Thank you for your support and advice. It’s very helpful x
@valerieohara3649Күн бұрын
Thank you
@arunms8696Күн бұрын
Thank you👍🏻
@ranganaths2295Күн бұрын
Thank you❤
@Kenny-21-x8tКүн бұрын
I appreciate ur time in making this video. It's helpful
@AgileAngel76Күн бұрын
Awesome video!!! Great insight!! ❤️☀️🙏👑❌⭕❌⭕
@user-xg4ck8ps3pКүн бұрын
#1&Only: Do only what you love.
@dai19721Күн бұрын
the muslim woman's back...just dont mention the gays or the jews around her she gets a bit negative.
@darioz5894Күн бұрын
What about toxic parents that inflicted a lot of childhood trauma on people as adults in parents who will not change their ways even when you try to explain the damage they've done ?
@showtimemyles9643Күн бұрын
They said distance from toxic people
@darioz5894Күн бұрын
@showtimemyles9643 isn't there a difference between people and parents ?
@JuliannFlavin18 сағат бұрын
People, parents especially do not want to admit that they’ve made mistakes, especially with literally the most important job in the world and/or they seem to “not remember” the events you bring up. When I was in my early twenties, I STILL hated my mother for what she did to me/didn’t do to protect me etc and I tried to let her know every chance I had. I would call my aunt (her sister) and vent and vent because she STILL hadn’t changed her whorish horrible mother ways and one day my aunt said “Juliann, you’re not going to change her, the only thing that you can change is the way that you react to her or your attitude about it.” & for some reason that really really hit me. And I tried to do that and just accept her for who she was and accept the fact that she wasn’t going to change and then I felt so much better.