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serotonin

@med7007

Katılım Mayıs 2022
104 Takip Edilen4 Takipçiler
serotonin
serotonin@med7007·
Anthakante inka em thoughts vasthai lmaoooooo Yall be sayin anything to justify assault. This id exactly how people make excuses for r*pists in the real world btw
𝙎𝙖𝙣𝙜𝙖 𝙍𝙚𝙙𝙙𝙮 𝙑𝙖𝙣𝙜𝙖@Cult_Loading

@DSrisaketh @cheyathicheyak Oka konda kinda bathike labour panu cheskune illiterate young man at his peak masculine age lo anthakante em thoughts osthai? Once vadu identity kosam poradadam start chesaka heroine eh vethukuntu vachina pakkana petti ambition meeda focus chesadu it's all about the perspective

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~ kay ʚɞ˚☆⋆⁺
~ kay ʚɞ˚☆⋆⁺@averosaxo·
are they seriously not gonna play golden on the fireworks show tf
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TIME
TIME@TIME·
For the first time in 25 years, child mortality rates for preventable diseases are projected to increase, after having declined for 25 years. time.com/7338791/childh…
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Rahul Ravindran
Rahul Ravindran@23_rahulr·
No buddy… it had nothing to do with any other movie. Vikram uses these colours/paint to shame and humiliate her. She has learnt to embrace it now. She knows it’s a part of her now. That acceptance makes her stronger, invincible even. And for someone who starts out as an inexpressive introvert… she now doesn’t think twice about standing in front of the whole college in all her glory… with these colours on her. That’s what it was meant to signify. Hence the choice. A visual representation of “mari neeku leni siggu naakendhuku ra yedava!”
Firefly@aurasoreal

What was the thought behind giving @iamrashmika this particular look in the climax ? Why the colors on her face and clothes ? It was very powerful imagery but knowing you, is there a connection to Arjun Reddy or a diff movie ? @23_rahulr #Thegirlfriend

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Hamza
Hamza@hzijaz7·
Medicine as a profession is very unforgiving. You may be going through a low phase in life, be worried about something, need space or you may want to celebrate some happiness in life but you can't do anything except studying because you have an exam looming around.
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serotonin@med7007·
Sushi makes me so happy
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Chinmayi Sripaada
Chinmayi Sripaada@Chinmayi·
If politicians really wanted to - they could have ended caste oppression, like really come down heavily. But they wont because they need the polarity and the hate for votes. Until people realize politicians are NOT Talking about issues that concern our lives and children’s Clean Food Air and Water, dignified healthcare, education, jobs and SOOOO much more. An issue that will hit us sooner than later - we are quickly going to be an ageing population and this country is NOT ready in any manner to care for waste numbers of elderly, especially the poor. At that time, with the violence amongst people now - elder violence is going to be normalised and the economically vulnerable will be at far more of a risk. These are issues to plan for. But our 5 year plans? When was the last time you saw and checked it out as a citizen?
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serotonin@med7007·
@23_rahulr I truly wish the section of people making those vulgar and crass comments had the critical thinking skills to understand your tweet but I am afraid they dont. I applaud you for conveying your message so gracefully. Valani inka evaru bagu cheyaleru feels though
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Rahul Ravindran
Rahul Ravindran@23_rahulr·
I didn’t want to react to any of this so as to not draw any more negativity towards the girl. But the accusations keep getting more and more baseless. Firstly, 20 minutes before reaching this theatre… we were trying to decide between two different theatres and where we should go. We weren’t even sure that we going to go to this theatre. I now wish we hadn’t. We had no idea who is sitting in which theatre. Let alone planting someone. So no… this is definitely not a PR stunt. Whatever happened was purely spontaneous. Secondly, I was a bit worried about putting that video out because of this exact reason. That one section will go after this girl. But I was rushing to another theatre from there and the team said she was ok with it. I feel terrible for this girl. Lots of strength to her♥️ Keep expressing yourself bravely young one. Stand up against hate. Thirdly, the film isn’t asking anyone to take off or keep on their Chunnis. It’s purely a personal choice. The chunni is the film is a metaphor and not used literally. Lastly, this situation is an opportunity for a lot of us to introspect and check our biases. One girl taking off her dupatta as a symbolic gesture has this small section of people going into a meltdown. And it takes on a very large significance of ‘preserving our culture’ for this small section. I wonder why nobody gets triggered when week in and week out, men rip open their shirts before an action scene. Mind you, am not saying one should get triggered. That would be a spectacularly silly reaction. I am only questioning micro biases. Nobody bats an eyelid when men take off their shirts and wave them around in celebration of their favorite team’s sporting victory, or on new year’s day or just as an expression of joy in drunken state while dancing to their favorite songs. And nobody should bat an eyelid. It’s beautiful to see happy people expressing themselves. It always puts a smile on my face. But why is the burden of preserving our culture solely placed on the shoulders of our women, by this small section? Let me get even more basic. How come many in this small section don’t walk around dhotis everyday and everywhere? Why have they switched to trousers? Why do many of them tweet here in English? After all, they care so much about preserving our culture don’t they? These questions sound stupid and irritatingly immature and tone deaf don’t they. Then why are they perfectly fine holding women to a different standard? I don’t have the answers. And I hope the few people who ask me if a film like #TheGirlfriend is relevant or needed today, are observing the behaviour of this section when it comes to their responses to this film. They’ll have their answer.
Dhurandhar | © 🇮🇳 🚩@illakatmafliya

