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If you know babes family at all you know that they don't like being in the spotlight they shy away from it very much, they only come out when they are supporting babe at events. A very rarely show their faces or get involved with anything to do with the celebrity stuff. They are very much the opposite to Billy's family The whole of Billy's family is used to being in the spotlight they are all involved in being on social media having their faces out there whereas babe's family is not. Babies also and only child and was raised by his mother and three aunts so they are very protective of him.
Gizmo4Prez retweeted
You're never fully prepared for the adorable faces you'll see when you meet a rescue dog for the first time. You can tell they know they're safe by the joy on their faces 💗
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“The warning signs were there for all to see. Once you know a key player faces international challenges, you prepare ahead and put measures in place. Ghana cannot afford surprises at such a crucial stage.” Read More: thevaultznews.com/2026/06/14… Read | Comment | Share
ਵੰਸ਼ / Vansh (Lineage) The bus from Ludhiana smelled of diesel and overripe guava. Harpreet pressed his forehead against the vibrating window and watched the fields flatten into village. Forty years old. Still unmarried. He had stopped explaining himself years ago. Daadi's house was the colour of old teeth. She was in the courtyard on her charpoy, a bundle of bones held together by white cotton and stubbornness. When she saw him her face opened — the way very old faces open, with that particular joy that has already begun to grieve. "Puttar," she said. He bent and touched her feet. It had been going on for twenty years. At twenty-two she asked and laughed after and pinched his cheek and the asking felt like warmth, like being wanted, like love. At thirty-five something had changed shape. The asking was no longer woven into conversation. It arrived first — before hello, before prayers, before she had even fully registered he was there. Before she asked if he had eaten. Before she told him her knees were bad. The question preceded everything, the way a scent precedes a person entering a room. When are you getting married. Show me the face of a par-pota (great-grandchild) before I go. When. When. He brought mangoes. She asked. He oiled her hair the way she liked. She closed her eyes with pleasure and then opened them and asked. He held her hand while she slept and she woke still gripping him and asked before she had even fully surfaced from sleep, as though the question lived closer to her than dreams did. He told himself: she is old. She is afraid. This is how they love. It was a Tuesday in October when the feeling came. She was mid-sentence — some story about a mela his grandfather had taken her to, 1958, she still remembered what she wore — when she stopped. The eyes found his face. Something moved behind them. Some older, more urgent thing that wore her face but was not quite her. "Harpreet. When are you getting married. You are my only grandson. I only want one par-pota — just one great-grandchild — to hold before I go. Only you can give me this." He kept fanning her with the magazine. Outside a dog barked. The ceiling fan was broken. And then he saw it. Not love. Not fear of dying. Something beneath both of those — something that had been pulling the strings of this entire performance for twenty years, and perhaps for her entire life, and perhaps for every life before hers going back further than anyone could name. He saw the strings themselves. Running from her trembling hands. Running through every pinched cheek and hot paratha and guilted phone call and tearful prayer. Running through izzat and vansh and khandaan and all the ancient words that dressed the same naked instruction in different clothes across every language on earth. He was the vehicle. He had always been the vehicle. The love was real. He did not doubt for a moment that the love was real. But he understood now that he had mistaken the wrapper for the gift. He sat very still. He thought of his whole life — the guilt, the weight of being the only one, the way her disappointment had lived in him like a tenant. Twenty years of it. And underneath all of it, this. Just this. The fan kept being broken. The dog had gone quiet. He leaned forward very slowly, the way you move toward someone sleeping, and brought his lips close to the paper-thin shell of her ear. She smiled, thinking it was an embrace. "Daadi," he said. Barely a whisper. "Haan, puttar." Her voice like dry leaves. He paused. He could smell the mustard oil in her white hair, and the particular smell of great old age, which is not unpleasant, which smells like earth returning to earth. "You want a par-pota," he said softly. "A great-grandchild. Just one. That is all you have asked for, all these years." "Haan," she breathed. "Just one. Before I go." "I went to a doctor in Chandigarh last month, Daadi." "Haan, puttar." Waiting. Hopeful, even now. "I made sure," he said, with great gentleness, "that there will be no par-pota. No children. Ever. It is done. It cannot be undone." A silence. Then he felt it move through her — not through her mind, not through her heart, but through something below both — a shudder that began in her chest and travelled outward to the thin papery hands and the ninety-five year old feet and the white hair and the rheumy eyes. A collapse without falling. Every held breath of twenty years leaving the body at once. She made a sound he had never heard from a human being. It was not crying. It was smaller and more terrible than crying. It was the sound of something vast and very old losing its footing. She turned to look at him. Her face was wrong. Not grief. Not anger. Something prior to both. Something that did not have a name in any language he knew because no one had ever needed to name it before. He held her gaze. He did not look away. He reached across and lifted the pillow from behind her head. He held it in both hands. He noticed he was smiling and found he could not stop. "Rest now, Daadi," he said gently. "You have worked so hard." The pillow came down. She was ninety-five and the body had been leaving for months. There was a small sound, then stillness, then the particular quality of silence that only enters a room once. He sat in the courtyard for a long time. A crow landed on the wall, considered him with one orange eye, and flew away without comment. The sun was going down over the fields of Punjab. Golden. Enormous. Indifferent. Doing what it had always done. He stood, smoothed his kurta, and went inside to call the doctor. The first revolt is always quiet.
