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MODERN HOUSE PLAN AND DESIGNS
MODERN HOUSE PLAN AND DESIGNS
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Region: KE
Sunday 31 May 2026 09:46:53 GMT
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chibukepoziwa
Chibukepo Ziwa :
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2026-06-13 17:42:06
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dj091702
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2026-06-01 21:41:06
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j.e_official
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2026-05-31 11:25:39
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sweetshiinaomi
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2026-05-31 19:52:47
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At 28: career first. Relationships later — when things settle. At 31: the close friends moved cities. I told myself we'd stay in touch. We didn't, really. At 34: I'm too busy to maintain friendships that require real time. People understand. At 37: I don't know how to be close to people the way I used to be. Something calcified. I'm not sure when. At 40: the apartment is beautiful. The weekends are full of plans that don't quite touch anything. At 43: a very busy, very lonely life — and no idea when I stopped knowing the difference. Each of those decisions was reasonable in isolation. No single one was wrong. Together, compounded over fifteen years: a life with no floor. Here's what nobody tells you about the relationships that actually hold you: They take years to build. Not months. They require showing up through inconvenience, failure, and change — repeatedly, before it's urgent, before you need something. You cannot decide at 43 to have what takes fifteen years to grow. You can start. But you can't rush it. The most valuable investment I made in my 30s was not in my career. It was in the three people who knew me well enough to call me on my own patterns. Everything else can be rebuilt. That cannot be rushed. … Loneliness is not sadness. It's a physiological state. Chronic social disconnection runs the immune system, cardiovascular function, and cognitive health differently — and worse. The good news: it's reversible. The bad news: it requires what it always required. Showing up for specific people, consistently, before it's urgent. Not a strategy. Not a resolution. One person. More often. With your actual attention. That's how the interest starts going the other way.
At 28: career first. Relationships later — when things settle. At 31: the close friends moved cities. I told myself we'd stay in touch. We didn't, really. At 34: I'm too busy to maintain friendships that require real time. People understand. At 37: I don't know how to be close to people the way I used to be. Something calcified. I'm not sure when. At 40: the apartment is beautiful. The weekends are full of plans that don't quite touch anything. At 43: a very busy, very lonely life — and no idea when I stopped knowing the difference. Each of those decisions was reasonable in isolation. No single one was wrong. Together, compounded over fifteen years: a life with no floor. Here's what nobody tells you about the relationships that actually hold you: They take years to build. Not months. They require showing up through inconvenience, failure, and change — repeatedly, before it's urgent, before you need something. You cannot decide at 43 to have what takes fifteen years to grow. You can start. But you can't rush it. The most valuable investment I made in my 30s was not in my career. It was in the three people who knew me well enough to call me on my own patterns. Everything else can be rebuilt. That cannot be rushed. … Loneliness is not sadness. It's a physiological state. Chronic social disconnection runs the immune system, cardiovascular function, and cognitive health differently — and worse. The good news: it's reversible. The bad news: it requires what it always required. Showing up for specific people, consistently, before it's urgent. Not a strategy. Not a resolution. One person. More often. With your actual attention. That's how the interest starts going the other way.

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