@royzivmusic: El Choclo #tango #guitartok #guitarsolo #musiciansoftiktok

Roy Ziv
Roy Ziv
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Region: CA
Sunday 14 June 2026 15:13:10 GMT
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rontz99momotarosan
RONTZ99 MOMOTAROSAN :
Original song by Samad
2026-06-14 22:10:08
0
alex_daniel88
LX :
Closed mouth
2026-06-15 00:16:24
3
don.vic540
Don Vic 🎸 :
Yes Sir..... 🔥🎸🎸🎸🔥
2026-06-15 05:05:02
3
kzm81430
KZM :
like it
2026-06-15 06:44:17
0
johndemarchi4gmail.com
john demarchi :
Nice job. Whats the name of that tango?
2026-06-15 01:37:02
0
uzi.mizrahi3
Uzi Mizrahi :
💯💯💯Perfect. Fire.
2026-06-15 06:31:22
0
elladrondeacordes
El Ladrón de Acordes :
impresionante
2026-06-15 06:49:57
0
nima_liku
Nima_Liku🇹🇴 :
Can u plz show a tutorial of how u get that tone?!
2026-06-15 00:32:04
1
wifi.com7
Emtv12 :
karena uda biasa dengar lagu Melayu Deli jadi melodi awal kayak lagu Johor sport club 😁
2026-06-15 06:42:49
0
fiqqry_qaddry74
fiqqry#akustika :
@
2026-06-15 06:17:27
0
frca006
Chris Martin777 :
All good, but harmonics are exceptionnals !
2026-06-14 18:50:40
1
alelucifero1
alelucifero1 :
Sublime🔝
2026-06-15 06:19:11
0
_mubbb
bayuuuuu :
2026-06-14 15:15:46
2
wuezox
wuezox :
incredible
2026-06-15 06:01:23
0
adamushpremier
AdaBubbleGum :
my fking god 😅
2026-06-14 23:47:17
1
imclark_superman
Clark :
Triple H? 😁✌
2026-06-15 06:42:09
0
amadinou
amadinou :
You are so special… Many respects!
2026-06-15 06:05:10
0
jdjskdsjassajsbd
Leo Messi Simatupang🦁 :
on fire 🔥
2026-06-15 06:04:54
0
ricardobosma_09
Ricardo :
play spongebob theme song, but he isn't a sponge anymore...
2026-06-14 16:37:52
7
lucaellegi
Kuma :
Bello😁😉
2026-06-15 05:34:53
0
lugrag_99
LugraG99 :
MaknyusSs.. 🔥🔥🔥
2026-06-15 05:37:05
0
orcaxv
Orca :
hy, can you share the backingtrack?
2026-06-15 06:03:43
0
user8571045151712
user8571045151712 :
Великолепно!!!
2026-06-15 05:35:41
0
hanitcci
saccie :
early!!
2026-06-14 15:14:39
0
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Other Videos

I spent years thinking I was the problem. Not dramatically — I wasn’t walking around certain I was broken. It was subtler than that. I just consistently second-guessed what I remembered. Apologized for reactions before anyone told me they were wrong. Felt something shift in a conversation and then spent the next hour deciding I had misread it. I was very good at overriding my own perception. Here’s what I eventually understood about that: That skill — the overriding — was learned. It developed in a specific environment where my read on what happened was regularly corrected. Not cruelly. Just consistently. “That’s not what I said.” “You’re making that up.” “You always do this.” “You’re being too sensitive.” Said often enough, those corrections don’t land as corrections anymore. They land as evidence. Evidence that the problem with any given situation is probably my perception of it. That’s not a personality type. It’s an adaptation to an environment that made my perception unsafe to trust. The first step out of it is almost always the same: Start trusting the first read again. The one before the self-correction. Write it down before you talk yourself out of it. Talk to someone outside the dynamic. Let your initial reaction exist long enough to examine it before you override it. The perception usually wasn’t the problem. The training to distrust it was. … The physiological cost of chronic self-doubt is measurable. The nervous system under sustained uncertainty about one’s own perception runs in a low-grade threat state — not because anything acute is happening, but because the basic capacity to evaluate the environment has been disrupted. It shows up in cortisol. In sleep. In the exhaustion of NEVER fully trusting what just happened in the room. The body cannot fully rest when the mind doesn’t trust its own signals. Recovery starts when the signals get trusted again — the first read, before the correction. That process is slower than the disruption that caused it. But it moves.
I spent years thinking I was the problem. Not dramatically — I wasn’t walking around certain I was broken. It was subtler than that. I just consistently second-guessed what I remembered. Apologized for reactions before anyone told me they were wrong. Felt something shift in a conversation and then spent the next hour deciding I had misread it. I was very good at overriding my own perception. Here’s what I eventually understood about that: That skill — the overriding — was learned. It developed in a specific environment where my read on what happened was regularly corrected. Not cruelly. Just consistently. “That’s not what I said.” “You’re making that up.” “You always do this.” “You’re being too sensitive.” Said often enough, those corrections don’t land as corrections anymore. They land as evidence. Evidence that the problem with any given situation is probably my perception of it. That’s not a personality type. It’s an adaptation to an environment that made my perception unsafe to trust. The first step out of it is almost always the same: Start trusting the first read again. The one before the self-correction. Write it down before you talk yourself out of it. Talk to someone outside the dynamic. Let your initial reaction exist long enough to examine it before you override it. The perception usually wasn’t the problem. The training to distrust it was. … The physiological cost of chronic self-doubt is measurable. The nervous system under sustained uncertainty about one’s own perception runs in a low-grade threat state — not because anything acute is happening, but because the basic capacity to evaluate the environment has been disrupted. It shows up in cortisol. In sleep. In the exhaustion of NEVER fully trusting what just happened in the room. The body cannot fully rest when the mind doesn’t trust its own signals. Recovery starts when the signals get trusted again — the first read, before the correction. That process is slower than the disruption that caused it. But it moves.

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