Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 20 hours ago
فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists

Category

📚
Learning
Transcript
00:01What is this?
00:03Where am I?
00:04What's going on?
00:06Don't worry, Hossam
00:08This is a simple bloodletting procedure
00:09What is this?
00:10Is this a campaign to donate blood?
00:12no
00:12Is it a campaign to plant a tree?
00:14Why would I draw blood from you for a tree-planting campaign, you human being?
00:17Why is God punishing me because I don't donate blood?
00:20No, not yet
00:21Why? There's nothing wrong with them.
00:23The thing is, I'm drawing blood from young men.
00:26I renew my blood with it, and consequently, I renew my youth.
00:28Will I renew your youth?
00:29By installment, can't you see the bald head?
00:31I'm really worried about this now
00:33Did you notice that?
00:34This is an advertising space
00:35Even if hair isn't important
00:37the important
00:38What's wrong with me? I have diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart problems.
00:40What's this? I'm black.
00:42Isn't that all?
00:43My wife isn't happy with me, be careful.
00:45What does "not understanding" mean?
00:46What I did was make it seem like a crazy science, a thug, and some other nonsense.
00:49I'm so angry with you, Hussam
00:50Your wicked schemes were thwarted by your chronic illnesses.
00:53Mahmoud Al-Far's meaning and your bad eating habits
00:56Why did you only focus on this one, sir?
00:57I'm being run over by the world like a train.
01:00Well, I was really happy that you kidnapped me.
01:02So I can get some rest from my worries
01:03What's the extra, Hossam?
01:05enough
01:05I'm the one who will donate blood to you
01:09You're welcome, but before you donate, I need to get an understanding from your Hester.
01:12As you can see, the situation doesn't need any trouble.
01:14More than that
01:22My dear friends, this is not Hadi Al Saleh and his friends, I know you are in a new episode of the Al-Daheeh program.
01:26My dear viewers, and of course my condolences
01:28This episode is for everyone who is obsessed with their money and looks.
01:32Dear Kanin, let me tell you about the French noblewoman Diane Deputies.
01:36Diane was no ordinary character, especially by Channel 16 standards.
01:39Diane was in charge of the education of the royal family's children.
01:42This woman is a patron of the arts.
01:44Most importantly, she was the lover of King Henry II.
01:48Forget everything that came before.
01:49That was the reason for her victory.
01:50Without teaching, without fan, he is Henry II.
01:52Almost the six of them were so jealous
01:54She was like the real owner of France
01:56Not his real wife, Catherine
01:57But, my dear historian, what came before it?
02:001565
02:01The record, with all its books, contained this very strange observation.
02:04And that's because Diane looked very young.
02:07He described her as sitting
02:08Oh Abu Ahmad, this is a move to flatter historians
02:10I know her very well
02:11Her well-known gesture was to go to her mother-in-law and say it.
02:13Hey, hey, what's this? I thought I was the bride!
02:16Hahaha
02:17Honestly, my dear, the matter was much bigger than that.
02:19Greater skill than that
02:20Diane had it at the time of the interview
02:22Sixty-six years
02:23However, the man was genuinely impressed by her youth.
02:25He was saying
02:29Six, if you add one hundred years to the sixty-six that already existed
02:31The signs of aging won't be visible in her.
02:33Of course, my dear, I don't need to tell you about the historians' eye diameter.
02:36One might say that the state has expanded its influence and become far-reaching.
02:40Turn the page. Taxes have increased due to external risks and the collapse of the state.
02:44The man, may God bless him, his eye pierced the woman and brought her to the ground.
02:47Diane dies 6 months after this interview
02:49Ironically, Diane was indeed obsessed with the idea of ​​youth.
02:52And that's why, my dear, you were drinking something very strong.
02:54Gold chloride mixed with diacylcap
02:57My dear, you were drinking from a golden cup
03:02And what surprised me was that at that time I was extremely critical.
03:04Drinking gold was a tradition in the Middle Ages, especially among the nobility.
03:07How many people perform Umrah since gold is not consumed?
03:09So, we can drink it then.
03:10Our bodies do not wrinkle or age.
03:12We take from the strength of the element that does not rust
03:14It doesn't carry a logical argument.
03:16What is she actually doing?
03:17And it was shaped by a young man, according to the historian.
