@rina_stay.hw: Good morning от Сыночки😅🥰 Думаю в его случае много слов не обязательно, с настолько фантастическим голосом😍 #skz#straykids#seungmin#seungminstraykids#будильник

rina_stay.hw
rina_stay.hw
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Saturday 13 June 2026 02:25:41 GMT
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dasastay25
ТГК: Dasastay💖 :
жду с Минхооо
2026-06-13 23:58:39
6
raya73183
Кейтлин Маккензи🦊 :
можно Чанбина?
2026-06-13 10:36:13
3
yuyuyuooo92
хан не с мандаринами :
а ещё будет с кемто
2026-06-13 07:45:10
2
stefanidakotik
Valiaᵃ⁴`¹⁴³ :
не могу отправлять в коммы стикеры, только в ЛС, но знай это круто получилось 🎀
2026-06-13 05:09:45
4
rina_stay.hw
rina_stay.hw :
Песня на фоне: Seungmin- Hold on
2026-06-13 02:32:28
4
reallass_s
tata :
💖💖💖
2026-06-13 03:01:10
2
amanda_tsulaia142312
✨ami_queen✨ :
2026-06-13 09:46:26
1
xci.saltusha
Xci.Saltysha🌸 :
2026-06-13 18:23:41
1
i719054
. :
описание вообще синочка
2026-06-15 06:56:36
1
jazv_a
Екатерина Язвыч :
емаё😳
2026-06-13 16:40:33
0
stefanidakotik
Valiaᵃ⁴`¹⁴³ :
спасибо 🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-13 05:09:12
2
...1992..1403.3
Анастасия :
😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-13 22:47:21
0
skz.ukraine1
Skz Ukraine 🇺🇦 :
♥️♥️♥️
2026-06-14 14:24:39
1
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Phoenix The Immortal Bird #phoenix #ancientmythology #worldmythology #mythologyexplained #ancientmyths The Phoenix is one of the most universal mythological creatures in human history — and one of the most mysterious, precisely because no single culture can claim it as their own. Every major ancient civilization described it independently, with striking similarities that have never been fully explained. In Ancient Egypt, it appeared as the Bennu bird — a sacred heron associated with the sun god Ra and the primordial mound of creation. The Bennu was said to have been the first living thing to cry out at the moment of creation, its call setting time itself in motion. It was associated with the city of Heliopolis and depicted perched atop the sacred Benben stone. In ancient Greek tradition, the historian Herodotus documented the Phoenix in the 5th century BC, describing it as a rare bird from Arabia that appeared in Egypt only once every 500 years, carrying the body of its dead father wrapped in myrrh to bury at the temple of the sun. The Roman writer Pliny the Elder described its plumage as gold and crimson, its size comparable to an eagle. In Persian mythology it appeared as the Simurgh — an ancient bird so old it had witnessed the destruction of the world three times. In Chinese tradition the Fenghuang represented balance, immortality and the union of heaven and earth. In Arabian mythology the Anqa was a magnificent bird that grew so powerful it became a danger and was either destroyed or retreated beyond human reach. Across all traditions the core remains identical — a singular immortal bird, associated with the sun, fire, death and rebirth, that cannot truly die. Ancient texts from multiple civilizations describe it as the oldest living thing in existence. The question that has never been answered is why every civilization, with no contact between them, described the same creature.
Phoenix The Immortal Bird #phoenix #ancientmythology #worldmythology #mythologyexplained #ancientmyths The Phoenix is one of the most universal mythological creatures in human history — and one of the most mysterious, precisely because no single culture can claim it as their own. Every major ancient civilization described it independently, with striking similarities that have never been fully explained. In Ancient Egypt, it appeared as the Bennu bird — a sacred heron associated with the sun god Ra and the primordial mound of creation. The Bennu was said to have been the first living thing to cry out at the moment of creation, its call setting time itself in motion. It was associated with the city of Heliopolis and depicted perched atop the sacred Benben stone. In ancient Greek tradition, the historian Herodotus documented the Phoenix in the 5th century BC, describing it as a rare bird from Arabia that appeared in Egypt only once every 500 years, carrying the body of its dead father wrapped in myrrh to bury at the temple of the sun. The Roman writer Pliny the Elder described its plumage as gold and crimson, its size comparable to an eagle. In Persian mythology it appeared as the Simurgh — an ancient bird so old it had witnessed the destruction of the world three times. In Chinese tradition the Fenghuang represented balance, immortality and the union of heaven and earth. In Arabian mythology the Anqa was a magnificent bird that grew so powerful it became a danger and was either destroyed or retreated beyond human reach. Across all traditions the core remains identical — a singular immortal bird, associated with the sun, fire, death and rebirth, that cannot truly die. Ancient texts from multiple civilizations describe it as the oldest living thing in existence. The question that has never been answered is why every civilization, with no contact between them, described the same creature.

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