Anmol Arora

1K posts

Anmol Arora

Anmol Arora

@Anmol538

Katılım Nisan 2015
131 Takip Edilen87 Takipçiler
Anmol Arora retweetledi
⚭
@lekimgym·
Enjoy being while becoming
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akinn.eth
akinn.eth@akinncar·
tudo é urgente no meio corporativo menos aumento de salário, promoção, e reconhecimento pelo seu trabalho
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S.🎧
S.🎧@1ssve·
FUCK TEAMS. FUCK EXCEL. FUCK AUTHENTICATOR APP. FUCK ONE DRIVE.
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pan em crise.
pan em crise.@panemcrise·
Eu depois de comer algo que eu sabia que iria bagunçar meu estômago, mas eu tinha que comer:
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NASA
NASA@NASA·
Sky full of stars. Following a successful lunar flyby, the Artemis II astronauts captured this breathtaking photo of our galaxy, the Milky Way, on April 7, 2026.
NASA tweet media
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Mak
Mak@mak_aura·
life when you accept there’s nothing you can do and move on
Liza@Li33aaa

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Dave McMenamin
Dave McMenamin@mcten·
Game respect game: Luka Doncic greeted Carlos Alcaraz after his 60-piece tonight
Dave McMenamin tweet media
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NinjaPromo
NinjaPromo@ninjapromoio·
@1ssve being a top applicant on LinkedIn is the professional equivalent of your mom telling you you're the most handsome boy at the prom
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LakeShowYo
LakeShowYo@LakeShowYo·
Last night was a MOVIR 🪄
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Pop Base
Pop Base@PopBase·
Today is National Napping Day.
Pop Base tweet media
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S.🎧
S.🎧@1ssve·
The longer I work in corporate, the more I realize …half of “leadership” is just scheduling meetings about problems they created
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Murray Hill Guy
Murray Hill Guy@MurrayHillGuy1·
Corporate America is crazy because you can work your ass off all year, exceed expectations on your annual review, boss loves you and says you’re doing an amazing job… and only walk away with a 2% raise
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Barbell Financial 💪🏻💰
POV: you lost another year of your life at a soul sucking corporate job you hate, got an exceeds expectations on your performance review, and only got a 2% raise while inflation is 3%
Barbell Financial 💪🏻💰 tweet media
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Netflix
Netflix@netflix·
me, locking in for the Year of the Horse
Netflix tweet media
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Charlotte Clymer 🇺🇦
Charlotte Clymer 🇺🇦@cmclymer·
It annoys me that so many people are under the impression that this guy, Steven Bradbury, is some subpar goober who lucked his way into gold. That could not be further from the truth. This is one of the most satisfying victories in the history of the Olympics if you know the full backstory. This medal final was during his fourth Olympics, in Salt Lake City in 2002. Earlier in his career, he was among the best athletes in the world in this specific event, the 1000 meter short-track men's speed skate. But despite his talent, he just had some of the shittiest luck in the sport. We're talking a decade of shit luck. In the '94 Winter Olympics, he was considered the odds-on favorite to take gold, but he fell in his heat after getting illegally pushed by an opponent (who was later disqualified). He didn't get a re-do. That was it. He got shoved by some asshole, and his Olympics was over. Then in the '98 Winter Olympics, he was a favorite to at least medal in the same event but got caught up in a collision that wasn't his fault and failed to advance. In 1994, he got his thigh sliced open by a competitor's skate during a race, which required 111 stitches and 18 months of recovery time. In 2000, he broke his neck during training because a skater in front of him fell and tripped him up. That required a bunch of screws and plates being inserted into his skull and back and chest. And doctors told him that he should stop skating. But he didn't wanna give up. It meant too much to him. So, there he was in Salt Lake City in 2002, past his prime, a walking erector set, going up against opponents who were faster and younger and in their prime. He manages to win his heat and advance to the quarterfinal but then has the shit luck (yet again) of having to go up against the best two athletes in the quarterfinal and only the top two advance. He finishes third and thinks: "Damn, I gave it my best shot." But then, the second place finisher is disqualified, so Bradbury gets to advance to the semifinal. Now, at this point, he's thinking: Well, shit, I'm not as fast as these younger guys, and I got a bad habit of getting taken out by crashes that aren't my fault. So, he consults with the Australian national coach, Ann Zhang, and they decide that he should hang back from the pack and hope the pack crashes. That is a perfectly valid strategy. If you crash, you lose, but speed skaters risk crashing to gain an advantage in order to win. It may not feel exciting, but it is a valid strategy and just as risky: avoid crashes entirely and hope that pays off. It paid off in the semifinal: the pack, including the defending Olympic champion, jostled too much and crashed. Bradbury wins and advances. So, he's improbably in the final and takes the same approach, and it works: the entire pack jostles too much and crashes, and Bradbury's risk of hanging back pays off. This victory was not some un-athletic schlub lucking his way into gold. It was a journeyman athlete who never gave up and played smart after a career of shitty luck and finally got his due after it being snatched away from him so many times. Hands down, one of my favorite Olympics stories.
Chris Fronzak@FRONZ1LLA

"Dude there's no way you could ever win unless every single person in front of you crashed"

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ESPN
ESPN@espn·
CARLOS ALCARAZ HAS COMPLETED THE CAREER GRAND SLAM AT 22 YEARS OLD 🏆 He becomes the youngest men's player in tennis history to complete the feat ✨
ESPN tweet media
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The Tennis Letter
The Tennis Letter@TheTennisLetter·
THE MOMENT CARLOS ALCARAZ BEAT NOVAK DJOKOVIC AT THE AUSTRALIAN OPEN TO BECOME THE YOUNGEST MAN TO COMPLETE THE CAREER GRAND SLAM. 22 years old. History. 🥹🥹🥹
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