@exow52: On a trop banalisé les pouvoir là-bas 😂😂 #HumourReactionStory #reactionhumour #funnystory #humour #magiefondvert

Exow🦁🌪️⚡️
Exow🦁🌪️⚡️
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Thursday 16 April 2026 20:30:58 GMT
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alanryan947
@ LARYA 2X :
Mais si tu pouvais choisir ton alter tu allais refuser ?
2026-04-17 03:43:50
21
le.rigollow
le rigollow :
imagine sa sert a quoi c'est alter
2026-04-16 20:34:28
61
itskira33
マ-KIRA :
la vanne sur le Type C c'est la goutte de trop
2026-04-16 23:37:58
32
bossd.a4
bossd.a :
La meuf elle as la écouteur avec fils alors que les AirPod existe
2026-04-16 20:49:36
4
nuix34
yaoi horibe :
il a dénigrer MHA 😂
2026-04-21 20:58:54
8
kingdomrmc
🐉 :
Donc il y a des humains qui choisissent les alters ? tandis que pourrait avoir Zawardo !
2026-04-16 20:46:39
8
adambarro738
ADAM gun 46 🔥 :
t'es trop méchant 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
2026-04-16 20:33:39
21
jonathankitete916
Jonathan do Santos :
tu ad raison de ouf
2026-06-05 19:03:06
1
japhetfullbuster
Japhet Fullbuster :
L’alter de mineta 💔🤣
2026-04-16 23:37:12
1
mkaiser32
E = mc^2 :
Avec un peu d’imagination ont peut croire que c’est spider man 😂😂
2026-04-17 18:29:11
4
sia.tae3
sia tae🇨🇩 :
par je préfère Hermite purple que un alter aléatoire
2026-05-08 16:11:58
3
counimanmanw_8890
Nonchalante :
2026-04-16 20:35:18
21
blackbilly43
Billybk77 :
stand tout les jours
2026-04-16 22:06:06
6
fk_vrai
Fk_vrai⚡️ :
> lol 😂
2026-04-17 16:30:11
4
farel00280
卂丂卄ㄩ尺卂 :
🤣T’as pas tort 🤣
2026-04-16 21:02:53
4
meji_sante
Urbain Ndri :
premier commentaire enfin 😭
2026-04-16 20:32:52
3
gisly226
Ghislain Osée Ki :
Dans the boys c’est encore plus aléatoire 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
2026-04-19 10:30:41
1
mahabib181
Pucci(H2b) :
Mec faire une route sa coute des millions donc faire des routes aussi rapidement je pense que l’etat va le rendre millionnaire
2026-05-23 15:49:19
0
riccardoangelloka
AKR SMOKE 7 THE BEST :
2026-06-04 21:39:48
0
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David Goggins grew up in an environment that was anything but stable. His childhood was marked by poverty, racism, and abuse. He struggled in school, often feeling like he didn’t belong and wasn’t smart enough to succeed. For many, a beginning like that becomes a reason to settle or give up. For Goggins, it became fuel. As a young adult, he found himself stuck in a life going nowhere. He worked a regular job, carried extra weight, and lacked direction. He was far from the person he could become. Then one day, he looked at himself honestly—really looked—and realized he was living far below his potential. That moment changed everything. Goggins made a decision: he would no longer accept mediocrity. He set his sights on becoming one of the toughest individuals on the planet by joining the Navy SEALs, one of the most elite and demanding military forces in the world. There was just one problem—he was completely unprepared. He needed to lose a massive amount of weight, transform his physical condition, and develop an unbreakable mindset. Where most people would see impossibility, Goggins saw a challenge. He trained relentlessly. Day after day, without excuses. He ran for miles while his body screamed for rest. He pushed through exhaustion, pain, and self-doubt. He later described this process as “callousing the mind”—building mental toughness by repeatedly doing hard things, especially when you don’t want to. His path to becoming a Navy SEAL was far from smooth. He failed multiple times, including during the infamous “Hell Week,” a brutal phase designed to break candidates physically and mentally. Many quit. Goggins didn’t. Each time he was knocked down, he came back stronger. Eventually, he made it through—not because he was the most naturally gifted, but because he refused to quit. But for Goggins, that achievement was just the beginning. After his military career, he searched for new ways to test his limits. He turned to ultra-endurance events—running races of 100 miles or more, often with little preparation. His body broke down more than once. He dealt with stress fractures, dehydration, and extreme fatigue. Yet he kept going, driven by a mindset that refused to surrender. What makes Goggins different is how he views pain. Most people avoid it. He embraces it. To him, pain is a teacher—a way to discover where your limits are and how far beyond them you can go. He often says that most people only use a small fraction of their true potential because they avoid discomfort. One of his most well-known ideas is the “40% rule.” It suggests that when you think you’ve reached your limit, you’re only at about 40% of your actual capacity. The rest is locked behind mental barriers. Breaking through those barriers is where real growth happens. But his message isn’t just about physical endurance. It’s about accountability. Goggins believes no one is coming to save you. No one else is responsible for changing your life. Not motivation, not