@t4wjurt: thôi tin đi đi, em hận tin suốt đời này luôn. #martin #cortis #fakesub #pov id: rosie.sgf_

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Monday 04 May 2026 05:09:15 GMT
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nadiaapiee
nadiaapiee :
it’s fake btw
2026-05-11 12:09:35
882
kstuv.m0rena
Kstuv.feb6 :
That’s so sad, I wish idols/trainees had more freedom. That’s just sad bro
2026-05-11 08:15:54
1527
alisy553
ᡣ₊˚Alisy🧸ೀ⋆ :
Girl, you made me cry and then I realized it was fake
2026-05-11 15:13:12
88
kerenjiaying.song
☆꒰ঌ𝒥𝓊𝒥𝓊𐙚໒꒱☆ :
bro I was about to feel sad but I CANNOT take this song seriously😭
2026-05-11 10:50:59
187
nqwjn_
bạn gái mới của mẹ bạn. :
lậy bố,lúc đầu t tưởng tht
2026-05-04 09:26:59
281
ys.iaallt
Sao kim của Bống :
Hạn chế nha b nhét chữ hoài cũng kh nên 😅
2026-05-04 14:54:40
392
nawel_hms
nawel 🛷 :
Almost believed it
2026-05-11 10:55:11
34
natran_31
nu9 fim set :
tôi là tình đầu của ảnh
2026-05-05 13:30:04
0
_kawalll_
_kawalll_ :
Guys it’s fake 😭
2026-05-19 16:26:18
10
twiz.trg_
ngọc kiều :
toy có bật phụ đề đấy nhé 💔🥰
2026-05-04 12:30:37
27
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Walk a seasoned detective into a room and they don't look where you look. You scan for the familiar — faces, the food, your own phone. They scan for the single thing that doesn't belong. The first thing they build isn't suspicion. It's a baseline. What is normal for this room, this person, this exact moment? You can't spot what's off until you know the shape of what's true. Only then do the small things start to glow. The smile that arrives half a second late. The hands that go still while the mouth keeps moving. The corner of the room that's too tidy. The one obvious thing that nobody will name. Ordinary people react to content — the words being spoken. Trained ones track congruence — whether the words, the face, and the body are all telling the same story at the same time. When those three split apart, that's the signal. The mouth says
Walk a seasoned detective into a room and they don't look where you look. You scan for the familiar — faces, the food, your own phone. They scan for the single thing that doesn't belong. The first thing they build isn't suspicion. It's a baseline. What is normal for this room, this person, this exact moment? You can't spot what's off until you know the shape of what's true. Only then do the small things start to glow. The smile that arrives half a second late. The hands that go still while the mouth keeps moving. The corner of the room that's too tidy. The one obvious thing that nobody will name. Ordinary people react to content — the words being spoken. Trained ones track congruence — whether the words, the face, and the body are all telling the same story at the same time. When those three split apart, that's the signal. The mouth says "I'm fine" while the jaw locks and the foot points at the door. Most people hear only the words. Detectives watch the vote, and the body always outvotes the sentence. And the part that's yours to keep: you already feel this. That quiet "something's off" that lands in your gut and that you immediately talk yourself out of, so you can stay polite. That feeling is the scan running. You just keep overriding it. … So the one detail they catch was never some hidden, trainable clue. It's a mismatch — the gap between what a person says and what their body is doing while they say it. You can read it at every dinner, every meeting, every first date you'll ever sit through. It was never special eyesight or a badge on a belt. It's permission — to trust the off feeling instead of explaining it into silence to be nice. Your gut already reads the whole room the second you walk in. The only skill left to build is to stop talking it out of what it noticed. Next conversation, hunt for one mismatch between the words and the body. You'll catch it inside a minute. Then come tell me exactly what you saw.

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