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Peach🍑🎬 retweeted
Thousand Faces of Dunjia: A mission to protect humanity from a vicious monster from dark realm
Baahubali. Vs. Bhallaladeva Honestly, without Bhallaladeva Father's constant instigating and Manipulating, i don't think he would've the heart to eliminate his brother Baahubali. What's your Honest take?
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Replying to @MukandRita
Why would America apologize? Not their problem if the gov of India faces backlash at home. Americans are anyways good at destabilizing any country. Its the Indian reaction that matters. They should hit any US merchant vessel to show that thing's can't go unchallenged.
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Replying to @TheCineprism
Lost my respect for Indian audiences to the point I laugh at their faces for having a preference in what they watch. A preference so trash, a sense of entertainment so utter bullshit, it baffles me how these audiences are the reason studios here make shit in the name of movies.
a.a retweeted
It’s not secret oo, they do it publicly and laugh at everyone right in our faces.
I just know Nigerian politicians do monthly secret meetings to just laugh at us
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Jock Thomson 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇬🇧 🌍☀️🌕 ⚓🎗️O:-) retweeted
Makerfield taxi driver, 63, faces life on benefits due to Labour's Andy Burnham’s Clean Air Zone madness! John from Wigan has a 17-year-old taxi that’s immaculate and passes every emissions and MOT test. But from 31 Dec 2026, Burnham’s policy bans any car over 12 years old, regardless of emissions. John can’t afford a new £20k taxi and at 63 he’ll be forced out of work and onto benefits! ‼️This is the real cost of net zero virtue-signalling on working people. Vote @RestoreBritain to end this assault on hardworking British people!🇬🇧
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Replying to @IsmaelKiyonga
He's a good baller and I love his sense of positioning but wait when he faces a Scotland who are full of running.
Ellen Mortensen retweeted
🚨🇦🇱 BREAKING: Albania witnesses its largest protest so far. ✊️🇦🇱Every generation faces a moment when it must decide: Stay silent. Or stand up. ✊️🇦🇱More than 200,000 people have made their choice. ✊️History remembers those who showed up. #Albania
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Another conference in the bag. 2026 @BTCPrague was exactly what I had hoped it would be. Got to see some familiar faces. Got to meet @BTCsessions , @r0ckstardev , @UsDylan and see all the people I admire and respect do their thing on stage.
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z__005 retweeted
Replying to @LFCVik2
Dominik ‘The ball is a bomb’ Szoboszlai would’ve started shrugging his shoulders and making faces in front of the fans if he got shifted out of the way to LB.
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Replying to @Incognito_qfs
When we are young, we love being opinionated. But as time passes, realities catch up. Ideologies often stop mattering to people who are simply trying to survive, looking out for themselves. This MP is just 33 years old, but had emerged as one of the sharpest critics of the BJP, using art, music and culture as political resistance. Today, she faces the maximum heat and scrutiny…..
Replying to @torogems
Scan solana:6PuC6gyVfZAATJwoArT49ajY9dibXc3YX9WyfXZbpmrQ further. NO ~ The Original NO. Rage Face Meme Coin The iconic NO. rage face was created on August 10, 2010 by artist Chris Farral (known online as Up2Admin or on X as X.com/RealChrisFarral). He originally posted it on the Cheat Engine forums as a simple, brutally effective reaction image for shutting down terrible ideas with a single disapproving glare. That single drawing quickly exploded across 4chan, Reddit, Memebase, and the entire early rage comic ecosystem. It became one of the most recognizable “NO.” / disapproval faces of the 2010–2012 rage comic golden era, the ultimate visual way to say “absolutely not,” “hell no,” or “this is garbage.” Now in 2026, the actual original artist, Chris Farral, is on board with the official $NO project on Solana. This isn’t some random dev riding nostalgia actually it’s the real creator reclaiming and reviving his own legendary meme in the crypto era. Authentic provenance, no middlemen, no fake “official” copies. $NO is pure rage comic culture: raw, unfiltered, and brutally honest. Just like the face itself. NO. to rugs. NO. to fakes. YES to the real one. The legend from 2010 is finally getting his flowers.
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Replying to @CJP_4_Bihar
When we are young, we love being opinionated. But as time passes, realities catch up. Ideologies often stop mattering to people who are simply trying to survive, looking out for themselves. This MP is just 33 years old, but had emerged as one of the sharpest critics of the BJP, using art, music and culture as political resistance. Today, she faces the maximum heat and scrutiny…..
James 🎸🎹📻🎧📺🎬🎥🎞📚 retweeted
Scotland's famous faces, Clare Grogan, Tony Curran, Martin Compston, First Minister John Swinney, Gerard Butler and Former Scotland captain Darren Fletcher, have their say before the historic match. #Scotland #News #UK #ScottishFootball #WorldCup #FIFAWorldCup #WorldCup #FWC26 #HAISCO
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AsheaEggon retweeted
Nigeria is too fragile and faces too many security and unity challenges to entrust its presidency to someone who consistently makes excuses for separatists. At a time when the country needs strong leadership that defends national unity and the rule of law, electing a separatist apologist as President would send the wrong message and further deepen existing divisions.
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