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@randomwords2thoughts

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It seems in this society a normal relationship is toxic. Any relationship that is based on respect for one another, love without (too much)condition or reason, and so, is considered abnormal.
My father should know shame. The amount of time he blamed for things for which he never even cared is astounding. He was never a hero, just a coward, who had the option and chance to live his dreams but left it for prestige, and does not want anyone else to follow their dream and waste time on prestige, one has no interest in. If you don't follow the same soulless path and kill your identity (hope, dreams)the you have no respect here. No wonder I'm losing any motivation to make anyone proud. I will just demean and disappear as wished. Be nothing, as being made to believe.
Anyone hiring remotely? I just need some to pay my bills and eat. Shame covers me like a blanket when I have to ask for money from my parents, whom I promised to never be a lender to me.
All portals and sites and I got no replies.
The Seven Minute Man
The first thing he was aware of was the smell of rain on hot pavement. Then the sound of it, a soft hiss against the windowpane. Then the warmth of the ceramic mug in his hands.
He was in a cafĂŠ. The same cafĂŠ. He always was.
He didnât know his name. The concept felt foreign, a label for a history he didnât have. He had a body, he had clothesâa grey jacket, dark jeansâand he had exactly seven minutes.
The bell above the door chimed. A man in a long, dark coat, collar turned up against the damp, walked in. He shook the rain from his hair and approached the counter. The manâs order was always the same. âBlack coffee. To go.â
This was the signal. The start of the sequence.
He watched, as he always did, feeling a familiar dread mix with a strangerâs curiosity. The man got his coffee, turned, and his eyes scanned the room. They always did. They always found him.
The man walked over. His expression was unreadable, a mask of mild urgency.
âMind if I sit?â the man asked, gesturing to the empty chair opposite him. The words were precise, familiar. They hung in the air, a line from a play heâd rehearsed a thousand times.
He nodded. It was what he always did. âSure.â
The man sat, placing the paper cup on the table. He didnât drink from it. He never did.
âYou look like youâve been waiting,â the man said. This, too, was part of the script.
âI suppose I have,â he replied. The words came unbidden, an automatic response from a mouth that felt like his own but spoke with a will he didnât command. He had tried, in earlier loopsâloops he only remembered as a faint, nagging sense of repetitionâto say something else. To scream. To stay silent. The loop simply⌠reset. A stutter in reality, and he was back, smelling the rain, feeling the warm mug, hearing the bell chime. Compliance was easier. It made the seven minutes pass smoother.
âDo I know you?â the man asked, leaning forward slightly. His eyes were intense, searching.
This was the core of the paradox. The question that had no answer.
âI donât think so,â he said, the lie tasting like ash. âI donât know anyone.â
The manâs gaze didnât waver. âYou seem familiar. Like a face from a dream.â
He offered a weak smile. It was the expected response. âMaybe in another life.â
There was a pause. The rain tapped its rhythm against the glass. He had learned to find a strange comfort in these moments of quiet within the script. They were his only moments of genuine, un-orchestrated existence, even if the other man was just waiting for his next cue.
âI have to go,â the man said finally, rising from his chair. He left the full cup of coffee on the table. âIt was⌠good to see you.â
He nodded again. âYou too.â
The man in the coat gave him one last, inscrutable look, then turned and walked out. The bell chimed his exit.
He was alone again. He looked down at his own mug. The coffee was still warm. He had three minutes and twelve seconds left. He knew this because he had counted them, over and over.
He existed only within this bubble of time. He had no memory of a childhood, a home, a family. There was no before the cafĂŠ. There was only the loop. He was a normal humanâhe felt the chill of the air, the fatigue in his bones, a deep, aching lonelinessâbut he knew he was not. A normal human has a beginning. He was a sentence without a capital letter, a story that consisted only of its middle paragraph, endlessly reprinted.
He was a man who had never been born. He had simply begun.
He was not the time traveler. He was the destination. The fixed point. The event that required the journey.
The final seconds ticked down. He closed his eyes. He didnât know who had created this, or why. Was he a message that needed to be delivered? A mistake that needed to be contained? A piece of a cosmic equation that only balanced if he was right here, right now, having this same conversation?
The world didnât fade to black. It didnât dissolve. It rewound.
The warmth fled from the mug in his hands, rushing back into the air. The sound of the rain reversed into a silence that was then filled by its beginning. The door chimed backwards. His own body felt a visceral lurch, a sensation of being pulled, unstuck, and thenâŚ
The smell of rain on hot pavement.