03:19This is
03:19He is the unfortunate man whose eye is beautiful.
03:21Honestly, my dear, I wish I could agree with you.
03:22And we'll go out on Ghost Night, you and I
03:24However, science has proven otherwise.
03:25Recent analyses of Diane's body remains
03:27Very high concentrations of gold and mercury were shown.
03:30It means the woman didn't sleep because of envy.
03:31She most likely died as a result of poisoning.
03:34From the gold I drank over the years
03:37The truth, my dear
03:38Before drinking gold, there were attempts
03:40It might seem a bit more scientific
03:42To combat aging and restore youth
03:44So, in the fifteenth century
03:45Pope Innocent VIII
03:46He was convinced of the idea of ​​blood renewal.
03:48And he applied it in the year 1492
03:50They made a very strong move, my dear, with their news
03:52A crime in the history of modern medicine
03:53They brought three very ordinary young men
03:55They drew blood from them
03:56They injected it into the body of the sick Pope
03:57Come on, take it
03:58Of course, my dear, I don't celebrate your statement.
04:00The operation ended with the death of all four.
04:01And Dr. Matt is probably out of line
04:03Of course, my dear, he didn't know at the time.
04:04Blood transfusion without compatibility
04:07In the factions
04:07The sterilization process of the blood itself
04:09This is a disaster, it affects lifespan, don't prolong it
04:11And the man knew, that was it.
04:12But it doesn't mean my name, my dear.
04:13Count your taking and bringing back, your going and bringing back
04:15In the centuries
04:15You can't handle these time-related hiccups.
04:26But it suffices to say that the obsession with resisting aging
04:28It is recorded in one of the oldest existing human epics.
04:31The Epic of Gelgamish 2100 BC
04:33In this epic, King Gilgamesh was leading
04:36Legendary adventures to find the plant of immortality
04:38And all his attempts were unsuccessful.
04:40Everything you need to know about them was that they were kings and popes
04:42and nobles
04:43Characters, my dear, at the foot of the pyramid
04:44The area, my dear, is imprinted with longevity.
04:46But if we look at our current situation
04:48We will find the thinking of ordinary people about aging
04:50They could think much more than their ancestors did.
04:52It no longer matters whether you are a king or a nobleman.
04:53Everyone is thinking now about their future and when they will be able to manage.
04:56This is simply because people these days are obsessed with all this.
04:58They didn't usually live long after forty anyway.
05:00For him, old age was retirement age.
05:02The one who reaches the age of sixty is the centenarian.
05:04Up to the eighteenth century, the child in England
05:06It was expected that he would live to the age of thirty-five.
05:08This is the average, of course, because many children were dying.
05:10In America, the average age was 28.
05:12Now, my dear child, who was born in America in 1986
05:14It is expected that he will live for 70 years.
05:16If it was a male and three, 78 in the name of God
05:18God willing, if she were a young lady, of course for well-known reasons.
05:20We won't say it because we didn't sleep in '69
05:21One 71 is very sweet, why? What's the problem? It's beautiful.
05:23Average, my dear, what he's telling you was roughly what was expected.
05:26Our poverty is 18, and that means that today
05:28We see the symptoms of aging and its diseases that
05:30We need it much more than before.
05:32It's natural that this would be a very large part of our thinking.
05:34And what is our fear, my dear, that has made our current time
05:36A battleground in science, medicine, and commerce
05:39With one enemy: old age
05:41But first, let's talk about these battles.
05:42We need to know what old age actually is.
05:44What does old age mean?
05:46When medicine and biology define aging
05:48It is time-related deterioration
05:50In essential vital functions
05:52For survival and reproduction
05:54Take me, my dear, by the hand of your sister
05:56We'll fill your belly, my dear, we'll go inside you
05:58We are now on a journey inside your body
06:01Don't do anything
06:02I see you and I see your intestines
06:04I won't tell you what's happening in the lungs.
06:06Some people sit in large numbers
06:08Tell me, my dear, you have defined aging through your body.
06:11Aging isn't something that improves from day one.
06:13This is a collection of small daily accumulations
06:15We start to see its effects over time.
06:16What we respected, Kamel told Professor Abdel Bassa Hamouda
06:19There is no such thing in the world as suddenly seeing the soul
06:21I suddenly found myself
06:22Gerontologists have problems with this issue.
06:24You're tired of this sudden thing, it's your problem.
