@jadenny93: no hace falta lujos, #parati #con amor

Jadenny93
Jadenny93
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Region: GT
Saturday 02 May 2026 14:54:06 GMT
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krizthiandu
Krizthian Duhar't :
Ni Elon Musk podría comprar este momento.
2026-05-18 11:25:41
5911
vivelavidagay
Vive la Vida Gay :
eso es indicador de q es buen padre
2026-06-05 00:35:49
289
jorge.a_ruch
🌃 Jorge.R :
Hasta yo lloré con esa sorpresa🥺
2026-06-04 22:36:52
48
halodroid9990
HALODROID :
hay millonarios que darían toda su fortuna por tener esto
2026-05-28 14:30:26
168
leo167112
leonel de jesus acevedo higuia :
para qué mas regalo que ésa familia qué tiene
2026-05-30 19:00:17
116
la.hija.de.boby
la hija de boby :
aquí las que lloramos por desconosidos
2026-06-03 11:54:43
52
adriancillo87
Adriano :
a mis 35 años festeje mi primer cumpleaños, el resto de año nunca supe lo q era un cumpleaños xq mis padres me abandonaron y viva con mis abuelitos, a los 35 años conocí a la q es mi actual esposa y ella me festejo mi día, ese día fui el niño más feliz del mundo, hoy en día amo a mis padres abuelitos y en especial a mi esposa y sobretodo a Dios 🙏🏻
2026-06-08 15:34:04
62
geminisjcp
ANDREA :
en un mundo que suele estar lleno de dolor, preocupaciones, miedos y traumas si al final del día llegas a un lugar donde eres valorado respetado y amado no importa el dolor que se vive en cada momento de esta vida valdrá la pena
2026-06-06 22:53:55
27
armandoortuo4
Armando16 :
que bonito regalo amigo felicidades
2026-05-30 20:13:50
20
yorianjimenez
Yorian Jiménez 🙏🏼 :
Quien a esta hora 06:33 am hoy domingo 31 de mayo no se le salieron las lágrimas 😢 que bendición de familia
2026-05-31 11:34:05
19
ljrod2
LjRod :
soy millonario entonces y ni m daba cuenta... eso lo es todo
2026-06-07 02:55:02
18
sebastianaguilar.1
Neymar,s versión 👑⚽ :
permiso para llorar ¿?🥹
2026-05-31 06:27:08
5
maikol.2607
MAiKOL :
súper afortunado 🙏🏻👍🏻❤️
2026-06-06 19:19:10
7
alexoswaldofuente
Alex Oswaldo :
Con que así se siente ser millonario......
2026-06-06 17:40:27
34
pacofranc4
PacoFranc :
¡sí supieran que tan valiosos son esos momentos regalados para nosotros los hombres! De ahí sacamos la fuerza para enfrentar las dificultades, gracias por estar ahí.
2026-05-29 01:50:46
21
rubenalfredomonta8
alf :
al final. solo estos momentos podemos llevarnos, el resto se queda.
2026-06-03 22:19:53
13
diegoamaya738
Diego :
una familia que te ama...que más se puede pedir? miren las caritas de esos pequeños llenos de felicidad por su viejo, genuinamente emocionados x ese papá al que adoran y admiran...
2026-06-04 21:13:30
10
tornado16rcm
Tornado🌪️💀🐉 :
viene mi cumpleaños 31 y sera uno mas lejos de casa y mi familia nimodo es lo que toco
2026-05-31 02:13:49
14
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INNER ARC SERIES Reflections from a life being rebuilt in real time SOMETHINGS YOU RECOGNISE WITHOUT KNOWING WHY The other day, I found myself watching an interview with Phil Collins when something unexpected happened. It wasn’t the music that caught me. It was him. For all the success, the fame, the records sold, and the stages he has stood on throughout his life, there didn’t seem to be any hierarchy in the room. No need to be bigger than anyone else. No need to prove anything. Just a person sitting with another person. Present. Human. But more than that, there was a presence. Not loud. Not performative. Just… there. A kind of quiet gravity. The sort of presence that doesn’t ask to be noticed, but somehow fills the space anyway. He wasn’t doing anything in particular. He was simply existing in the moment. And yet you could feel him. Like the room had settled into him, rather than him trying to fill the room. And that’s when I thought of Geoff. Not as a comparison. Not in a direct way. But as a familiar shape in memory. Geoff was my stepdad. He was married to my mum for thirty years and became a huge part of our family’s story. Four years ago, he was diagnosed with terminal cancer and passed away within six months. Yesterday would have been his birthday. Maybe that’s why he was already somewhere close to the surface of my thoughts. Maybe that’s why this moment found its way in. Because what I recognised in that interview wasn’t illness or endings. It was presence. Geoff had that too. A way of being where he didn’t need to fill silence with words. Where he didn’t need to dominate a space to belong in it. He could just be there. Solid. Steady. Quietly felt. And over time, I’ve realised how rare that is. Not always expressed in grand speeches. Not always worn on the outside. But deeply rooted. A love for family that didn’t always need to announce itself, but showed up in its own way. Sometimes in small gestures. Sometimes in a look. Sometimes in a hug that lasted longer than expected. It wasn’t always easy to read. But when it came through, it meant everything. Because it wasn’t performed. It was real. There is something both beautiful and difficult about that kind of life. Beautiful because those moments were real when they happened. Difficult because they weren’t always there in the ways we might have hoped for. But the