@chewygun_: pake khiban lozy bisa secantik ini🥹💗

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Friday 26 June 2026 08:04:52 GMT
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indramarwanto1
indramarwanto881 :
assalamualaikum
2026-06-26 08:28:44
0
rptxx_
aminnzwn :
mauk
2026-06-26 08:31:29
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thisisdeen13
UDAPISH :
MashaAllah
2026-06-26 08:06:26
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duapuluhenammei_
matcaholic💚 :
tutor hijabnya kak...😍
2026-06-26 09:01:52
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abangjagoars
user9112181039920 :
🥰🥰
2026-06-26 12:28:35
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everydoy12
Everydoy :
😍😍😍
2026-06-26 09:11:37
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asephidayat1463
hidayat :
subhanallah pesona wanita cantik di chat hari ini di bls klo ingat
2026-06-26 09:12:01
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Sometimes people treat relationships as if they are the center of life. As if happiness begins with another person and ends the moment that person leaves. As if love is the answer to every question and the cure for every wound. And maybe that’s why so many people suffer when relationships fall apart. Not because they lost someone. Because they built their entire world around that someone. There is a strange tendency to place relationships on a pedestal. To believe that finding “the right person” will suddenly make everything feel complete. That loneliness will disappear. That insecurities will fade. That life will finally make sense. But people are not meant to carry that responsibility. No one can become another person’s entire reason for happiness. It’s too heavy. Too much to ask. And eventually, the weight begins to crush both people. Maybe that’s why some relationships become unhealthy. Not because there is no love. Because there is too much expectation. One person becomes a source of purpose, comfort, validation, security, and identity all at once. And when that person disappoints you—as all humans eventually do—it feels like the world itself is collapsing. The truth is that love is important. Beautiful, even. But it is not everything. There are friendships. Dreams. Family. Passions. Places you haven’t seen yet. Versions of yourself you haven’t met yet. A relationship can enrich your life, but it should not become your entire life. Because when someone becomes your whole world, you begin losing yourself. Your mood depends on them. Your self-worth depends on them. Your future depends on them. And suddenly you’re no longer loving them freely. You’re clinging to them out of fear. Fear of losing not just a person, but everything you built around them. Perhaps that’s what many people misunderstand. Love is not supposed to complete you. You were already complete before it arrived. Love is supposed to accompany you. To walk beside your life, not replace it. To add warmth, not become the only source of light. And maybe that’s why some heartbreaks feel like the end of the world. Because people weren’t only grieving a relationship. They were grieving the version of life they believed could not exist without it. Yet life continues. It always does. Painfully at first. Then quietly. Then almost normally. Until one day you realize something important: the relationship was a chapter. A meaningful one. A beautiful one, perhaps. But never the entire book. And maybe the healthiest kind of love is the one that allows two people to remain whole. Not two halves desperately trying to become one. Just two complete people choosing, every day, to share a part of their lives with each other.
Sometimes people treat relationships as if they are the center of life. As if happiness begins with another person and ends the moment that person leaves. As if love is the answer to every question and the cure for every wound. And maybe that’s why so many people suffer when relationships fall apart. Not because they lost someone. Because they built their entire world around that someone. There is a strange tendency to place relationships on a pedestal. To believe that finding “the right person” will suddenly make everything feel complete. That loneliness will disappear. That insecurities will fade. That life will finally make sense. But people are not meant to carry that responsibility. No one can become another person’s entire reason for happiness. It’s too heavy. Too much to ask. And eventually, the weight begins to crush both people. Maybe that’s why some relationships become unhealthy. Not because there is no love. Because there is too much expectation. One person becomes a source of purpose, comfort, validation, security, and identity all at once. And when that person disappoints you—as all humans eventually do—it feels like the world itself is collapsing. The truth is that love is important. Beautiful, even. But it is not everything. There are friendships. Dreams. Family. Passions. Places you haven’t seen yet. Versions of yourself you haven’t met yet. A relationship can enrich your life, but it should not become your entire life. Because when someone becomes your whole world, you begin losing yourself. Your mood depends on them. Your self-worth depends on them. Your future depends on them. And suddenly you’re no longer loving them freely. You’re clinging to them out of fear. Fear of losing not just a person, but everything you built around them. Perhaps that’s what many people misunderstand. Love is not supposed to complete you. You were already complete before it arrived. Love is supposed to accompany you. To walk beside your life, not replace it. To add warmth, not become the only source of light. And maybe that’s why some heartbreaks feel like the end of the world. Because people weren’t only grieving a relationship. They were grieving the version of life they believed could not exist without it. Yet life continues. It always does. Painfully at first. Then quietly. Then almost normally. Until one day you realize something important: the relationship was a chapter. A meaningful one. A beautiful one, perhaps. But never the entire book. And maybe the healthiest kind of love is the one that allows two people to remain whole. Not two halves desperately trying to become one. Just two complete people choosing, every day, to share a part of their lives with each other.

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