@tobilawall: love a good legwork tiktok x #nigeriantiktok #legwork #africantiktok #butterflylegwork #irishnigerian

tobz
tobz
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Region: GB
Thursday 15 January 2026 13:22:10 GMT
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yolandamoyo1
Yolanda🫶🏾 :
If I could move my legs like this everyone would be so sick of me😭🤣
2026-01-15 13:25:10
3838
essosa._1
Sosa… :
Spinning leg work is serious 😭😭
2026-01-15 17:03:47
672
oyin.honey_
Ur•bonnylass🍯 :
give me a lifetime and intense training😭
2026-01-19 19:31:57
471
tomimimiii
' te͏e͏ 🐐 :
you think you’re better than me?? 😭
2026-01-15 20:32:33
702
kokob885
𝙺𝚘𝚔𝚘𝚋 ☆ :
Holy legwork 🤣 🔥
2026-01-15 18:49:21
8
mishbee22
michelle🐚💕 :
i know your mum used to tell you to dance in the family functions 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
2026-01-15 18:03:27
160
ebunoluwa._0
ebunoluwa._0 :
I’m not legworking to full potential.
2026-01-17 03:17:50
49
thisisnot.liza
liza🇬🇭 :
how i’m moving ghana independence day
2026-01-16 09:16:47
58
kaloras_s
Kaloras ✰ :
2026-01-18 05:48:58
8
mysecretsecretacc00
Mariamisgoingsecret? 🤷🏾‍♀️ :
Just give me a year and plenty more of agege bread
2026-01-21 12:43:51
12
user14gj1ayn4t
user45337494616 :
Involveeeeeee meee (you have to teach me first
2026-01-21 21:17:19
5
queenbrotherchapaativon_
Brotherchapaati :
See now if my uncle didn’t cut my hair…
2026-01-15 18:10:07
92
b_typeshii
B :
You’re cheating I can’t prove it yet
2026-01-17 02:16:54
20
steezville
steezville :
I even joined you
2026-01-17 07:45:18
6
t.tofunmi12
T.. :
Ma I join you
2026-01-19 00:28:28
7
nolan.frls
Nolan frls :
One of my fellow legwork warriors
2026-01-17 07:46:38
1
olajumoke_s
Sunny💋 :
Abegggg teach meeeeee
2026-03-12 14:16:44
8
_dumebieee_
_dumebieee_ :
Heiiiiiiii
2026-01-18 16:23:33
5
soleoffaye
soleoffave :
u better be a dancer bc no wayyy
2026-01-16 20:35:32
5
rboogie8
RBoogie :
Are you Nigerian by any chance ?
2026-01-17 12:24:45
29
daniellifts24
daniellifts24 :
How bro ?
2026-01-15 18:35:50
5
bvdmus_
BADMUS MARIAM :
That butterfly legwork! 💯💯💯😭
2026-01-16 20:41:48
7
6ixgodant
6ixgodant :
Chai my prime even poco lee Dey learn work 😂
2026-01-19 02:21:22
5
iloveeyoubrent
Tamia 🇹🇿 :
Teach me
2026-01-31 20:33:25
4
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Other Videos

In 2002, a furniture salesman named Jason Padgett walked out of a karaoke bar in Tacoma, Washington. Two men attacked him from behind. They kicked him in the head until he lost consciousness. He woke up in a hospital with a severe concussion and post-traumatic stress disorder. He could barely leave his house. Then the world changed. Padgett began seeing geometric patterns in everything. Running water broke into tessellations. Tree branches split into fractals. A circle was no longer a curve. It was a polygon with so many sides the eye could not distinguish them from smoothness. He was seeing what Archimedes described in 250 BC: a regular polygon inscribed inside a circle, its perimeter converging on 2 times pi times the radius as the number of sides approaches infinity. Padgett had no math background. He had barely passed high school algebra. A neurologist named Darold Treffert diagnosed him with acquired savant syndrome, a condition in which severe brain trauma unlocks extraordinary cognitive abilities that were not accessible before the injury. Fewer than 40 cases have ever been documented. Brain scans showed that the areas of his brain responsible for mathematical reasoning had become hyperactive. The damage to one region forced another to compensate. The mathematics had not arrived from outside. It had been structurally present the entire time. The injury removed whatever was keeping him from accessing it. Treffert spent decades arguing that savant abilities might be latent in all human brains, suppressed by the same neural architecture that keeps us functional. If math was already inside Jason Padgett's head before the injury, is it inside yours?
In 2002, a furniture salesman named Jason Padgett walked out of a karaoke bar in Tacoma, Washington. Two men attacked him from behind. They kicked him in the head until he lost consciousness. He woke up in a hospital with a severe concussion and post-traumatic stress disorder. He could barely leave his house. Then the world changed. Padgett began seeing geometric patterns in everything. Running water broke into tessellations. Tree branches split into fractals. A circle was no longer a curve. It was a polygon with so many sides the eye could not distinguish them from smoothness. He was seeing what Archimedes described in 250 BC: a regular polygon inscribed inside a circle, its perimeter converging on 2 times pi times the radius as the number of sides approaches infinity. Padgett had no math background. He had barely passed high school algebra. A neurologist named Darold Treffert diagnosed him with acquired savant syndrome, a condition in which severe brain trauma unlocks extraordinary cognitive abilities that were not accessible before the injury. Fewer than 40 cases have ever been documented. Brain scans showed that the areas of his brain responsible for mathematical reasoning had become hyperactive. The damage to one region forced another to compensate. The mathematics had not arrived from outside. It had been structurally present the entire time. The injury removed whatever was keeping him from accessing it. Treffert spent decades arguing that savant abilities might be latent in all human brains, suppressed by the same neural architecture that keeps us functional. If math was already inside Jason Padgett's head before the injury, is it inside yours?

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