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  • When you come home from an absolutely exhausting work day and realise that you still have so many chores to do...

    OH well....let's just turn up the music and goooooooooo! Who's also cleaning today? Let's do it together :)
    When you come home from an absolutely exhausting work day and realise that you still have so many chores to do... OH well....let's just turn up the music and goooooooooo! Who's also cleaning today? Let's do it together :)
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  • 1 last meeting for the day and I get to go home.
    After I completed my huge meeting room project this really feels relaxing. I only get to maintain the systems and catch up with my manager regarding problems, if required.

    Pffft. Need. A. Beer. Now.
    1 last meeting for the day and I get to go home. After I completed my huge meeting room project this really feels relaxing. I only get to maintain the systems and catch up with my manager regarding problems, if required. Pffft. Need. A. Beer. Now.
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    1
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  • Talk about going home earlier on a Friday.
    Why do people always show up with complex issues on that day?
    Talk about going home earlier on a Friday. Why do people always show up with complex issues on that day? 😅
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  • Some of us are gonna finish work in 30 minutes and go home, some of you however are born without luck. I don't make the rules.
    Some of us are gonna finish work in 30 minutes and go home, some of you however are born without luck. I don't make the rules.✌️
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  • I spent what felt like the whole day today in the park in my town, which also includes a small, partially abandoned cemetery.

    This place makes me thoughtful because of its structure: on one side, children play innocently on a playground, while young couples stroll nearby, their hands intertwined. Yet, just beyond them lies a retirement home, where the building gazes longingly at the cemetery—a silent reflection of mortality.

    In between, smaller, older, crumbling statues stand sentinel, guardians of forgotten stories, their weathered faces etched with the sorrows and joys of those who have come before. Complementing these fading relics, scaffolding is being erected for new architecture, a juxtaposition of the old and the new, of decay and renewal.

    As I walk through this park, a question quickly arises: what does it truly mean to live? We are born, we grow, we learn, we love, and inevitably, we pass away. But do we fade into nothingness, or do we leave a trace behind in our borrowed time? Perhaps a whisper lingers in the hearts of those we touch, a thread woven into the very fabric of the universe, connecting moments that seem so fleeting.

    Is it not a privilege to love and be loved, to create ripples in the fabric of time with our joy and our sorrow? In this park, where the clang of swing sets mingles with the soft rustle of leaves, I feel both connected and isolated—a thread in the grand tapestry of life and death, pulled taut yet ethereal.

    Beneath the laughter and love lies an unspoken truth: we are all temporary. Yet, is it not the beauty of our transience that makes moments so precious, illuminated against the backdrop of eternity? The whispers of those who have come before dance in the air, and I wonder, perhaps they are not so far removed; they linger with us in our laughter, our tears, and in the very act of living.

    I realize that while our bodies may return to dust, our spirits, woven into the lives and hearts of others, may transcend even death, echoing in the stories told under starlit nights and cradled within the whispers of time.
    I spent what felt like the whole day today in the park in my town, which also includes a small, partially abandoned cemetery. This place makes me thoughtful because of its structure: on one side, children play innocently on a playground, while young couples stroll nearby, their hands intertwined. Yet, just beyond them lies a retirement home, where the building gazes longingly at the cemetery—a silent reflection of mortality. In between, smaller, older, crumbling statues stand sentinel, guardians of forgotten stories, their weathered faces etched with the sorrows and joys of those who have come before. Complementing these fading relics, scaffolding is being erected for new architecture, a juxtaposition of the old and the new, of decay and renewal. As I walk through this park, a question quickly arises: what does it truly mean to live? We are born, we grow, we learn, we love, and inevitably, we pass away. But do we fade into nothingness, or do we leave a trace behind in our borrowed time? Perhaps a whisper lingers in the hearts of those we touch, a thread woven into the very fabric of the universe, connecting moments that seem so fleeting. Is it not a privilege to love and be loved, to create ripples in the fabric of time with our joy and our sorrow? In this park, where the clang of swing sets mingles with the soft rustle of leaves, I feel both connected and isolated—a thread in the grand tapestry of life and death, pulled taut yet ethereal. Beneath the laughter and love lies an unspoken truth: we are all temporary. Yet, is it not the beauty of our transience that makes moments so precious, illuminated against the backdrop of eternity? The whispers of those who have come before dance in the air, and I wonder, perhaps they are not so far removed; they linger with us in our laughter, our tears, and in the very act of living. I realize that while our bodies may return to dust, our spirits, woven into the lives and hearts of others, may transcend even death, echoing in the stories told under starlit nights and cradled within the whispers of time.
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  • #homeless #laptop
    #homeless #laptop
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  • Videoclip recorded in Troia on the other side of the river of my hometown Setubal
    Videoclip recorded in Troia on the other side of the river of my hometown Setubal
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  • Did anyone else wake up next to a different bear than the one they took home last night?
    Did anyone else wake up next to a different bear than the one they took home last night?
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  • Shanah Tovah ladies and goths. There have been numerous attacks on my brethren this blessed holiday, but we stand defiant and steadfast. Violence and fear tactics will not keep us from our daily lives, but only strengthen our resolve as we fight the evil of antisemitism at home and abroad.

    Shanah Tovah ladies and goths. There have been numerous attacks on my brethren this blessed holiday, but we stand defiant and steadfast. Violence and fear tactics will not keep us from our daily lives, but only strengthen our resolve as we fight the evil of antisemitism at home and abroad.
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  • I’m still near Naples, Italy.
    Flying home on the 7th.
    Actually been very depressed
    This past week.
    So barely left our hotel or edited videos .

    Going to go check out Pompeii and Herculaneum though today. Will be good to get out.

    How are you?

    I made this yesterday though -
    https://youtu.be/LfV60uxs4mI?si=e4ekRrT3HFgZRJr0
    I’m still near Naples, Italy. Flying home on the 7th. Actually been very depressed This past week. So barely left our hotel or edited videos . Going to go check out Pompeii and Herculaneum though today. Will be good to get out. 🥺 How are you? I made this yesterday though - https://youtu.be/LfV60uxs4mI?si=e4ekRrT3HFgZRJr0
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