@32_zotelo: Odvio #rogar#parati#greenscreen #mujeres#foryoupage❤️❤️

𝓔𝓼𝓽𝓮𝓫𝓪𝓷⚡️
𝓔𝓼𝓽𝓮𝓫𝓪𝓷⚡️
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Region: AR
Wednesday 08 July 2026 01:29:14 GMT
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efercon_2309
Emily :
El mio lo compartio😍😍😍
2026-07-11 22:22:26
2
sinnombredoble11
𝓙𝓾𝓵𝓲🫠🖤 :
Me lo mandó el🙈💘
2026-07-10 20:27:38
1
laadellffi
delf¡na :
donde consigo uno asi?
2026-07-11 05:13:52
1
eugenianoya
Bastian te amo 🩵 :
uno así por favor 🤞🏻🤞🏻
2026-07-10 00:33:15
4
kiara.monsee
Te Amo Valentín 🤍 :
2026-07-11 18:39:19
0
zoraya.reyes4
Zoe♡♡ :
Lo compartido mi esposooo😍😍
2026-07-11 21:22:24
0
ciro._.0321
Cír0_🧌🚬 :
2026-07-11 06:31:09
0
el..joel
el..joel :
Cuando tenga a quien rogarle así vuelvo,subo la ft y el video
2026-07-10 09:24:38
1
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Maybe grief doesn’t get smaller. Maybe you just get bigger. Bigger than the pain. Bigger than the memories. Bigger than the moments that still catch you off guard years later. You don’t get there by forgetting. You get there by continuing to live. One of the hardest parts of grief is the quiet fear that if it still hurts, you must be doing it wrong. That by now you should be “further along.” That you should have “moved on.” That the waves shouldn’t still be able to knock the wind out of you. But that’s not how grief works. The pain of losing someone, or something, that mattered tends to stay, because the love stays too. So healing isn’t always about feeling less. Often it’s about building more around the loss. More life. More connection. More meaning. More moments that get to exist right alongside the grief. This reel brings together two ideas about grief that have stayed with me. The first is the “Ball in a Box” metaphor, which Lauren Herschel shared after her mum died, passing on something a doctor had told her. In that version, the grief ball slowly shrinks and hits the pain button less often over time. The second is Lois Tonkin’s “Growing Around Grief” model, which offers something a little different. Maybe the grief doesn’t shrink at all. Maybe your life just grows around it, slowly making more room for joy, connection and meaning to live alongside the loss. This is my attempt to hold both of those beautiful ideas at once. ❤️ If you’re looking for more practical psychology tools for navigating life’s big feelings, my Pocket Psychologist Mini Course is available via the link in my bio.
Maybe grief doesn’t get smaller. Maybe you just get bigger. Bigger than the pain. Bigger than the memories. Bigger than the moments that still catch you off guard years later. You don’t get there by forgetting. You get there by continuing to live. One of the hardest parts of grief is the quiet fear that if it still hurts, you must be doing it wrong. That by now you should be “further along.” That you should have “moved on.” That the waves shouldn’t still be able to knock the wind out of you. But that’s not how grief works. The pain of losing someone, or something, that mattered tends to stay, because the love stays too. So healing isn’t always about feeling less. Often it’s about building more around the loss. More life. More connection. More meaning. More moments that get to exist right alongside the grief. This reel brings together two ideas about grief that have stayed with me. The first is the “Ball in a Box” metaphor, which Lauren Herschel shared after her mum died, passing on something a doctor had told her. In that version, the grief ball slowly shrinks and hits the pain button less often over time. The second is Lois Tonkin’s “Growing Around Grief” model, which offers something a little different. Maybe the grief doesn’t shrink at all. Maybe your life just grows around it, slowly making more room for joy, connection and meaning to live alongside the loss. This is my attempt to hold both of those beautiful ideas at once. ❤️ If you’re looking for more practical psychology tools for navigating life’s big feelings, my Pocket Psychologist Mini Course is available via the link in my bio.

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