BlackWhiteLove
15.5K posts



estağfurullah niye kaçsın huzurum ben çok iyi anlıyorm sizn yaşadıklarınızı.sonra Cihanın yaptıklarını tavrını doğru buluyorum.Cihanla bizim aramzdaki gerçek eğer sizi rahatsız etmiyorsa ben niye rahatsız olayım 💅🏼 içinde kıyamet var ama hiç fırsat vermiyor🥲 #UzakŞehir #CihAl

o çocuğu cihandan yazmayacaklar:D bakın göreceksiniz




Lol, I just noticed something. Look at what Alya and Meryem are wearing… the colors of their clothes are almost inverted. And I don't think that's random either. It’s a visual cue. People keep saying the narrative is trying to equalize Alya and Meryem. It’s not. It’s doing the opposite. It’s showing that one is the real deal (Alya), and the other is trying to be, but failing. That’s why we get the necklace, the framing, the shots of her looking out over the konak. But, here's the kicker - that reality exists only in Meryem’s head. The truth is, there is only one Hanımağa. The one Cihan truly loves. The one who has already secured her place in his heart and on Albora land. What Meryem will come to understand is that the things she's holding onto have no real weight. She’s a pale reflection of a reality that fate has already sanctioned. That’s what the konak will mean to her - a rude awakening. Walking into that house won’t make her part of the family. It will only make it undeniable that there is no place for her in the Cihan–Alya–Deniz equation. That’s the real unit. #CihAl #UzakŞehir

ضحكت جاي ميّت رعب 😭


@ZMX06 One option is to give Alya custody, the other is to act nice and get close to her and Denis again.Sadakat’s small mind believes that once M arrives at the mansion and spends time with Cihan, Alya will distance herself from him, which could lead her to leave Mardin with Denis &B😂

We suffer more in imagination than in reality. A quote from the stoic philosopher Seneca. Seneca argues that most of our suffering is a result of our own thoughts. We believe something bad is going to happen therefore we act as if it is something to be feared and creates anxiety, though the true event itself often does not live up to our catastrophic ideas















