Lawrence

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Lawrence

Lawrence

@jclwr

one day you'll leave this world behind, so live a life you will remember.

Katılım Nisan 2020
753 Takip Edilen2K Takipçiler
Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Once i encountered an ig reel that said something like “you will die on a normal day, with plans undone. Some will mourn, if youre lucky, but the world moves on.” That really changed me.
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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Last dayyy in Da Nang. Where should I go next? 🤔
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Lawrence@jclwr·
Gusto ko sumuka sa hilo after hahaha
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Lawrence@jclwr·
Saying that you bought 1989 in the guise of liking her lyricism in that era only reveals how obnoxiously pretentious your take is. Like come on. There’s folkmore. Midnights. TTPD. Some of TLOAS.
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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Manila: makes you understand why the fuck
Unfiltered@quotesdaily100

How the world's greatest cities became unforgettable: 1. Paris makes you fall in love 2. Tokyo makes you feel the future 3. New York makes you feel alive 4. Istanbul makes you question time 5. Rio makes you forget your problems 6. Mumbai never lets you sleep 7. Vienna makes you feel cultured 8. Havana makes you nostalgic for something you never lived 9. Beirut breaks your heart and fixes it the same night 10. Kyoto makes you slow down 11. Lagos makes you believe in energy 12. Rome makes you feel small in the best way 13. Buenos Aires makes you want to dance at midnight 14. Amsterdam makes you rethink how a city should be built 15. Cairo makes you feel thousands of years pressing down 16. Barcelona makes you believe architecture is a love language 17. Nairobi makes you feel a continent rising 18. Lisbon makes you ache for something you cannot name 19. Seoul makes you question whether you have been living efficiently 20. Mexico City makes you understand that chaos and beauty are the same thing 21. Prague makes you feel like you stepped inside a painting 22. Marrakech overwhelms every one of your senses at once 23. Singapore makes you realize what a city looks like when it actually works 24. Athens reminds you that everything modern was once someone's ancient idea 25. São Paulo makes you feel the hunger of a city still becoming itself 26. Edinburgh makes you believe in ghosts and you are not even superstitious 27. Tbilisi makes you wonder why nobody told you sooner 28. Cartagena makes you feel like the heat itself has a personality 29. Medellín shows you that a city can completely rewrite its own story 30. Copenhagen makes you question why everyone else makes things so complicated 31. Accra makes you feel a pride that does not even belong to you 32. Kolkata makes you confront beauty and struggle sharing the same square meter 33. Bruges makes you feel like time forgot to move and you are grateful 34. Amman makes you feel welcomed before you have spoken a word 35. Jakarta makes you understand twenty million people sharing the same urgency 36. Tallinn makes you feel like the medieval world never fully let go 37. Bogotá surprises you so completely you feel embarrassed for your assumptions 38. Chiang Mai makes you breathe slower without anyone telling you to 39. Porto makes you realize faded beauty is still beauty, maybe more so 40. Dakar makes you feel the ocean and the continent pulling equally 41. Reykjavik makes you feel the earth is still being made beneath your feet 42. Jerusalem makes you feel the impossible weight of what people believe 43. Hanoi moves at full speed and still feels intimate 44. Thessaloniki makes you wonder why its neighbor gets all the attention 45. Sarajevo makes you sit quietly long after you leave 46. Oaxaca makes you understand that culture expressed through food survives everything 47. Lviv shows the stubborn dignity of a people who refuse to disappear 48. Zanzibar makes you feel the air itself is different 49. Lagos deserves a second mention because one feeling was never enough 50. Delhi swallows you whole, overwhelms you completely, and somehow makes you want to come back for more

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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Silaw
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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
✅ night time skin care
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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Mama’s boi
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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Who’s your daddy
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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥
The Husky@Mr_Husky1

It was a Monday in early August 2023. The exhausted truck drivers of Taylor Swift's Eras Tour thought they were heading to a routine production meeting before the Los Angeles shows. They had no idea what was coming. Scott Swift walked in. Taylor's father didn't say much—he just began handing out envelopes. When the drivers finally peeked inside, some thought the check said $1,000. Others read $10,000. The third driver stared at his and said out loud: "This has to be a joke." It wasn't. $100,000. Each driver. Nearly 50 of them. The industry standard bonus from the biggest stars? $5,000 to $10,000. Taylor had given them more than ten times that. But here's what made it matter most: these drivers weren't wealthy. They lived in truck cabs. They hadn't seen their families in 24 weeks. They were people who would never own homes—until now. Until that envelope. That moment of shock and tears? It was just the beginning. Across the entire Eras Tour, Taylor quietly handed out $197 million in bonuses. The dancers. The band. The riggers. The lighting and sound technicians. The caterers. Every single person who built the show—they got bonuses, handwritten notes, and wax-sealed letters. When dancers opened theirs on camera in her docuseries, they broke down crying. Some couldn't believe she was real. "If the tour grosses more, they get more," she explained simply. These people work hard. They deserve it. But the crew bonuses weren't the only quiet revolution happening. Starting in March 2023, in every city where the tour touched down, a call came to local food banks. Taylor wanted to donate. No press conference. No announcement. No photo op. One donation fed 75,000 meals. Another provided hundreds of thousands of pounds of fresh produce. Across the tour, the total reached millions of meals—possibly more—all delivered in silence. She never posted about a single one. And it wasn't new for her. In March 2020, when the pandemic locked down the world, Taylor scrolled through social media posts from fans who were breaking. A photographer about to lose everything. A person staring down eviction. She sent direct messages with rent money—$3,000 here, $13,000 there. Some fans got enough for months of bills. She read the Washington Post. She noticed the names. She helped. She never announced it. Years later, in October 2025, a two-year-old named Lilah—fighting a cancer so rare that only 58 families in America had ever known it—was filmed by her mother dancing to a Taylor Swift song. Lilah called Taylor her friend. A few days later, the GoFundMe received a $100,000 donation. The note said: "Sending the biggest hug to my friend, Lilah! Love, Taylor." Mike Scherkenbach has worked with the wealthiest people in music. He's seen the bonuses. He's seen the behavior. He's watched billionaires guard their money jealously. What he saw with Taylor was different. The biggest tour in history grossed $2 billion. The artist behind it became a billionaire from her own songwriting. And then she signed her name onto hundreds of envelopes by hand and sent enough money back to the people who built her dream that they cried opening their letters. That isn't strategy. That isn't a publicity stunt. That's what happens when someone, somewhere along the way, remembered what matters.

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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Alaska! 🖤❤️‍🔥
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Lawrence
Lawrence@jclwr·
Hmm yep
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