@genny1708: What’s a signout without a transition 🙈#viralvideo#graduate#fyp

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Saturday 20 June 2026 09:00:49 GMT
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tolubabyyyyy
𝓨𝓮𝔀𝓪𝓷𝓭𝓮💕 :
Congratulations my love❤️
2026-06-20 14:08:09
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toyo.bby098
꧁ꨄ!𝑻𝒐𝒚𝒐 𝒃𝒃𝒚🥹💐💕!ꨄ꧂ :
Congrats Mama 🥹🎊
2026-06-20 16:44:32
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favourroyal8
Only one royal👸❤️ :
Congratulations my bestie 🫣💃
2026-06-20 09:44:03
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ᥫ᭡ Mariam✨ :
Congratulations ml🙂‍↔️💕
2026-06-22 14:11:30
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Congrats 🎉🍾 ❤️
2026-06-21 21:04:46
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Congratulations
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IFEOLUWA💫💕 :
Congratulations love 💕
2026-06-22 15:56:15
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olasanya06 :
Congratulations 🎈🎉
2026-06-21 17:08:07
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abike_477
abike_477 :
Congratulations sis❤️
2026-06-20 11:15:30
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jaybless_prints
JAYBLESS PRINTS 💻🖨💰 :
🔥🔥🔥
2026-06-20 15:13:43
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Lee Moran didn’t just walk into a meet and squat 1,000 lbs. His 12-week system wasn’t complicated, but it was calculated. The goal wasn’t to lift heavy all the time. It was to arrive at the final week ready to handle the heaviest weight of his life. So the program started lighter than most people would expect. That allowed his body to adapt without burning out early. He trained legs every fourth day — not daily, not randomly — giving enough time to recover while still pushing progression forward. From there, the weight increased steadily. Week by week, the loads climbed: 600 lbs… then 700… then 800+… Until those numbers weren’t shocking anymore — they were familiar. Even the use of equipment was part of the system. He didn’t rely on belts or wraps early in the cycle. Those only came in around the 475–500 lb range. And the suit? Saved for meet day. Nothing was wasted early so that his body and mind could trust that he was ready for the final lift. Everything was timed and followed consistently. This is what made the system work. Simplicity, repetition, consistency. No rushing involved. Just progression, recovery, and execution — aligned toward one moment. Today, fewer people ever reach a true peak because they seek the angle, the variation, the rep range…when the bread and butter is still the same. So it raises a real question: is strength built through complexity or through doing the right things for a long period of time? #getstrong #goliathliftzz #trainhardorgohome #oldschoolstrength #shutupandsquat
Lee Moran didn’t just walk into a meet and squat 1,000 lbs. His 12-week system wasn’t complicated, but it was calculated. The goal wasn’t to lift heavy all the time. It was to arrive at the final week ready to handle the heaviest weight of his life. So the program started lighter than most people would expect. That allowed his body to adapt without burning out early. He trained legs every fourth day — not daily, not randomly — giving enough time to recover while still pushing progression forward. From there, the weight increased steadily. Week by week, the loads climbed: 600 lbs… then 700… then 800+… Until those numbers weren’t shocking anymore — they were familiar. Even the use of equipment was part of the system. He didn’t rely on belts or wraps early in the cycle. Those only came in around the 475–500 lb range. And the suit? Saved for meet day. Nothing was wasted early so that his body and mind could trust that he was ready for the final lift. Everything was timed and followed consistently. This is what made the system work. Simplicity, repetition, consistency. No rushing involved. Just progression, recovery, and execution — aligned toward one moment. Today, fewer people ever reach a true peak because they seek the angle, the variation, the rep range…when the bread and butter is still the same. So it raises a real question: is strength built through complexity or through doing the right things for a long period of time? #getstrong #goliathliftzz #trainhardorgohome #oldschoolstrength #shutupandsquat

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