@2018linhdan: #makeupdepbinhduong #MakeupTruongThiThanh

Trương Thị Thanh
Trương Thị Thanh
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Friday 03 July 2026 09:02:01 GMT
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spa.trung.hoa.th
Vi đang học Make Up tại TDM :
Xinh xỉu cô ơi
2026-07-03 16:04:55
0
ho.phm.makeup
Hoà Phạm makeup :
Em Mê cô quá ạ😘😘😘
2026-07-03 12:31:40
0
vananhbridal
Nguyễn Vân Anh Makeup :
Tròi oi đẹp đuyênnn
2026-07-03 12:00:43
0
nguyenannahairstylist
Nguyễn Anna :
Xinh quá cô iu ơi♥️
2026-07-03 11:49:23
0
cngnguyn831
MinhCương Makeup :
Em xin ifo mi trên với ạ❤️
2026-07-03 11:12:49
0
doantrangmakeupquan8hcm
Doantrangmakeup :
đẹp quá cô ơi
2026-07-03 10:11:00
0
maivo.makeup
MaiVo.Makeup :
Mê quá cô
2026-07-03 09:17:06
0
thtruc092204
Thanh Trúc :
Mi trên cho em xin in4 voi ạ
2026-07-03 09:09:19
0
lolicute992
lolicute❤️❤️‍🔥💞💖 :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-07-03 09:45:43
0
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Hatred is a complex emotional and neurological response shaped by biology, psychology, personal experiences, and the environment. Scientifically, it is not a single emotion but a combination of anger, fear, disgust, and persistent negative feelings toward a person, group, idea, or object. It likely evolved as a survival mechanism, helping humans recognize and respond to perceived threats. When the brain detects danger or injustice, the amygdala becomes active, while stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol prepare the body to react. If these responses occur repeatedly, temporary anger can gradually develop into long-lasting hatred. The prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for reasoning and self-control, normally regulates emotional reactions. However, intense or chronic emotions can reduce its influence, allowing hatred to persist even when evidence challenges those beliefs. The hippocampus also contributes by storing emotionally significant memories. Repeated experiences of fear, betrayal, violence, or humiliation strengthen neural connections associated with hostility, making hateful responses more automatic over time. Psychological processes such as stereotyping, confirmation bias, and social learning also contribute to hatred. People naturally categorize information, but this can lead to prejudice and unfair generalizations. Family, culture, media, and online communities can reinforce these beliefs, especially when individuals are repeatedly exposed to one-sided or emotionally charged information. Chronic hatred affects both the mind and body. It keeps the stress response activated, increasing inflammation and raising the risk of high blood pressure, heart disease, anxiety, depression, and weakened immune function. Brain imaging studies have also shown that hatred activates areas involved in emotional processing and goal-directed behavior, helping explain why it can remain strong for many years. Despite its intensity, hatred is not permanent. Because of neuroplasticity, the brain can change throughout life. Education, empathy, critical thinking, emotional regulation, and positive experiences can gradually weaken hostile thought patterns and strengthen healthier emotional responses. From a scientific perspective, hatred is a dynamic process influenced by the brain, the body, experiences, and the surrounding environment rather than an unchangeable state. #hate #tcc #truecrimecommunity #fyp #humanity
Hatred is a complex emotional and neurological response shaped by biology, psychology, personal experiences, and the environment. Scientifically, it is not a single emotion but a combination of anger, fear, disgust, and persistent negative feelings toward a person, group, idea, or object. It likely evolved as a survival mechanism, helping humans recognize and respond to perceived threats. When the brain detects danger or injustice, the amygdala becomes active, while stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol prepare the body to react. If these responses occur repeatedly, temporary anger can gradually develop into long-lasting hatred. The prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for reasoning and self-control, normally regulates emotional reactions. However, intense or chronic emotions can reduce its influence, allowing hatred to persist even when evidence challenges those beliefs. The hippocampus also contributes by storing emotionally significant memories. Repeated experiences of fear, betrayal, violence, or humiliation strengthen neural connections associated with hostility, making hateful responses more automatic over time. Psychological processes such as stereotyping, confirmation bias, and social learning also contribute to hatred. People naturally categorize information, but this can lead to prejudice and unfair generalizations. Family, culture, media, and online communities can reinforce these beliefs, especially when individuals are repeatedly exposed to one-sided or emotionally charged information. Chronic hatred affects both the mind and body. It keeps the stress response activated, increasing inflammation and raising the risk of high blood pressure, heart disease, anxiety, depression, and weakened immune function. Brain imaging studies have also shown that hatred activates areas involved in emotional processing and goal-directed behavior, helping explain why it can remain strong for many years. Despite its intensity, hatred is not permanent. Because of neuroplasticity, the brain can change throughout life. Education, empathy, critical thinking, emotional regulation, and positive experiences can gradually weaken hostile thought patterns and strengthen healthier emotional responses. From a scientific perspective, hatred is a dynamic process influenced by the brain, the body, experiences, and the surrounding environment rather than an unchangeable state. #hate #tcc #truecrimecommunity #fyp #humanity

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