The sound of it, a soft hiss.
The warmth of the ceramic mug in his hands.
He was in the cafĂŠ. The bell above the door chimed. A man in a long, dark coat walked in.
He looked at the stranger, this anchor of his existence, this keeper of his prison. And he felt a profound, weary recognition. He would meet him again. They would say the same things. They would get the same answers.
He took a sip of his coffee. It was always perfectly bitter. It was always the same.
He waited for the only other person in his universe to come and sit down.

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THE DAILY GLOBE - ODDITIES & ENDS
THE ASTRONAUT WHO CAME FROM... SOMEWHERE ELSE?
Coastal Mystery Deepens as Rescued Spaceman Vanish
CAPE CANAVERAL, FLâItâs a story that has left local authorities and federal investigators utterly baffled. What began as a miraculous rescue has ended in a disappearance that defies all logic.
Last Tuesday, the missing lunar shuttle Artemis-7, which vanished without a trace one month ago, was discovered washed ashore on a remote Florida beach. The discovery was a moment of pure elation for the space community. Inside, they found their man. Astronaut Captain Mark Evans was alive, found in a state of suspended animation.
He was rushed to Christ Hospital for evaluation. Medical staff reported he awoke disoriented but coherent. However, the celebration was short-lived.
âAlmost immediately, he began asking questions we couldnât answer,â said Dr. Alison Reid, the lead physician. âHe didnât recognize the name of the hospital. He demanded to be taken to a place he called an âAsclepieion.â We initially wrote it off as severe trauma.â
But Captain Evansâs confusion soon took a darker, more specific turn. During debriefing, he made an astonishing claim: he was not from Earth. He insisted he was a citizen of a world called âGeode,â a civilization he described as technologically superior to our own. His accounts were not the ramblings of a madman, but detailed, calm, and consistent.
âThe real head-scratcher is that all the evidence checked out,â said a NASA official who wished to remain anonymous. âThe shuttle was the Artemis-7. The man we recovered was, by all physical metrics, Mark Evans. His fingerprints, his DNAâit was all a perfect match.â
The mystery deepened when his family arrived. While he recognized his wife and mother, he became agitated, insisting they were âimpostersâ and that the people before him were âdifferent.â He spoke of his deceased father as if the man were still alive.
After months of psychological evaluation and rehabilitation for suspected PTSD, the man who looked like Mark Evans was reluctantly released into the care of his family. The hope was that familiar surroundings would break his delusion.
They were right, but not in the way anyone expected.
As the family arrived at their suburban home, the front door opened. Standing there was another manâa haggard, exhausted, but unmistakable Captain Mark Evans, the one who had seemingly just survived a grueling month-long ordeal.
The two men stood face-to-face for a single, silent moment. The family watched in frozen horror.
Then, the one they had just brought home from the hospital⌠simply vanished into thin air.
The case is now officially closed, filed under âunexplained.â The man who came home that day is readjusting to life with his family. But the question remains, a whisper in the halls of NASA and the minds of those who witnessed the event: If the man who washed ashore wasnât our astronaut, whoâor whatâwas he? And where in the heavens is Geode?
The Seven Minute Man
The first thing he was aware of was the smell of rain on hot pavement. Then the sound of it, a soft hiss against the windowpane. Then the warmth of the ceramic mug in his hands.
He was in a cafĂŠ. The same cafĂŠ. He always was.
He didnât know his name. The concept felt foreign, a label for a history he didnât have. He had a body, he had clothesâa grey jacket, dark jeansâand he had exactly seven minutes.
The bell above the door chimed. A man in a long, dark coat, collar turned up against the damp, walked in. He shook the rain from his hair and approached the counter. The manâs order was always the same. âBlack coffee. To go.â
This was the signal. The start of the sequence.
He watched, as he always did, feeling a familiar dread mix with a strangerâs curiosity. The man got his coffee, turned, and his eyes scanned the room. They always did. They always found him.
The man walked over. His expression was unreadable, a mask of mild urgency.
âMind if I sit?â the man asked, gesturing to the empty chair opposite him. The words were precise, familiar. They hung in the air, a line from a play heâd rehearsed a thousand times.
He nodded. It was what he always did. âSure.â
The man sat, placing the paper cup on the table. He didnât drink from it. He never did.
