@ennygold7n7: #duet with @Abeldi #goviral Which kind Wahala promax be this tori Olorun 🤣🤣🤣😂

HRHHOMEOFBEAUTY🇬🇧🇬🇧
HRHHOMEOFBEAUTY🇬🇧🇬🇧
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Wednesday 17 June 2026 13:40:15 GMT
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wolex_9957
Wolexy Moss :
😂😂😂😂😂😂Eko for show
2026-06-18 17:17:26
1
chigozievictor40
+Chigoziem.🖤 :
Ikorodu Junction 😂
2026-06-18 08:59:33
1
tunradun001
tunradun001 :
wahala don jam agbako, you go explain tire😂😂😂😂
2026-06-17 21:28:24
0
fasnad1217
Tripple A worldwide :
😄😄😄😄
2026-06-17 14:15:45
0
asabirichie
Bammy :
😂😂😂
2026-06-17 13:45:50
0
omoteeglam1245
Omotanwa Ajike Gold ❤️❤️💋💋🥰 :
😂😂😂😂😂😂
2026-06-17 16:49:26
0
adunbarin.omooba
Adunbarin OmoOba :
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
2026-06-18 18:36:42
1
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My labs were normal for four years. Every test they ran came back unremarkable. Nothing wrong. Everything within range. I was also sleeping eight hours and waking up tired. Eating well and gaining weight I couldn’t explain. Thinking clearly until noon and then hitting a wall I couldn’t push through. I learned to stop mentioning it. Because the conversation always ended the same way: Maybe stress. Maybe sleep hygiene. Maybe try exercise. Here’s what they were not accounting for: The load I had been carrying for six years — not dramatic stress, sustained stress. The kind with no clear endpoint. Caregiving. A job that never fully turned off. The mental management of everything, constantly. That kind of load — sustained, with no clear endpoint — produces a cortisol pattern that standard panels don’t capture. It dysregulates the system that governs energy, weight, sleep, and immune function in ways that take years to develop and don’t show up in a single morning blood draw. The body wasn’t broken. It had adapted — correctly — to a sustained threat state. The adaptation was the problem. I didn’t need more tests. I needed someone to look at the full picture — including what I had been carrying, and for how long. … What I eventually found a name for: allostatic load. The cumulative physiological cost of sustained stress. Not extreme situations. Sustained moderate stress, over years, without adequate recovery, produces measurable changes: in cortisol curve, in inflammatory markers, in mitochondrial efficiency. Normal labs don’t rule it out. They just don’t look for it. The women who finally got answers weren’t sicker than the ones who didn’t. They were more persistent. They kept asking until someone looked in the right place. Don’t outsource your certainty to a panel that isn’t designed to find what you’re describing. You know something is different. That knowledge is data.
My labs were normal for four years. Every test they ran came back unremarkable. Nothing wrong. Everything within range. I was also sleeping eight hours and waking up tired. Eating well and gaining weight I couldn’t explain. Thinking clearly until noon and then hitting a wall I couldn’t push through. I learned to stop mentioning it. Because the conversation always ended the same way: Maybe stress. Maybe sleep hygiene. Maybe try exercise. Here’s what they were not accounting for: The load I had been carrying for six years — not dramatic stress, sustained stress. The kind with no clear endpoint. Caregiving. A job that never fully turned off. The mental management of everything, constantly. That kind of load — sustained, with no clear endpoint — produces a cortisol pattern that standard panels don’t capture. It dysregulates the system that governs energy, weight, sleep, and immune function in ways that take years to develop and don’t show up in a single morning blood draw. The body wasn’t broken. It had adapted — correctly — to a sustained threat state. The adaptation was the problem. I didn’t need more tests. I needed someone to look at the full picture — including what I had been carrying, and for how long. … What I eventually found a name for: allostatic load. The cumulative physiological cost of sustained stress. Not extreme situations. Sustained moderate stress, over years, without adequate recovery, produces measurable changes: in cortisol curve, in inflammatory markers, in mitochondrial efficiency. Normal labs don’t rule it out. They just don’t look for it. The women who finally got answers weren’t sicker than the ones who didn’t. They were more persistent. They kept asking until someone looked in the right place. Don’t outsource your certainty to a panel that isn’t designed to find what you’re describing. You know something is different. That knowledge is data.

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