@noorboutiqe: Multi-color mehndi dress that blends tradition with vibrant elegance ✨ Perfect for twirling through festive nights with style and grace 💃 #MehndiVibes #DesiFashion #ColorfulElegance #WeddingSeason #StyleInspo

Noor bridal Rawalakot
Noor bridal Rawalakot
Open In TikTok:
Region: PK
Wednesday 29 April 2026 07:53:10 GMT
5582
154
3
13

Music

Download

Comments

alhamdulliah722
Mrs Tayyab😍🥰 :
price
2026-04-29 09:28:28
0
noorboutique___
Noor Boutique Rawalakot 🥀 :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-04-29 10:59:19
0
kashikhan1182
Mrکاشی🍁 :
❣️❣️❣️
2026-04-30 10:59:38
0
To see more videos from user @noorboutiqe, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

This is a 2 year old who came in because his parents could not understand why he was constantly moving and fidgeting. His mom told me he refuses to sit in his high chair, screams the moment he is buckled into his car seat, pulls his diaper off every chance he gets, and cannot get through a single bedtime story without arching his back and squirming out of her lap. He was also still waking up multiple times a night despite being well past the age it should have settled. When I evaluated him, his Spinal Galant reflex was still active on both sides. This can be mistaken for being ticklish. Ticklishness is a conscious response to light touch that the brain can override. A retained Spinal Galant is an involuntary reflex coming from the spinal cord and brainstem. The child cannot stop it. The hip swings out every single time, in the same direction, with the same intensity. That is not ticklish. That is a reflex the brain never turned off. The Spinal Galant is a reflex every baby is born with. When you stroke one side of a newborn's lower back, their hip curls toward that same side. It helps the baby move through the birth canal and supports early hip and trunk development. It should be fully integrated by 9 months of age. He is 2. When the Spinal Galant stays active, the lower back becomes hypersensitive to touch and pressure. Anything brushing that area sends a signal through the nervous system that the body has to respond to. A diaper waistband. A car seat strap. The back of a high chair. A parent's arm during a cuddle. The brain reads these as constant input and the body answers the only way it knows how, which is to move. So these little ones cannot settle, not because they are defiant or overtired, but because their nervous system will not let them. His parents had been told he was just a busy toddler and that boys are wired this way. What he actually had was a primitive reflex that should have integrated when he was a baby and never did. #primitivereflexes #adhd #autism #autismo #brain
This is a 2 year old who came in because his parents could not understand why he was constantly moving and fidgeting. His mom told me he refuses to sit in his high chair, screams the moment he is buckled into his car seat, pulls his diaper off every chance he gets, and cannot get through a single bedtime story without arching his back and squirming out of her lap. He was also still waking up multiple times a night despite being well past the age it should have settled. When I evaluated him, his Spinal Galant reflex was still active on both sides. This can be mistaken for being ticklish. Ticklishness is a conscious response to light touch that the brain can override. A retained Spinal Galant is an involuntary reflex coming from the spinal cord and brainstem. The child cannot stop it. The hip swings out every single time, in the same direction, with the same intensity. That is not ticklish. That is a reflex the brain never turned off. The Spinal Galant is a reflex every baby is born with. When you stroke one side of a newborn's lower back, their hip curls toward that same side. It helps the baby move through the birth canal and supports early hip and trunk development. It should be fully integrated by 9 months of age. He is 2. When the Spinal Galant stays active, the lower back becomes hypersensitive to touch and pressure. Anything brushing that area sends a signal through the nervous system that the body has to respond to. A diaper waistband. A car seat strap. The back of a high chair. A parent's arm during a cuddle. The brain reads these as constant input and the body answers the only way it knows how, which is to move. So these little ones cannot settle, not because they are defiant or overtired, but because their nervous system will not let them. His parents had been told he was just a busy toddler and that boys are wired this way. What he actually had was a primitive reflex that should have integrated when he was a baby and never did. #primitivereflexes #adhd #autism #autismo #brain

About