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@celebrityencounte: #film #usa #tiktok #fyp
celebrityencounte
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Region: US
Saturday 09 May 2026 05:07:01 GMT
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No Watermark .mp4 (
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Music .mp3
Comments
Nicholas Lewis :
2026-05-11 23:09:55
0
Rumblin22 :
😳😳😳
2026-06-11 07:21:19
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rodneyrogers19 :
😁😁😁
2026-05-11 03:51:17
0
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1. Rejection Isn’t Failure By 21, I’d been rejected from med school twice, and I remember feeling completely untethered. Everything I’d planned my future around suddenly felt uncertain, and I kept thinking that if this didn’t work out, then maybe I wasn’t good enough. What I didn’t realise then is that rejection doesn’t mean you’re incapable — it often just means that path isn’t meant to be yours. Not knowing what comes next is uncomfortable, but it’s also where you start separating who you are from the one plan you thought defined you. 2. Some Risks Don’t Work Out I spent a lot of money trying to make med school happen — applications, prep, all of it — and I treated it like an investment that had to pay off. When it didn’t, it felt like I’d failed twice: once by being rejected, and again by “wasting” money chasing it. With time, I realised not every risk is meant to reward you financially. Some risks give you clarity instead. Letting go after investing so much wasn’t quitting — it was choosing not to keep spending time, money, and energy on something that wasn’t moving forward. 3. Your Career Doesn’t Have to Look Perfect The ironic part is that I’m glad it didn’t work out. I ended up in a better job for work-life balance, with the freedom to pursue side hustles at the same time — something I never pictured when I was fixated on one career path. I also learned that once you’re out of school, work experience matters far more than grades ever did. Degrees might open doors, but it’s real-world skills, flexibility, and experience that help you change roles and build a career that actually fits your life. Follow @adamarzq for more 🔍
Ne konserdi be🤩 #hatay #wegh #weghrumi
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