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It's okay he finally petted her🙏💜 #murderdrones #murderdrone #murderdronesn #murderdronesv #vxn #nxv

29,541 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

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The 7-year-old girl in the front row wouldn't stand up. She held her backpack tight against her chest as if it could protect her. For 27 years, Mr. Carter has driven Route 56. He knows every child who steps onto his bus. He knows who forgot their lunch, who is excited about the weekend, and who is carrying something heavy inside. During the last few weeks, 7-year-old Amaya had changed. She used to laugh the loudest and sing along to every song on the radio. Now she sat in silence, wore long sleeves even on hot afternoons, and tensed whenever the bus hit a bump. Each day he watched her walk toward the house at 412 Pine Road. Something about that driveway always made his stomach tighten. That afternoon, he pulled up to her stop and opened the doors. Amaya didn't move. She kept staring through the window at the driveway. A truck was parked there. Mr. Carter set the brake and turned around in his seat. He didn't raise his voice. He simply looked at her. "Amaya," he said gently, "are you okay?" Her eyes were filled with fear. "He's home," she whispered. "He's angry again. I don't want to go inside." The bus grew quiet. "I know," she said, shaking. "I don't want to go back there." He stood up and walked toward her seat. "You're with me right now," he told her calmly. She looked up at him. "You gonna make me?" "Not today," he answered. Amaya stepped into his arms without hesitation. She pressed her face into his jacket and began to cry, her small body trembling. "We're staying right here until you feel okay," he said softly. "Just breathe with me." Mr. Carter closed the doors and secured the bus. He contacted dispatch and asked them to send help, keeping his voice steady while he stayed beside her. For that hour, the bus remained parked. He didn't rush her. He didn't let her face that driveway alone. Outside, the truck never moved. Inside, she finally felt safe.

Crazy Moments

92,688 görüntüleme • 10 gün önce

#zhanglinghe #TheBestThing 🩺🌷 he suye always told others to love themselves more than anything else. but, is he also apply it to himself? yes. these two scenes makes me realize that that he knows his value so well and also know when to give up and move on. I love how the screenwriters didn't make his character ended as a "love brain" guy that will just love the FL without any reason. even if he's already been hurt. when he was rejected, he chose to stay away from sxf. it's not until sxf came to his house that he tried to open communication with her again. in 1st video below, he said that he will also end the relationship if he feels it doesn't spark happiness anymore. this is inline with his mother's hardships during marriage. she was trying to hold onto someone who didn't have the same amount of love and made her ended up loving alone and struggling alone. this is also the reason why he didn't propose to sxf. actually, after sxf gave him the ring and the way he said "I thought you will propose me", we know he already considering marriage. but it was only when she propose to him then he propose her right away. did he passively waiting? no. at one side, he waited for her to finally ready to marry him by her own willing. at the other side, he make sure that she also have the same amount of love so he will not end up being the one who has more love in this relationship. he make sure no one in this relationship will end up like his mother. the importance to love yourself before loving others. thanks he suye for this lesson🥹🫶🏻

张凌赫的小核桃𖹭

30,965 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

"A welfare check on a quiet street turned into something Sheriff Daniel Hayes will never forget. Neighbors hadn't seen the young mother at 214 Willow Lane for two days. They told dispatch a baby had been crying on and off, then suddenly everything went silent. Silence was what worried them most. Hayes, a 20-year veteran, arrived expecting a routine knock and a tired parent who simply hadn't answered the door. He knocked hard and announced himself. No movement. No sound. He forced the door open and stepped inside, calling out as he moved down the hallway. The air felt heavy. A faint smell of heat and stillness hung in the rooms. In the back bedroom, he found a baby girl lying in her crib. She was weak and dehydrated, but her eyes were open. When she saw him, she didn't cry. She just stared. "You've been around a long time, haven't you?" he said softly as he moved closer. In the next room, he found her mother. She had passed away in her sleep from a sudden medical event. Later reports estimated she had been gone for at least 36 hours. The baby had been alone the entire time. Training took over first. Hayes checked her breathing and pulse, then called for medical assistance. After that, he carried her outside to the front porch, away from the scene inside. He lowered himself into an old wooden chair and held her carefully against his chest. "It's alright," he murmured. "I'm here now. You're not alone right now." The child's small fingers wrapped weakly around his shirt. Her head rested under his chin as he waited for the ambulance. "You held on so long," he whispered. "We're going to get you warm. We're going to." His partner captured the moment from a distance. The photo shows a seasoned sheriff sitting on a porch, cradling a baby as tears fall down his face. Years of experience hadn't prepared him for the weight of that afternoon. The girl, later named Lily, recovered at the hospital. Hayes and his wife opened their home to her while relatives were located. When her grandparents were finally found, the handoff was quiet and full of emotion. Now she visits every month. The uniform that carried her out of that house is no longer just a symbol of authority to her family. Some calls end when the report is filed. Others change a life long after the sirens fade.