âYou look like youâve been waiting,â the man said. This, too, was part of the script.
âI suppose I have,â he replied. The words came unbidden, an automatic response from a mouth that felt like his own but spoke with a will he didnât command. He had tried, in earlier loopsâloops he only remembered as a faint, nagging sense of repetitionâto say something else. To scream. To stay silent. The loop simply⌠reset. A stutter in reality, and he was back, smelling the rain, feeling the warm mug, hearing the bell chime. Compliance was easier. It made the seven minutes pass smoother.
âDo I know you?â the man asked, leaning forward slightly. His eyes were intense, searching.
This was the core of the paradox. The question that had no answer.
âI donât think so,â he said, the lie tasting like ash. âI donât know anyone.â
The manâs gaze didnât waver. âYou seem familiar. Like a face from a dream.â
He offered a weak smile. It was the expected response. âMaybe in another life.â
There was a pause. The rain tapped its rhythm against the glass. He had learned to find a strange comfort in these moments of quiet within the script. They were his only moments of genuine, un-orchestrated existence, even if the other man was just waiting for his next cue.
âI have to go,â the man said finally, rising from his chair. He left the full cup of coffee on the table. âIt was⌠good to see you.â
He nodded again. âYou too.â
The man in the coat gave him one last, inscrutable look, then turned and walked out. The bell chimed his exit.
He was alone again. He looked down at his own mug. The coffee was still warm. He had three minutes and twelve seconds left. He knew this because he had counted them, over and over.
He existed only within this bubble of time. He had no memory of a childhood, a home, a family. There was no before the cafĂŠ. There was only the loop. He was a normal humanâhe felt the chill of the air, the fatigue in his bones, a deep, aching lonelinessâbut he knew he was not. A normal human has a beginning. He was a sentence without a capital letter, a story that consisted only of its middle paragraph, endlessly reprinted.
He was a man who had never been born. He had simply begun.
He was not the time traveler. He was the destination. The fixed point. The event that required the journey.
The final seconds ticked down. He closed his eyes. He didnât know who had created this, or why. Was he a message that needed to be delivered? A mistake that needed to be contained? A piece of a cosmic equation that only balanced if he was right here, right now, having this same conversation?
The world didnât fade to black. It didnât dissolve. It rewound.
The warmth fled from the mug in his hands, rushing back into the air. The sound of the rain reversed into a silence that was then filled by its beginning. The door chimed backwards. His own body felt a visceral lurch, a sensation of being pulled, unstuck, and thenâŚ
The smell of rain on hot pavement.
The sound of it, a soft hiss.
The warmth of the ceramic mug in his hands.
He was in the cafĂŠ. The bell above the door chimed. A man in a long, dark coat walked in.
He looked at the stranger, this anchor of his existence, this keeper of his prison. And he felt a profound, weary recognition. He would meet him again. They would say the same things. They would get the same answers.
He took a sip of his coffee. It was always perfectly bitter. It was always the same.
He waited for the only other person in his universe to come and sit down.
Why has everything become subscription?
Also when a person is rude, doesn't mean they are interested in you, they just don't want you around and think too much and have already given clear say they are not interested
Why can't some people just figure out themselves why a certain scene needs certain reactions in movies or series or just google even for most simplest thing asking so many questions and ruining everything. like obviously if all your close one is killed, you will want to take revenge and be sad or angry, but NOOOOOOO , they can understand why the scene needs to be that way

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Have anyone used cutting onions as an excuse to cry so that no one asks questions about how one is feeling and hide their tears? Like literally.?
Sometimes I think that being selfish is essential for one's own growth.. okol toye yat nathako..... sobore kiba thaka olop belekoru sinta Kora.....
Belekor khatir bhabute, nijor ki ase nai bhabibo nuara hoi goisu.
Be a little selfish person.
Don't be a dependent person.
All the positive energy and confidence PLEASE bless me.
You Cosmos there please guide me.
I'm lost here.
I can't find my proper self.
I don't know where I'm, where I should be. I feel as if I'm in a stagnant pond with no oars to row my tiny boat.
I have said I love you so many times without meaning it that it has become a burden phrase
Someday I would like to be among the sea thousands of strangers cheering together to whomever deserving đ #alone #randomwish #randomthoughts

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
All those amazing talented people instead of inspired makes me uninspired and demotivated
One sun is enough to brighten up your world, proves that you don't need many stars, they just looks pretty.. #stayhome #staysafe