@83marwa: #fyp #fypage #اكسبلورexplore

💫marwa💫
💫marwa💫
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Region: BH
Wednesday 10 June 2026 11:57:45 GMT
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modeking66
modeking66 :
الله أكبر
2026-06-10 13:44:16
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its.momo369
its.momo369 :
الشكر لله
2026-06-10 13:12:33
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nasrr1111
naser :
استغفر الله العظيم واتوب اليه …،.
2026-06-10 13:30:11
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modeking66
modeking66 :
الحمد الله رب العالمين
2026-06-10 13:44:12
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modeking66
modeking66 :
سبحان الله العظيم واتوب اليه
2026-06-10 13:44:06
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modeking66
modeking66 :
استغفر الله العظيم واتوب اليه
2026-06-10 13:44:00
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azdineerre
عزالدين 🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦 :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-10 14:00:17
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saif.ullah3489
Saif Ullah :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-10 12:00:31
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halimatouti
Halima touti :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-10 13:43:15
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zubair.khan5414
Zubair Khan :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-10 13:20:31
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gullbax28
gulbax karim :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-10 12:00:36
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modeking66
modeking66 :
لا اله الا الله محمد رسول الله علي والي الله واولاد المعصومين حجه الله
2026-06-10 13:44:23
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modeking66
modeking66 :
لا حول ولا قوة الا باالله العلي العظيم
2026-06-10 13:44:30
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If you’re dating a married man, here’s what usually plays out, even if no one wants to admit it: 1. You’re second by default He has a wife, home, finances, and often kids that come first. Holidays, weekends, emergencies, and major life events will go to them. You get the leftover time. 2. Secrecy becomes your normal: You can’t post about him, introduce him to friends/family openly, or have a normal relationship trajectory. That secrecy often feels exciting at first, then isolating. 3. His promises are tied to a life he hasn’t left: “I’ll leave her” is common. Sometimes it’s true, often it’s said to keep you around. Look at actions over 6-12 months, not words. If nothing changes, nothing changes. 4. You carry most of the emotional risk: If he gets caught, you’re the one blamed publicly. If he chooses his marriage, you’re the one left processing it alone. He has a built-in fallback. 5. Trust issues get baked in: If he’s cheating with you, there’s a track record of lying and compartmentalising. It’s hard to build a relationship on that foundation and feel secure later. 6. Your standards quietly drop: Most people in this situation start accepting less than they’d accept from a single guy - less time, less commitment, less respect - because “at least I have something.” 7. It delays other opportunities: While you’re waiting, you’re not fully available for someone who can choose you openly. Time passes, and you’re still in the same holding pattern. The exception: A small number of these situations end with divorce and a real relationship. But statistically, most don’t. The pattern is usually “affair” not “transition to marriage.” If you’re in this, the honest question is: “Would I be okay if this never changed for the next 2 years?” If the answer is no, you’ve got your answer. #datingadvice #relationshipadvice #womenempowerment #fvp #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp
If you’re dating a married man, here’s what usually plays out, even if no one wants to admit it: 1. You’re second by default He has a wife, home, finances, and often kids that come first. Holidays, weekends, emergencies, and major life events will go to them. You get the leftover time. 2. Secrecy becomes your normal: You can’t post about him, introduce him to friends/family openly, or have a normal relationship trajectory. That secrecy often feels exciting at first, then isolating. 3. His promises are tied to a life he hasn’t left: “I’ll leave her” is common. Sometimes it’s true, often it’s said to keep you around. Look at actions over 6-12 months, not words. If nothing changes, nothing changes. 4. You carry most of the emotional risk: If he gets caught, you’re the one blamed publicly. If he chooses his marriage, you’re the one left processing it alone. He has a built-in fallback. 5. Trust issues get baked in: If he’s cheating with you, there’s a track record of lying and compartmentalising. It’s hard to build a relationship on that foundation and feel secure later. 6. Your standards quietly drop: Most people in this situation start accepting less than they’d accept from a single guy - less time, less commitment, less respect - because “at least I have something.” 7. It delays other opportunities: While you’re waiting, you’re not fully available for someone who can choose you openly. Time passes, and you’re still in the same holding pattern. The exception: A small number of these situations end with divorce and a real relationship. But statistically, most don’t. The pattern is usually “affair” not “transition to marriage.” If you’re in this, the honest question is: “Would I be okay if this never changed for the next 2 years?” If the answer is no, you’ve got your answer. #datingadvice #relationshipadvice #womenempowerment #fvp #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp

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