@uugantsar: #follow_oo_darcixaa #typppppp #foryou #brazil🇧🇷 #engenes

Pyllo <3 jake
Pyllo <3 jake
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Wednesday 08 July 2026 16:43:38 GMT
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niko805503
. :
jungwon yu gd heltsiin hleed uguuch pls
2026-07-10 08:55:54
7
asa02450
urka :
ed nart lee heeseung gxr ewgvi blsn bh
2026-07-11 06:25:12
2
munkhjinbaatarsur
Munxjin_gdymo :
gxde Jungwon eniig xvseq bx
2026-07-09 15:21:18
147
zolzaya426
ZolZayA :
i love you brazil engenes😁
2026-07-11 01:00:22
0
mongol_guy0
Mongol_guy :
баярлалаа
2026-07-10 08:21:31
0
amber_55mio0
amber_55mio0 :
Tiishdee 💘
2026-07-09 11:01:25
2
angiinchinhuuhd
¿~°☆🎼MæřÆļ🐚☆°~¿ :
ard n verity bn :)
2026-07-10 08:34:36
1
sunghoon.247
𝑉𝐴𝑉𝐴 💋🌷 :
Solongos engene vvd😢
2026-07-09 08:36:01
8
whoistinaq
￴￴￴￴ ￴￴￴￴ ￴￴￴￴￴￴￴￴￴Mina :
Heesung💔
2026-07-10 07:34:35
2
yooku4556
🇲🇳🕷️†★Alex★†🎨🇲🇳 :
ovooshdee Brazil engene nar
2026-07-09 12:55:18
9
b_dtz7
Ñœb_êdítz :
yes
2026-07-09 05:30:29
1
miko0519_7
🩷🍡Engene🍡🩷 :
mngl yugara dutdi gshhh
2026-07-10 02:05:02
2
oyutsatsralgdy
Arixchin gants haraa ogooch 😜 :
brazil engene jurh222
2026-07-10 01:43:30
1
tsegi_diva
Tseku_gdy :
Copy hiij bolohu
2026-07-10 04:34:38
1
ucrlucrlll11
￴￴ ￴￴￴ ￴￴ ￴￴ ￴￴￴ ￴￴ ￴￴￴ ￴￴￴￴￴ :
ot6
2026-07-10 17:25:19
1
mynameisu_
𝓥𝓪𝓿𝓪𝓝𝓲𝓷𝓲.ೀ :
naacin omno jiliin togllt bnshdd ghde ot7 hiiseeee💕💕
2026-07-09 07:35:50
2
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FREKANSZOUK • GORDON HENDERSON d’EXILE ONE parle de  « Fraîche » | Au tournant des années 70 une révolution se met en marche depuis la ville du Gosier en Guadeloupe. À sa tête, Gordon Henderson, un architecte sonore qui refuse les limites imposées. Après ses débuts avec Les Vikings de la Guadeloupe il crée Exile One avec des amis dominiquais. En injectant la tension du Funk, du Blues et du Rock dans le terreau créole, il scelle le destin du Cadence-Lypso. Au cœur de cette discographie monumentale trône « Fraîche », un titre qui porte son nom comme une promesse tenue. Ce n’est plus seulement de la musique, c’est une onde de choc qui, partie de l’archipel, déferle sur l’Afrique et l’Europe. Premier groupe antillais à décrocher l’or chez Barclay, Exile One prouve alors que le génie n'a pas de frontières. Ce qui fascine chez Henderson, c’est cette rigueur de métronome alliée à une intuition d’éclaireur. Du parcours international de ce pionnier, on retient une élégance rare, une manière d’habiter la scène mondiale sans jamais sacrifier l’âme du pays et une simplicité à toute épreuve de l’homme. Mais le véritable prodige reste la longévité. Là où les modes se fanent, Exile One demeure. Cinquante ans de carrière n'ont en rien émoussé la puissance de ce concept qui continue de défier le temps. Exile One n'appartient pas au passé ; c'est une vibration qui, un demi-siècle plus tard, conserve une modernité absolument... fraîche. #exileone #gordonhenderson #fraiche @GORDON HENDERSON
FREKANSZOUK • GORDON HENDERSON d’EXILE ONE parle de « Fraîche » | Au tournant des années 70 une révolution se met en marche depuis la ville du Gosier en Guadeloupe. À sa tête, Gordon Henderson, un architecte sonore qui refuse les limites imposées. Après ses débuts avec Les Vikings de la Guadeloupe il crée Exile One avec des amis dominiquais. En injectant la tension du Funk, du Blues et du Rock dans le terreau créole, il scelle le destin du Cadence-Lypso. Au cœur de cette discographie monumentale trône « Fraîche », un titre qui porte son nom comme une promesse tenue. Ce n’est plus seulement de la musique, c’est une onde de choc qui, partie de l’archipel, déferle sur l’Afrique et l’Europe. Premier groupe antillais à décrocher l’or chez Barclay, Exile One prouve alors que le génie n'a pas de frontières. Ce qui fascine chez Henderson, c’est cette rigueur de métronome alliée à une intuition d’éclaireur. Du parcours international de ce pionnier, on retient une élégance rare, une manière d’habiter la scène mondiale sans jamais sacrifier l’âme du pays et une simplicité à toute épreuve de l’homme. Mais le véritable prodige reste la longévité. Là où les modes se fanent, Exile One demeure. Cinquante ans de carrière n'ont en rien émoussé la puissance de ce concept qui continue de défier le temps. Exile One n'appartient pas au passé ; c'est une vibration qui, un demi-siècle plus tard, conserve une modernité absolument... fraîche. #exileone #gordonhenderson #fraiche @GORDON HENDERSON
