@suguruosako.official: Easy Session . 本日はダブル。雨で倒れてきた木の枝を避けるの上手い。 #ランニング #マラソン #SuguruOsako #大迫傑 #marathon #Running

suguru osako 大迫傑
suguru osako 大迫傑
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Monday 06 April 2026 12:33:19 GMT
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user7448355147566
水嶋シロ :
何このトラック
2026-05-24 02:24:27
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user9469098338493
かいちー :
うしろだれ?
2026-06-07 07:58:50
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ituraki52
たくみ :
ナイキオレゴンプロジェクトから使用してるトラックかな
2026-05-17 05:47:47
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toshi_blog6
Toshi :
緑の素敵な場所ですね✨
2026-04-11 21:51:04
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mrt999s
reeeeeee :
ナイキ本社のトラックだ
2026-06-03 06:56:06
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hazex1119
はるき :
このトラックで走ることが夢
2026-05-27 11:00:39
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One of the biggest mistakes people make after a breakup is trying to turn every tiny piece of information into a message. Your ex viewed your story. They liked a post. They unliked a post. They watched your TikTok. They viewed your LinkedIn profile. They appeared in your suggested friends. Suddenly your mind goes into detective mode. “What does it mean?” “Are they thinking about me?” “Are they regretting the breakup?” “Is this a sign?” Sound familiar?  And listen, I understand why people do this. When you miss someone, uncertainty is painful. The human brain doesn’t like unanswered questions. Researchers who study uncertainty and attachment have found that when people feel emotionally deprived of information, they often start searching for clues, patterns, and explanations to reduce their anxiety. The problem is that most of the clues people find aren’t actually clues. They’re guesses. A view is a view. A like is a like. A follow is a follow. A social media interaction is not a relationship conversation. It is not a commitment. It is not accountability. It is not reconciliation. It is not a plan. And it certainly is not evidence that you should interrupt your healing and reach out. Think about how many reasons someone might view your content. Curiosity. Boredom. Habit. Nostalgia. Accident. The algorithm put it in front of them. They were scrolling. They were wondering how you’re doing. They were wondering whether you moved on. They were simply being human. The truth is that you don’t know. And that’s exactly why trying to assign meaning to these things is so dangerous. Psychologists call this confirmation bias We naturally look for information that supports what we already hope is true. If you want your ex back, every view feels significant. Every like feels intentional. Every online activity starts looking like evidence. But most of the time, you’re not gathering facts. You’re just building a fantasy story. And stories built on assumptions usually create more suffering than clarity. What I want you to hear is this: If someone wants a place in your life, they know how to contact you. They know your phone number. They know your email. They know your social media accounts. They know where you live. They know how to find you. A grown adult who wants reconciliation does not need to communicate through breadcrumbs. They communicate through words. Direct words. Clear words. Intentional words. That’s why I tell people there is really only one signal worth paying serious attention to. Not a like. Not a view. Not a mutual friend report. Not a cryptic quote. Not a song lyric. Not a random text saying “Hey.” The signal is this: They come to you personally. They clearly communicate that they want another opportunity to have you in their life. Not because they’re lonely. Not because their rebound failed. Not because they’re having a bad week. But because they have intentionally decided they want to rebuild something with you. That’s the conversation that matters. Everything else is noise. And here’s the part many people need to hear. Even if they viewed every story you’ve posted for six months… Even if they liked every picture… Even if they stalked your profile every day… That still doesn’t mean you should stop moving forward. Because your healing cannot depend on interpreting digital breadcrumbs. Your healing has to be built on reality. Reality is what people do. Reality is what people say. Reality is the actions they take. Until someone clearly tells you they want another opportunity to be part of your life, the healthiest assumption is that nothing has changed. Not because you’re bitter. Not because you’re giving up. But because you’re protecting your peace. A view is just a view. A like is just a like. A breadcrumb is just a breadcrumb. Stop trying to turn crumbs into a meal. If someone truly wants a seat at your table again, they won’t leave you guessing. They’ll pull up a chair and tell you themselves.  #HealingJourney #healing #breakup #closure
One of the biggest mistakes people make after a breakup is trying to turn every tiny piece of information into a message. Your ex viewed your story. They liked a post. They unliked a post. They watched your TikTok. They viewed your LinkedIn profile. They appeared in your suggested friends. Suddenly your mind goes into detective mode. “What does it mean?” “Are they thinking about me?” “Are they regretting the breakup?” “Is this a sign?” Sound familiar? And listen, I understand why people do this. When you miss someone, uncertainty is painful. The human brain doesn’t like unanswered questions. Researchers who study uncertainty and attachment have found that when people feel emotionally deprived of information, they often start searching for clues, patterns, and explanations to reduce their anxiety. The problem is that most of the clues people find aren’t actually clues. They’re guesses. A view is a view. A like is a like. A follow is a follow. A social media interaction is not a relationship conversation. It is not a commitment. It is not accountability. It is not reconciliation. It is not a plan. And it certainly is not evidence that you should interrupt your healing and reach out. Think about how many reasons someone might view your content. Curiosity. Boredom. Habit. Nostalgia. Accident. The algorithm put it in front of them. They were scrolling. They were wondering how you’re doing. They were wondering whether you moved on. They were simply being human. The truth is that you don’t know. And that’s exactly why trying to assign meaning to these things is so dangerous. Psychologists call this confirmation bias We naturally look for information that supports what we already hope is true. If you want your ex back, every view feels significant. Every like feels intentional. Every online activity starts looking like evidence. But most of the time, you’re not gathering facts. You’re just building a fantasy story. And stories built on assumptions usually create more suffering than clarity. What I want you to hear is this: If someone wants a place in your life, they know how to contact you. They know your phone number. They know your email. They know your social media accounts. They know where you live. They know how to find you. A grown adult who wants reconciliation does not need to communicate through breadcrumbs. They communicate through words. Direct words. Clear words. Intentional words. That’s why I tell people there is really only one signal worth paying serious attention to. Not a like. Not a view. Not a mutual friend report. Not a cryptic quote. Not a song lyric. Not a random text saying “Hey.” The signal is this: They come to you personally. They clearly communicate that they want another opportunity to have you in their life. Not because they’re lonely. Not because their rebound failed. Not because they’re having a bad week. But because they have intentionally decided they want to rebuild something with you. That’s the conversation that matters. Everything else is noise. And here’s the part many people need to hear. Even if they viewed every story you’ve posted for six months… Even if they liked every picture… Even if they stalked your profile every day… That still doesn’t mean you should stop moving forward. Because your healing cannot depend on interpreting digital breadcrumbs. Your healing has to be built on reality. Reality is what people do. Reality is what people say. Reality is the actions they take. Until someone clearly tells you they want another opportunity to be part of your life, the healthiest assumption is that nothing has changed. Not because you’re bitter. Not because you’re giving up. But because you’re protecting your peace. A view is just a view. A like is just a like. A breadcrumb is just a breadcrumb. Stop trying to turn crumbs into a meal. If someone truly wants a seat at your table again, they won’t leave you guessing. They’ll pull up a chair and tell you themselves. #HealingJourney #healing #breakup #closure

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