@iwan.media1: الشيخ حازم الباوي يطالب البرلمان العراقي بالإسراع في تشريع قانون سلم الرواتب وإنصاف الموظفين

ايوان للإنتاج الفني
ايوان للإنتاج الفني
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Sunday 21 June 2026 07:58:14 GMT
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user7e9l418wr6
راحلين :
شريف أبن شريف
2026-06-21 11:47:59
1
h0oo_o
المهندس حمزه صباح :
سلم رواتب بشريطة نظام البصمة في كل دوائر الدولة
2026-06-21 11:50:18
0
user2030828000576
عيسى :
حسين 🤲🤲
2026-06-21 09:59:20
0
.wowf
ابو حيدر الموسوي :
أحسنت
2026-06-21 09:30:08
0
user1556965795452
user1556965795452 :
احسنت
2026-06-21 09:08:23
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thelightsofthecold
طيبه في زمن الغدر :
حفظك الله يا شيخ لسان القراء الناط
2026-06-21 09:28:17
0
jdud939ns82
ميريام :
احسنتم
2026-06-21 09:05:31
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.user4300162988859
user4300162988859 :
احسنت شيخنا
2026-06-21 08:53:18
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usera0izmwwip0
سيد احمد الموسوي :
هذا الشيخ ممول
2026-06-21 09:21:58
0
user79941763980425
user79941763980425 :
احسنت طلعوني تقاعد وقطعه مامتلمين بلعباس وكاعدين بلاجار ورتب 500 ميكفي 10 تيام
2026-06-21 11:51:32
0
ufdgytrg
سجودي ابن السرايا :
وحق كفل زينب اشتغل بل صحه بيس وي شركه تنظيف والله العظيم ينطونه 200 الف حتى مايكفن يخلصن كراوي
2026-06-21 11:57:46
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user2030828000576
عيسى :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-21 09:58:59
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ab_17s3
عباس جاسب :
😍😍
2026-06-21 11:52:34
0
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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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