@GeethaArts was this girl invited for the success meet or was paid only to remove the dupatta and hug @23_rahulr after the screening ?

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serotonin@med7007·
I watched this movie in Ireland by myself at night and the ending gave me a sense of courage that i havent felt watching any recent films. People were clapping and cheering for Bhooma by the end of it! Thank you @23_rahulr @iamRashmika for giving me a film that felt like a hug🥹
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serotonin
serotonin@med7007·
#TheGirlFriend is a 10/10 film that showcased the many ways a toxic relationship can dim ones light. I felt so much anger and annoyance at Vikrams character and wished i couldve hugged Bhooma myself. When Durga finally says its not your fault, it felt like she was talking to me!
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soli
soli@solisolsoli·
The show must go on by Luca Ponsato
soli tweet media
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James Tate
James Tate@JamesTate121·
In 1952, inside a New York City delivery room, a baby was born blue and silent. Doctors hesitated, unsure whether to keep trying. Then a calm voice broke through the panic. “Let’s score the baby,” said Dr. Virginia Apgar. That moment changed medicine forever. Apgar had once dreamed of being a surgeon, but in the 1940s few women were allowed into the operating room. Told that no hospital would hire her, she turned to anesthesiology instead — a decision that would save millions of lives. Working in Columbia-Presbyterian’s maternity ward, she saw newborns die within minutes of birth because doctors had no system to judge which babies needed help first. So one morning in 1952, she grabbed a pen and paper and designed a five-point test measuring heart rate, breathing, muscle tone, reflex response, and skin color. She called it the Apgar Score. The idea spread faster than anyone expected. Within a decade, almost every hospital in America was using it. Infant mortality fell sharply. Doctors finally had a language for newborn care — and babies once thought lost were suddenly being saved. Apgar never stopped pushing forward. She earned a public health degree, joined the March of Dimes, and became a global voice for mothers and infants. When asked how she had thrived in a man’s world, she laughed, “Women are like tea bags — they don’t know how strong they are until they’re in hot water.” Dr. Virginia Apgar passed away in 1974, but her test still guides every delivery room on Earth. Every two seconds, somewhere in the world, a baby takes its first breath — and someone quietly calls out a number that honors the woman who refused to give up on newborns or on herself.
James Tate tweet media
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serotonin
serotonin@med7007·
@SpotifyUK I am still a student (thanks to med school) but spotify says I reached the maximum number of years I can reverify as a student. Is there an alternative for this please
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serotonin
serotonin@med7007·
@normuybeh i dont think i have the brains or the mental health for it🥺 inka emaina chesukodam better emo
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serotonin
serotonin@med7007·
@normuybeh ooh yes i feel like your recommendations will be top notch
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serotonin@med7007·
@normuybeh And thats just paper 1 i have neuro, MSK and endocrine and renal to do by friday😭😭😭 2.5 yrs syllabus 1 year lo pettesaru chachipothuna
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ranisa
ranisa@normuybeh·
@med7007 i’m not serious. that syllabus is ridiculous.
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ranisa@normuybeh·
bro entha mandi cheptharu i look like salma hayek
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