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عزام
عزام
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Region: SA
Friday 10 July 2026 23:02:39 GMT
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i9.fi7
{☕F..❗} :
الجوده يخوي
2026-07-11 18:47:50
0
.a7nj
AHMED :
الاسطوره كليان امبابي
2026-07-11 07:41:39
0
fuad_yy
FUAD➰️FM :
لامين
2026-07-11 05:27:35
3
_m7r.9
𝑀 𝑍 :
مبدع يا عزام
2026-07-10 23:24:14
0
fuad_yy
FUAD➰️FM :
لأمين باانتضارك😂
2026-07-11 05:27:11
2
ryzekb
ryzekb :
افعلها يا الامباب 💔
2026-07-10 23:10:53
1
cvb_501
طاغي الحارثي ∆• :
الامباب فتح الابواب ✌️
2026-07-11 03:44:53
0
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One of the stranger ironies of modern life is that the devices designed to help us communicate may sometimes prevent a particularly important conversation - the one we need to have with ourselves.   To understand ourselves requires periods of reflection. It requires moments when our minds are left alone long enough to wander, remember, worry, imagine and make unexpected connections. Many of the most important discoveries about who we are arrive gradually, during stretches of apparent inactivity.   If every pause is immediately occupied, we lose access to some of these opportunities for self-acquaintance. This matters because our relationship with ourselves influences almost every other relationship we have. We often assume that interesting people are those who have travelled widely, accumulated unusual experiences or acquired impressive knowledge. But some of the most compelling individuals are simply those who have paid close attention to their own minds.   They have reflected on their motives, their contradictions, their fears and their hopes. They have become familiar with the strange territory that lies within them.   How to apply this in your own life:   Notice what happens during the small gaps in your day. When you are waiting in a queue, sitting on a train or walking somewhere alone, resist the automatic urge to reach for your phone every time.   Allow your mind a little room to roam. You do not need to spend hours in contemplation. Even brief periods of uninterrupted reflection can reveal concerns that have been ignored, ambitions that have been forgotten or feelings that have struggled to make themselves heard.   The goal is not to abandon technology. It is to ensure that our access to other people's thoughts does not come at the expense of understanding our own.   We may spend our lives meeting thousands of people. The most interesting person we are ever likely to encounter remains ourselves.   Follow us for more useful ideas, every day.
One of the stranger ironies of modern life is that the devices designed to help us communicate may sometimes prevent a particularly important conversation - the one we need to have with ourselves.   To understand ourselves requires periods of reflection. It requires moments when our minds are left alone long enough to wander, remember, worry, imagine and make unexpected connections. Many of the most important discoveries about who we are arrive gradually, during stretches of apparent inactivity.   If every pause is immediately occupied, we lose access to some of these opportunities for self-acquaintance. This matters because our relationship with ourselves influences almost every other relationship we have. We often assume that interesting people are those who have travelled widely, accumulated unusual experiences or acquired impressive knowledge. But some of the most compelling individuals are simply those who have paid close attention to their own minds.   They have reflected on their motives, their contradictions, their fears and their hopes. They have become familiar with the strange territory that lies within them.   How to apply this in your own life:   Notice what happens during the small gaps in your day. When you are waiting in a queue, sitting on a train or walking somewhere alone, resist the automatic urge to reach for your phone every time.   Allow your mind a little room to roam. You do not need to spend hours in contemplation. Even brief periods of uninterrupted reflection can reveal concerns that have been ignored, ambitions that have been forgotten or feelings that have struggled to make themselves heard.   The goal is not to abandon technology. It is to ensure that our access to other people's thoughts does not come at the expense of understanding our own.   We may spend our lives meeting thousands of people. The most interesting person we are ever likely to encounter remains ourselves.   Follow us for more useful ideas, every day.

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