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Found 2 results for "6e70ffe12d669b88c7bc79c997ccd51c" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous /g/105882550#105888647
7/13/2025, 7:19:35 AM
>>105885031
How did the cameraman knew exactly where to point the camera at the specific day and hour, at that very moment, within that very tight window of time?
Anonymous /r9k/81766030#81766508
7/9/2025, 3:55:45 PM
>>81766030
>>81766482
>>81766489
6. No one is going to advocate for your health but you, so expecting to walk up to a doctor and asking for them to treat you will not work. You will have to take initative on researching PTSD, its treatments, their drawbacks, and everything inside them to actually handle your issue. If you cannot do this, you will be gambling on a therapist or doctor being able to save you. Given that you have PTSD, a disorder associated with negative thought patterns, failure will seem a lot more catastrophic. Because of that, you will have to over-research subjects so you dont make the wrong move and end up making yourself feel like its hopeless.

7. Get a friend you can trust to talk about your issues with. Many people are traumatized, broken, and struggling just like you. They're the only people who can understand and can empathize with you and your condition. Being able to relate to someone else in trauma, life experiences, and dealing and struggling with symptoms will make the world feel less alone and make getting better a lot easier. For me at least, a friend who cared was what pushed me off the brink of suicide and onto the path to recovery.

8. The path to recovery is very long and incredibly painful. Quick results only come from radical moves, and radical moves must be planned out and taken with great care as to not be dangerous. Always consider every change to your life you make and fully embrace it only once you are ready to, but always question why you are not ready to accept a conclusion you know is healthy. Often times, progress will simply just be slow and should be taken on a day-by-day basis.

friend, the world is scary, awful, and cruel, and whatever happened to you was likely something you did not deserve and does not have to define you. There is more to life than this suffering beyond the veil. It's just a matter of learning how to live normally now that you're out of the nightmare.

IM NOT A DOCTOR, THIS IS NOT MEDICAL ADVICE