happySaint
1.9K posts


@Trust_Anesu @Zweli_Thixo so you’re too lazy to think that now you use CHATGPT to reply a mere post?
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@Zweli_Thixo Was she ever stopped by private citizens in South Korea — people with no legal authority to question others about their presence in the country — the way it is now happening in South Africa, where ordinary individuals are stopping people and demanding to see their visas?
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Here’s an interesting fact: My friend in Korea on a work visa, and it’s valid for one year. Every year, she has to prove to Korean immigration that she is still medically fit, that she haven’t committed any crimes during that year, and that she is still employed in order for them to renew her visa. They will only renew her visa if she can prove that she is of good use to their country.
Furthermore, if during that year she decide to move from her apartment to a new one for any reason, she has 14 days to go back to immigration and inform them that she have changed her address. If she is even a day late and go on day 16, she will have to pay a fine, which can cost anything from R2,000 to R13,000.
As a South African, she is also not allowed to participate in any protests happening in the country. If there is a crowd of Korean people protesting for whatever reason, she cannot be found in that crowd because she could be deported. Before she got her Korean ID, she wasn’t even able to own a korean cellphone number or even order anything online.
She is therefore in this country legally, and she makes sure that she abide by their laws because she know that if she doesn't, she will be sent back home with no negotiations. Does this mean Korea is xenophobic? No. This is a country making sure that its citizens and the country itself are protected. A country making sure that guests know their place!
Why are South Africans being made to feel bad for wanting the same thing?

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@Sugababiie_x Lmao join Stripchat… some girls are working hard there
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For most of my life, I thought I was just failing at being “normal.”
I grew up feeling emotionally neglected and misunderstood. I was raised mostly by my grandmother while trying to navigate life quietly on my own. Because I did well academically and seemed “high functioning,” nobody noticed how much I was actually struggling internally.
As I got older, life became harder instead of easier.
Simple things that seem manageable for other people started feeling overwhelming for me:
- consistency,
- focus,
- emotional regulation,
- burnout,
- impulsive decisions,
- exhaustion,
- struggling to function under pressure,
- and constantly feeling mentally overwhelmed while trying to survive financially.
For years, I blamed myself.
I called myself lazy.
Broken.
Undisciplined.
But recently I started learning more about ADHD and Autism in adults — especially in women who masked their struggles for years — and for the first time in my life, everything started making sense.
I’m now trying to get a professional ADHD and Autism assessment so I can finally understand my brain properly, access support and start building a healthier future for myself instead of constantly surviving in confusion and burnout.
I’ve been trying my best to keep going:
creating content,
building online,
sharing my story honestly,
and finding ways to survive independently despite feeling deeply overwhelmed.
This assessment means more to me than just a diagnosis.
It means clarity.
Healing.
Understanding.
And hopefully a chance to finally stop feeling like I’m fighting my own mind every day.
If you’ve ever connected with my story, my content or simply want to help me take one step closer toward getting proper support, I’d appreciate any donation so deeply — even sharing this post helps more than you know.
Thank you for seeing me.
Thank you for helping me feel less invisible.
🤍🦋
backabuddy.co.za/campaign/autis…

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@_NombuleloM i hope you know it’s R25 per month for three months not R25 for the whole three months 😭😭
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