circumstances—just you. He challenges people to confront their excuses and take ownership of their actions. At the same time, he doesn’t expect everyone to become an ultra-athlete or join the military. That’s not the point. The point is honesty—with yourself. Identifying your weaknesses and working on them. Choosing the harder path when it leads to growth, instead of the easier one that keeps you stuck. His story is also a reminder that growth is rarely comfortable. The moments when you want to quit are often the moments that matter most. Goggins refers to this as “taking souls”—pushing beyond limits when others stop, including the weaker version of yourself that wants to give up. Today, he inspires millions of people around the world. Not with soft encouragement, but with direct, sometimes uncomfortable truth. He doesn’t offer sympathy—he demands effort. His message is simple: you are capable of far more than you think. #davidgoggins #davidgogginsmotivation #davidgogginsmentality #mentality #hardworkpaysoff
David Goggins grew up in an environment that was anything but stable. His childhood was marked by poverty, racism, and abuse. He struggled in school, often feeling like he didn’t belong and wasn’t smart enough to succeed. For many, a beginning like that becomes a reason to settle or give up. For Goggins, it became fuel. As a young adult, he found himself stuck in a life going nowhere. He worked a regular job, carried extra weight, and lacked direction. He was far from the person he could become. Then one day, he looked at himself honestly—really looked—and realized he was living far below his potential. That moment changed everything. Goggins made a decision: he would no longer accept mediocrity. He set his sights on becoming one of the toughest individuals on the planet by joining the Navy SEALs, one of the most elite and demanding military forces in the world. There was just one problem—he was completely unprepared. He needed to lose a massive amount of weight, transform his physical condition, and develop an unbreakable mindset. Where most people would see impossibility, Goggins saw a challenge. He trained relentlessly. Day after day, without excuses. He ran for miles while his body screamed for rest. He pushed through exhaustion, pain, and self-doubt. He later described this process as “callousing the mind”—building mental toughness by repeatedly doing hard things, especially when you don’t want to. His path to becoming a Navy SEAL was far from smooth. He failed multiple times, including during the infamous “Hell Week,” a brutal phase designed to break candidates physically and mentally. Many quit. Goggins didn’t. Each time he was knocked down, he came back stronger. Eventually, he made it through—not because he was the most naturally gifted, but because he refused to quit. But for Goggins, that achievement was just the beginning. After his military career, he searched for new ways to test his limits. He turned to ultra-endurance events—running races of 100 miles or more, often with little preparation. His body broke down more than once. He dealt with stress fractures, dehydration, and extreme fatigue. Yet he kept going, driven by a mindset that refused to surrender. What makes Goggins different is how he views pain. Most people avoid it. He embraces it. To him, pain is a teacher—a way to discover where your limits are and how far beyond them you can go. He often says that most people only use a small fraction of their true potential because they avoid discomfort. One of his most well-known ideas is the “40% rule.” It suggests that when you think you’ve reached your limit, you’re only at about 40% of your actual capacity. The rest is locked behind mental barriers. Breaking through those barriers is where real growth happens. But his message isn’t just about physical endurance. It’s about accountability. Goggins believes no one is coming to save you. No one else is responsible for changing your life. Not motivation, not circumstances—just you. He challenges people to confront their excuses and take ownership of their actions. At the same time, he doesn’t expect everyone to become an ultra-athlete or join the military. That’s not the point. The point is honesty—with yourself. Identifying your weaknesses and working on them. Choosing the harder path when it leads to growth, instead of the easier one that keeps you stuck. His story is also a reminder that growth is rarely comfortable. The moments when you want to quit are often the moments that matter most. Goggins refers to this as “taking souls”—pushing beyond limits when others stop, including the weaker version of yourself that wants to give up. Today, he inspires millions of people around the world. Not with soft encouragement, but with direct, sometimes uncomfortable truth. He doesn’t offer sympathy—he demands effort. His message is simple: you are capable of far more than you think. #davidgoggins #davidgogginsmotivation #davidgogginsmentality #mentality #hardworkpaysoff

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