged or changed. And the comments are reflecting exactly that when they say “nothing wrong with the name because WE ARE black” And when that becomes the default way of thinking (it seems to be the case at least to me in sudan), it affects how people see themselves, what they think they deserve, and how much they feel they can actually shape their environment. Again you can see a reflection of this in the comments where they actually dont see the point in a mindset shift or a name change because thats just how its always been.  In this video I reflect on the name Sudan and where it comes from. The name traces back to the Arabic term Bilād al-Sūdān, meaning “land of the black people,” originally used by historical geographers to describe a broad region south of the Sahara before it became attached to the modern state through colonial administration and later independence. I’m not approaching this as a rejection of history, but as a question about how identity is formed and inherited. What it means for a country’s name to originate from an external description, and how that shapes the way a people are seen and see themselves over time. The video also explores a more personal and controversial thought about Sudanese culture the way humility is often valued to the point where it can sometimes turn into an inferiority complex on a large scale within our sudanese society. Not as a criticism of humility itself, but as a reflection on how easily a society can become comfortable with being defined rather than defining itself- me personally im not having it.  Ultimately, this is a conversation about naming, perception, and whether inherited labels still reflect the people who carry them today. #sudan #sudanese_tiktok #sudanese_songs #africanculture #africa
Had to cut the video short from expanding on the inferiority complex, but I’m going to explain what I mean here. What I’m pointing at isn’t something every Sudanese person experiences the same way, but there is a pattern I keep noticing in how identity is carried. It can show up as internalised colourism, where lighter skin is unconsciously treated as higher status. It can show up in tribal thinking, where identity gets narrowed instead of unified. And more broadly, it can show up as an acceptance of low expectations hence way everyone just kicks a rock and relies on god. A lot of it gets tied into ideas of patience, fate, and relying on God, which on its own isn’t the issue. That can be a healthy coping mechanism, especially in difficult conditions. But it gets to a point where that mindset can slide into passivity. Where instead of “this is what I’m going through right now,” it becomes “this is just how things are meant to be,” even when it’s something that could be challenged or changed. And the comments are reflecting exactly that when they say “nothing wrong with the name because WE ARE black” And when that becomes the default way of thinking (it seems to be the case at least to me in sudan), it affects how people see themselves, what they think they deserve, and how much they feel they can actually shape their environment. Again you can see a reflection of this in the comments where they actually dont see the point in a mindset shift or a name change because thats just how its always been. In this video I reflect on the name Sudan and where it comes from. The name traces back to the Arabic term Bilād al-Sūdān, meaning “land of the black people,” originally used by historical geographers to describe a broad region south of the Sahara before it became attached to the modern state through colonial administration and later independence. I’m not approaching this as a rejection of history, but as a question about how identity is formed and inherited. What it means for a country’s name to originate from an external description, and how that shapes the way a people are seen and see themselves over time. The video also explores a more personal and controversial thought about Sudanese culture the way humility is often valued to the point where it can sometimes turn into an inferiority complex on a large scale within our sudanese society. Not as a criticism of humility itself, but as a reflection on how easily a society can become comfortable with being defined rather than defining itself- me personally im not having it. Ultimately, this is a conversation about naming, perception, and whether inherited labels still reflect the people who carry them today. #sudan #sudanese_tiktok #sudanese_songs #africanculture #africa

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