ruth

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ruth

@rhmxo

cada mes me malpego con algo diferente. ☭⃠

🇻🇪 unfortunately เข้าร่วม Haziran 2009
78 กำลังติดตาม568 ผู้ติดตาม
ruth
ruth@rhmxo·
also ya no me quiero echar coñazo con nadie, me retiro dignamente de la pelea 🏳️
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ruth
ruth@rhmxo·
se les fue la luz y tiraron esta, simplemente MOTY
ruth tweet media
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ruth
ruth@rhmxo·
Daniel escuchando miranda mientras juega laundry store simulator y luego estoy yo:
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ruth
ruth@rhmxo·
mi sistema nervioso ahorita cree que vamos pa la guerra y solo me estoy sirviendo un vaso de coquinha
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ruth รีทวีตแล้ว
Sammi ❀
Sammi ❀@otomeaddicted·
☐ single ☐ taken ☒ collecting fictional boyfriends
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ruth
ruth@rhmxo·
qué bolas como mi cerebro decide no recordar nada de mi infancia solo el día en el que mi salón se puso de acuerdo en votar por mi para reina de carnaval, acto seguido quejarse, decidir repetir los votos para solo sacar 2 en la segunda vuelta XDDDDDDDDDDDDD
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

The research behind this is wild. If you spent years bottling your feelings, huge chunks of your life were probably never recorded in the first place. Every time you push down a feeling, your brain has to choose: save the memory of what's happening, or shut the emotion up. It picks the emotion. In 2000, a team at Stanford tested this. They showed people a surgical film. Half were told to react naturally, the way they would if they were alone. The other half were told to hide their reactions, like someone trying not to look upset at the dinner table. Then everyone took a surprise memory test. The suppressors did worse on every measure, on what they'd seen and on what they'd heard. The same pattern held in two more experiments in the same paper. Brain scans later explained why. Your brain has three jobs when something emotional happens: tag the feeling, put what's happening into words, and save the scene to memory. When you reframe a feeling instead of suppressing it, all three regions fire together as a team. When you suppress, that teamwork falls apart. The memory-saving region goes quiet while the brain fights its own emotional response. And it compounds over time. Suppression keeps cortisol (the stress hormone) high, and cortisol shrinks the part of your brain that saves memories. People under chronic stress can lose 10 to 15 percent of the volume there. Even three weeks of elevated cortisol shrinks the wiring between brain cells by about 20 percent. The damage can partly reverse once the stress drops. But not always. The long-term cost shows up in the dementia data. A Finnish study followed 1,137 older adults for about a decade. People who said they habitually suppressed their emotions had nearly five times the risk of developing dementia. The researchers accounted for genetics, smoking, obesity, and education, and the gap still held. There's a way out. It's called cognitive reappraisal. Instead of shoving a feeling down, you change the story you're telling yourself about what caused it. A tough meeting becomes practice. A short-tempered friend becomes a tired friend. Same event, new frame. And because reappraisal kicks in before the emotion fully fires, your brain never has to fight itself. A 2003 study from Stanford and UC Berkeley found reappraisers ended up with more positive emotion, better relationships, and higher wellbeing. Zero memory cost. So when you say you don't remember half your life, you might be right about that. The part of you that saves the record had other orders the whole time.

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ruth
ruth@rhmxo·
hoy no me dieron ganas de llorar ni una sola vez, muy goated, orgullosa de mi persona 🙏🏻
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