motivation Qweekdays: weekends!!! at mag travel na magtravel 🥺 i never felt so happy just by discovering new things. more to come and growth pa in the future 🤍
you know it is over when the trust is broken, the disrespect is too deep, you’re gaslighting yourself w/every word you’re saying, and you didn’t even have a single remorse on what you did.
“this silent cut-off thing” is too loud to comprehend, girl. thank you for letting me go.
People don’t always realize how much weight their words carry, or how a single careless comment can ripple through someone’s entire day—or even their life. You never know what silent battles someone is fighting, and it’s easy to forget that even the smallest unkindness can be the thing that tips the balance.
It’s not about walking on eggshells, but about being mindful. You might think a comment is just a passing thought, but for the person on the receiving end, it can lodge itself deep, replaying in their head for days, weeks, sometimes years. People remember how they felt in those moments, and that stuff sticks in ways that can shape how they see themselves.
Kindness costs nothing, but it can mean everything. So, why not be the reason someone feels seen, supported, and a little more comfortable in their own skin? You never know how much someone might need that small act of grace.
R TO V:
“more than anywhere else, PH gave us the most energy. it was louder than the World Cup”- Irene
“philippines has the most event for us! thank you!”- Yeri
Fancon:
“philippine reveluvs have the best energy among all the Fan Concert stops” - Yeri
🙂↕️
it was not a prank rather an emotional frustration 😢 don't make jokes about family matters 'cause pls I don't know how and what to react immediately 😥😕
loved one. Ethical knowing is essential in respecting patients we encounter.
haayyysss this viral student nurse surfacing my feed is totally not giving 🙄
it takes one thing to be knowledgeable and experienced, but another thing entirely to apply emotions and feelings to treatment or attentiveness and sensitivity to our patients needs. Again, we should always put in mind that we deal with patients who are someone's family and--