@shibichi27: Hỉu hongg #xuhuong #shibachao💫 #caption

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Friday 11 July 2025 02:31:47 GMT
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tbinh092
𝓝𝓰𝓾𝔂ễ𝓷 𝓑ì𝓷𝓱 🦋 :
Cái này đúng nè😞
2026-06-08 03:35:55
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noolove138213
𝚕𝚘𝚙 𝚘𝚛 𝚕𝚘𝚟𝚎 ? :
xin cap
2026-06-07 05:06:59
0
nguyenminhtien106
nợ viettel 36k 😆 :
…@𝙷𝚊𝚗𝚗 𝙶𝚒𝚊𝚊 @ジア・ハン✨
2026-01-01 13:33:19
1
trungnghia1_
Trung Nghĩa :
tr oi bé nói dì dị bé nọc
2025-07-13 23:41:37
1
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If you consistently walk away from conversations feeling like you've done something wrong, even when you were the one who was hurt, that's not a coincidence. It's a pattern of emotional abuse, and it tends to work in three specific ways. The first is denial, where your experience gets dismissed, minimised, or quietly rewritten until you start to question what actually happened. The second is when the focus gets turned back onto you. Suddenly it's about what you did, how you reacted, how sensitive you are. The emotional abuse shifts the spotlight so completely that your original concern gets lost entirely. The third is the hardest to see because it can look so genuine. They become fragile, self-critical, full of how much they love you and how hard they try. And because you care about them, you soften, you comfort them, and somewhere in that moment you become the bad guy without even realising it. This kind of emotional abuse is effective precisely because it doesn't always look like abuse. It can look loving. It can look vulnerable. But the result is always the same: you leave feeling guilty and confused, holding responsibility for something that wasn't yours. The way through it is to keep coming back to your own experience, your own feelings, your own version of what happened, and trust that, even when someone is working very hard to make you doubt it Official accounts and resources: www.ellyanastasiades.com #relationshiptok #relationshipabuse #emotionalabuse #emotionallyabusiverelationship #abusive
If you consistently walk away from conversations feeling like you've done something wrong, even when you were the one who was hurt, that's not a coincidence. It's a pattern of emotional abuse, and it tends to work in three specific ways. The first is denial, where your experience gets dismissed, minimised, or quietly rewritten until you start to question what actually happened. The second is when the focus gets turned back onto you. Suddenly it's about what you did, how you reacted, how sensitive you are. The emotional abuse shifts the spotlight so completely that your original concern gets lost entirely. The third is the hardest to see because it can look so genuine. They become fragile, self-critical, full of how much they love you and how hard they try. And because you care about them, you soften, you comfort them, and somewhere in that moment you become the bad guy without even realising it. This kind of emotional abuse is effective precisely because it doesn't always look like abuse. It can look loving. It can look vulnerable. But the result is always the same: you leave feeling guilty and confused, holding responsibility for something that wasn't yours. The way through it is to keep coming back to your own experience, your own feelings, your own version of what happened, and trust that, even when someone is working very hard to make you doubt it Official accounts and resources: www.ellyanastasiades.com #relationshiptok #relationshipabuse #emotionalabuse #emotionallyabusiverelationship #abusive

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