Crazy Moments

963,984 görüntüleme • 11 gün önce

At 10 p.m. on a quiet Tuesday, the neighbors on Maple Street grew concerned. Mrs. Eleanor Price — 84 years old, barely five feet tall, known for tending her roses every morning - was standing alone on her porch in the dark, gently swaying and talking to someone who wasn't there. They called 911. Officer Daniel Reyes arrived expecting a routine welfare check. Maybe confusion. Maybe grief. Maybe something worse. Six years on the force had shown him plenty. But as he climbed the creaky porch steps, he heard soft music drifting through the night air — "Moon River" playing from an old radio, the kind with a turning dial and fading signal. "Everything okay, ma'am?" he asked softly. Mrs. Price startled, pressing a hand to her chest before quickly wiping her eyes. "Oh, officer, I'm sorry," she said, embarrassed. "Today would have been our 60th wedding anniversary. My husband passed last month. We always danced right here on this porch every year. I was just... pretending he was still here." Daniel could have gently told her to head inside. Cleared the call. Moved on. His shift didn't end until midnight. Instead, he removed his hat and set it on the porch railing. Then he held out his hand. ''I'm not as good a dancer as he was," Daniel said quietly, "but may I have this one?" For three minutes, under the soft yellow porch light, a young police officer slow-danced with a grieving widow while curtains shifted and neighbors watched through tearful smiles. Mrs. Price rested her head against his uniform, and for the first time in weeks, she smiled - really smiled. Later, when someone thanked him, Officer Reyes just shrugged. "She needed someone to dance with. That's all." Sometimes protecting and serving means protecting a heart that's still learning how to beat alone. These days, when neighbors see Mrs. Price swaying on her porch, they don't call 911. They just wave. And once a week, Officer Daniel stops by during his patrol. "Just checking in," he says. But the radio always ends up playing... and they always end up dancing 💕💕🙏

G-PA

55,053 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

"The Royal Guard is known for standing still through anything. Crowds can shout, cameras can flash, children can wave inches from his face, and he doesn't react. On a crowded afternoon outside St. James's Palace, 7-year-old Liam had been waiting for hours to see the soldiers in their bright red coats and tall black hats. His mother had promised him he would finally see them up close. One moment he was holding her hand. The next moment, he was swallowed by a wall of strangers. Panic hit fast. He turned in circles, calling out, but all he saw were coats and moving legs. Tears blurred his vision as he pushed through the crowd looking for someone safe. That was when he saw the guard. The soldier stood perfectly still inside his sentry box, eyes forward, posture locked. Liam ran straight toward him and grabbed the edge of the red coat. "Please, please," the boy cried. Every rule says the guard doesn't react to tourists. Training says no sudden movement, no emotional response, no break in discipline. The soldier looked down. He saw shaking hands and a child who was truly terrified. A small clock inside the box showed 1:59 PM. Relief was scheduled for 2:00 PM. "Stay right here. Do not move," the guard said quietly, barely shifting his stance. "I'm helping you in one minute." For sixty long seconds, Liam stood pressed against the uniform, breathing hard. The guard didn't step away. He didn't raise his voice. He simply waited for the change of post. At exactly 2:00 PM, the next sentry marched into position. The formal exchange lasted only a moment. As soon as he was officially relieved, the soldier stepped out of the box and dropped to one knee. "Hey, look at me," he said gently. "You're okay." The boy tried to speak but the words fell apart. "Are you safe here?" the guard asked softly. Liam shook his head and finally whispered, "I can't find my mum." The guard opened his arms without hesitation. The child leaned into him, gripping the heavy wool coat as if it were the only solid thing left in the world. "We're going to find her," the soldier said in a calm, steady voice. "You're not alone." Police officers in the area quickly began searching through the crowd. Within minutes, a frantic mother broke through the line, calling her son's name. She pulled him close, thanking the guard through tears. The soldier simply nodded once and stepped back into position as if nothing had happened. A few seconds later, he was standing still again, eyes forward, while the crowd carried on like always

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