@mcllyssaa: I wanna shoutout my mutual @gael for the spam inspo. & making me realize I can have more than one niche on this acc 🙂‍↔️ #foryou #fyp #GymTok #gymfyp

Mcllyssa
Mcllyssa
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Region: US
Wednesday 17 June 2026 16:10:16 GMT
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ccccaaaazzzzz
zacj :
just eat meat gng 💔
2026-06-17 18:23:02
3
withonlyserenity
sereni🍵 :
i eat too much cottage cheese
2026-06-17 19:47:24
1
hhugo.11
hugo :
Protein slop
2026-06-17 18:26:11
57
mejerik
mejerik :
that slop won't do anything btw
2026-06-17 18:12:25
2
rd__10100
RD__10100 :
and eat more meat you can’t just substitute protein with all the high protein slop shi their selling now
2026-06-17 19:03:18
0
demirolegend
Yancarloorozco😎👑 :
19 btw 💔😭😭😭
2026-06-17 16:20:30
1
aronn_08
arron🕷️ :
much i can do about having crohns , and having allergy for basicall all kinds of dairy and egg whites
2026-06-17 18:11:38
0
gosha8485
Gosha :
pudings stuffed with plant based protein what are not even half efficient as eating meat or eggs
2026-06-17 17:16:10
0
mattythewiener
Ⓜ️att🇫🇷🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 :
Protein slop
2026-06-17 17:50:06
2
npmaz
ywg maz :
Why not eat meat ur tweaking
2026-06-17 18:24:09
4
dudekdudkowski67
Dudek🗣️🔥😈 :
2 brick of chese
2026-06-17 19:19:21
1
gymcell01
Toni :
just eat.
2026-06-17 19:19:35
1
gaelgomez_
gael :
love this 💪
2026-06-17 16:13:47
1
blvrq_
blvrq_ :
i cant eat lactose i have ibs 😢😢😢
2026-06-17 16:27:41
1
filox6
Filox :
u da real protein
2026-06-17 18:21:05
0
stefzarfit
stefzarfit :
You'll learn one day
2026-06-17 18:06:02
0
yomykf
toji :
Holy slop
2026-06-17 18:26:00
1
mr.szymek
mr.szymek :
hey mommy
2026-06-17 16:15:31
0
j0nsen
🦅 :
Slop slop slop slop
2026-06-17 17:54:16
2
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Melancholy. It is not quite sadness, but it is not happiness either. It exists somewhere in between—a quiet emotional state where everything feels softer, slower, and more distant. Melancholy doesn't usually come from a specific event. You might be sitting in a perfectly normal room, listening to music, watching the sky darken outside, and suddenly feel it. Nothing is wrong, yet your heart becomes heavy with a feeling you can't fully explain. Unlike sadness, melancholy doesn't always want to be fixed. There is a strange comfort within it. People sometimes stay in it intentionally, listening to nostalgic songs, looking through old photos, or thinking about the past. It hurts a little, but it also feels meaningful. This feeling is often connected to the passage of time. You become aware that moments are disappearing even while you're living them. The present is already becoming the past. Every conversation, every season, every person you meet is temporary in some way. Melancholy is the emotion that notices this. It can make ordinary things feel beautiful. A train moving through the rain. A light left on in a distant apartment window. An empty classroom after everyone has gone home. The sound of footsteps at night. These moments seem insignificant, yet melancholy gives them emotional weight. Many people experience melancholy when they think about who they used to be. They remember old dreams, old fears, old versions of themselves. Sometimes they miss those versions, even if life is better now. Not because the past was perfect, but because it can never be visited again. There is also a loneliness within melancholy, but it is usually gentle rather than painful. It's the feeling of standing still while the world continues moving around you. You watch time pass, knowing you cannot stop it, and for a moment you simply accept that fact. Artists, writers, musicians, and filmmakers often try to capture melancholy because it feels deeply human. It reminds us that beauty and sadness are often connected. The things that matter most are usually the things we cannot keep forever. In the end, melancholy is the feeling of quietly looking at life and understanding that everything is temporary. Not with despair, not with fear, but with a soft awareness that makes every memory, every connection, and every moment feel a little more precious.
Melancholy. It is not quite sadness, but it is not happiness either. It exists somewhere in between—a quiet emotional state where everything feels softer, slower, and more distant. Melancholy doesn't usually come from a specific event. You might be sitting in a perfectly normal room, listening to music, watching the sky darken outside, and suddenly feel it. Nothing is wrong, yet your heart becomes heavy with a feeling you can't fully explain. Unlike sadness, melancholy doesn't always want to be fixed. There is a strange comfort within it. People sometimes stay in it intentionally, listening to nostalgic songs, looking through old photos, or thinking about the past. It hurts a little, but it also feels meaningful. This feeling is often connected to the passage of time. You become aware that moments are disappearing even while you're living them. The present is already becoming the past. Every conversation, every season, every person you meet is temporary in some way. Melancholy is the emotion that notices this. It can make ordinary things feel beautiful. A train moving through the rain. A light left on in a distant apartment window. An empty classroom after everyone has gone home. The sound of footsteps at night. These moments seem insignificant, yet melancholy gives them emotional weight. Many people experience melancholy when they think about who they used to be. They remember old dreams, old fears, old versions of themselves. Sometimes they miss those versions, even if life is better now. Not because the past was perfect, but because it can never be visited again. There is also a loneliness within melancholy, but it is usually gentle rather than painful. It's the feeling of standing still while the world continues moving around you. You watch time pass, knowing you cannot stop it, and for a moment you simply accept that fact. Artists, writers, musicians, and filmmakers often try to capture melancholy because it feels deeply human. It reminds us that beauty and sadness are often connected. The things that matter most are usually the things we cannot keep forever. In the end, melancholy is the feeling of quietly looking at life and understanding that everything is temporary. Not with despair, not with fear, but with a soft awareness that makes every memory, every connection, and every moment feel a little more precious.

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