older I get, the less interested I become in perfect narratives. Life isn’t made of perfect stories. It’s made of moments. And sometimes all it takes is watching a stranger being interviewed on television to be reminded of someone you loved, not because they are the same, but because something in the way they carry themselves reaches across time and memory and quietly says, I know this shape. A note of appreciation To Phil Collins, thank you. Thank you for the music, and also for the presence that stirred this reflection. There is something deeply human in the way you speak about your life and family, something that carries both strength and tenderness without needing to choose between them. Your work and your presence have left a mark far beyond charts or awards. They’ve been part of people’s lives in moments of joy, grief, reflection, and everything in between. And in this moment, they helped bring Geoff back into thought with a kind of quiet gentleness. Sending love and appreciation to you and your family. These reflections are becoming more than journal entries. They are evolving into tools for self-expression, reflection, conversation, scalability, and collaboration. If any part of this resonates with you, you’re welcome to follow the journey as Inner Arc continues to grow. IB Creative Inner Arc Series #InnerArc #Presence #Reflection #GriefAndHealing #Family
INNER ARC SERIES Reflections from a life being rebuilt in real time SOMETHINGS YOU RECOGNISE WITHOUT KNOWING WHY The other day, I found myself watching an interview with Phil Collins when something unexpected happened. It wasn’t the music that caught me. It was him. For all the success, the fame, the records sold, and the stages he has stood on throughout his life, there didn’t seem to be any hierarchy in the room. No need to be bigger than anyone else. No need to prove anything. Just a person sitting with another person. Present. Human. But more than that, there was a presence. Not loud. Not performative. Just… there. A kind of quiet gravity. The sort of presence that doesn’t ask to be noticed, but somehow fills the space anyway. He wasn’t doing anything in particular. He was simply existing in the moment. And yet you could feel him. Like the room had settled into him, rather than him trying to fill the room. And that’s when I thought of Geoff. Not as a comparison. Not in a direct way. But as a familiar shape in memory. Geoff was my stepdad. He was married to my mum for thirty years and became a huge part of our family’s story. Four years ago, he was diagnosed with terminal cancer and passed away within six months. Yesterday would have been his birthday. Maybe that’s why he was already somewhere close to the surface of my thoughts. Maybe that’s why this moment found its way in. Because what I recognised in that interview wasn’t illness or endings. It was presence. Geoff had that too. A way of being where he didn’t need to fill silence with words. Where he didn’t need to dominate a space to belong in it. He could just be there. Solid. Steady. Quietly felt. And over time, I’ve realised how rare that is. Not always expressed in grand speeches. Not always worn on the outside. But deeply rooted. A love for family that didn’t always need to announce itself, but showed up in its own way. Sometimes in small gestures. Sometimes in a look. Sometimes in a hug that lasted longer than expected. It wasn’t always easy to read. But when it came through, it meant everything. Because it wasn’t performed. It was real. There is something both beautiful and difficult about that kind of life. Beautiful because those moments were real when they happened. Difficult because they weren’t always there in the ways we might have hoped for. But the older I get, the less interested I become in perfect narratives. Life isn’t made of perfect stories. It’s made of moments. And sometimes all it takes is watching a stranger being interviewed on television to be reminded of someone you loved, not because they are the same, but because something in the way they carry themselves reaches across time and memory and quietly says, I know this shape. A note of appreciation To Phil Collins, thank you. Thank you for the music, and also for the presence that stirred this reflection. There is something deeply human in the way you speak about your life and family, something that carries both strength and tenderness without needing to choose between them. Your work and your presence have left a mark far beyond charts or awards. They’ve been part of people’s lives in moments of joy, grief, reflection, and everything in between. And in this moment, they helped bring Geoff back into thought with a kind of quiet gentleness. Sending love and appreciation to you and your family. These reflections are becoming more than journal entries. They are evolving into tools for self-expression, reflection, conversation, scalability, and collaboration. If any part of this resonates with you, you’re welcome to follow the journey as Inner Arc continues to grow. IB Creative Inner Arc Series #InnerArc #Presence #Reflection #GriefAndHealing #Family

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