💔 No one warned me that giving birth wouldn’t end when I heard my baby cry. I thought the worst part was over. Hours of contractions. Pain that felt like it was splitting me in two. Pushing until my body had nothing left to give. And then… I heard my baby cry. That sound changed everything. Relief. Tears. Shaking. Exhausted. Empty. Alive. I remember thinking: “It’s over. I made it.” But it wasn’t over. What happened next was a kind of pain almost no one talks about. While everyone gathered around my baby—and of course they did, because my baby was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen—I was still lying there. Exposed. Shaking. Bleeding. Completely vulnerable. Then the stitching began. I felt the first stitch like a bolt of lightning through my body. It wasn’t the pain of a contraction. It wasn’t the pressure of pushing. It was sharp. Deep. Raw. As though my body were being torn open all over again—except this time, everyone expected me to stay quiet. I told them I could feel it. But no one stopped. So I gripped the bed until my fingers went numb. I clenched my teeth. I tried to breathe through it. Because my baby was right beside me… and I didn’t want the first sound they heard from their mother to be a scream. Everyone was celebrating. Everyone was smiling. Everyone kept saying: “How beautiful.” And inside, I was falling apart. No one talks enough about the burning afterward. The swelling. The stitches. The fear of sitting down. The pain of standing up. The feeling that your body has survived a battle while the entire room has already moved on. That is one of the invisible wounds of childbirth. People see the baby. They don’t always see the mother who is still bleeding, shaking and trying to understand what just happened to her. And yes, I looked at my baby and felt a love bigger than anything I had ever known. But loving my baby did not erase my pain. Being grateful for my child did not mean I had to be grateful for the way I was treated. Both things can be true: 💛 My baby was worth everything. 💔 And I still deserved to be heard, believed and treated with compassion. Birth trauma does not make you ungrateful. Talking about what happened does not make you weak. And loving your baby does not mean you have to remain silent about the pain no one else could see. If you experienced that “silent pain” after giving birth, you are not alone. this post for educational purposes only #education
💔 No one warned me that giving birth wouldn’t end when I heard my baby cry. I thought the worst part was over. Hours of contractions. Pain that felt like it was splitting me in two. Pushing until my body had nothing left to give. And then… I heard my baby cry. That sound changed everything. Relief. Tears. Shaking. Exhausted. Empty. Alive. I remember thinking: “It’s over. I made it.” But it wasn’t over. What happened next was a kind of pain almost no one talks about. While everyone gathered around my baby—and of course they did, because my baby was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen—I was still lying there. Exposed. Shaking. Bleeding. Completely vulnerable. Then the stitching began. I felt the first stitch like a bolt of lightning through my body. It wasn’t the pain of a contraction. It wasn’t the pressure of pushing. It was sharp. Deep. Raw. As though my body were being torn open all over again—except this time, everyone expected me to stay quiet. I told them I could feel it. But no one stopped. So I gripped the bed until my fingers went numb. I clenched my teeth. I tried to breathe through it. Because my baby was right beside me… and I didn’t want the first sound they heard from their mother to be a scream. Everyone was celebrating. Everyone was smiling. Everyone kept saying: “How beautiful.” And inside, I was falling apart. No one talks enough about the burning afterward. The swelling. The stitches. The fear of sitting down. The pain of standing up. The feeling that your body has survived a battle while the entire room has already moved on. That is one of the invisible wounds of childbirth. People see the baby. They don’t always see the mother who is still bleeding, shaking and trying to understand what just happened to her. And yes, I looked at my baby and felt a love bigger than anything I had ever known. But loving my baby did not erase my pain. Being grateful for my child did not mean I had to be grateful for the way I was treated. Both things can be true: 💛 My baby was worth everything. 💔 And I still deserved to be heard, believed and treated with compassion. Birth trauma does not make you ungrateful. Talking about what happened does not make you weak. And loving your baby does not mean you have to remain silent about the pain no one else could see. If you experienced that “silent pain” after giving birth, you are not alone. this post for educational purposes only #education

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