06:25Please don't smoke in it
06:26The process is very gradual, like, for example, fine lines.
06:29Which turns into a wrinkle
06:31Straighten your back when you suddenly stand up from the chair
06:43The process of the hand or mentalization
06:44You love the process of burning calorie
06:46This process, my dear, just as it produces energy
06:47It also produces waste.
06:49Waste we call free roots
06:52This waste, my dear, attacks parts
06:55Very, very important in DNA
06:57and proteins
06:57Over time, my dear, this makes the cells work properly.
07:00And they begin to die at faster rates.
07:02And also, fewer new cells are formed.
07:04This, my dear, is at the cellular level.
07:06We extract the substance from the cell onto the body.
07:08And we see this manifest in signs and our eyes
07:09The skin becomes damaged and the muscles weaken.
07:11This increases your risk of developing chronic and serious diseases.
07:14Also, my dear, this is the neem tree.
07:15Which is considered your operating manual or guide
07:18The code that tells the cell what to do or not to do
07:20Over time, my dear, spelling mistakes started to appear.
07:22The body used to be able to repair it quickly.
07:24But with age
07:25The cinema is a little late, sorry, I'll announce the sleep schedule.
07:28Please, my dear, let the mistakes pile up.
07:29The cell is malfunctioning, so immunity is delayed.
07:31And the organs weaken more and more
07:33In addition to that, my dear, as I told you, there is an accumulation of free radicals.
07:36And we have an accumulation
07:37Genetic variations (mutations)
07:39The small mistakes that occur in it
07:42Our catalog of chromosomes
07:43What do you want? These differences, my dear
07:45Caused by a factor like radiation
07:47Oxidation or even random errors
07:49This occurs during cell division.
07:51And that, my dear, is how the body works, with its systems.
07:53Effective correction when you see a mistake and catch it
07:55And you can fix it, but my dear, with the reality
07:57She says that as we get older, efficiency decreases.
07:59Why do these discrepancies keep piling up, my dear?
08:01They accumulate, they accumulate, they accumulate, they accumulate
08:03The threat to the healthy cell begins to decrease.
08:05The organs begin to weaken gradually
08:08The immune system starts to work more slowly.
08:10So, my dear, you become more and more susceptible to infection.
08:13The third problem, my dear, is related to the design itself.
08:15A change occurs in the cell design.
08:17There's something called telomeres
08:19telomeres
08:20My dear, it's just a small error at the end of the chromosome.
08:22It protects our chromosomes during cell division.
08:25And that, my dear, is because every time this cell divides
08:29My darling, the telomeres are shortening
08:30shorten, shorten, shorten, shorten
08:40Either you leave with your skin on, or the wounds will slowly heal.
08:42And immunity will begin to weaken because the immune cell itself
08:45It's no longer renewing enough
08:46My dear, add to these examples many other processes that would take too long to explain.
08:50But of course, they all happen at the same level.
08:52cell area
08:53And the same result is achieved
08:55Aging
08:56By the grace of God, I beg you, my dear, wrinkles are too much.
08:59Obedience is a sign of respect in the street
09:00any?
09:00Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, look who's talking!
09:03As for what is a paper separator
09:03You are capable of creating popcorn dishes.
09:06What is this?!
09:06And they've ruined our old ways, what can I say? Let's just listen.
09:08Let's see what happens in the body
09:09Here we are, suffocating and leaving me with the episodes
09:10Skz, Skz, you're so messed up, you're going to get her.
09:13My dear, the timing and speed of everything I've told you about happening inside the cell is hindering things.
09:16It depends on reasons that you have no control over, such as genetics, for example.
09:19But it depends on your lifestyle, and that's in your hands.
09:22Do you know what you're doing?
09:24You can rely on a few healthy families to combat aging, which begins in the smallest part of your body.
09:28Free radicals, for example, are primarily dealt with by antioxidants.
09:31Take it, my dear, you'll find it in the most expensive fruits and vegetables.
09:34Also, there are supplements like vitamin C, omega-3 fatty acids, and vitamin A.
09:37And also in the creams and serums that we put on our skin
09:41I'm not sure, of course, if the scrub and lemon masks are the ones for desserts.
09:43But the sample block is useful
09:45Why? Because the Sambloc reduces the formation of free radicals in the first place.
09:49If Saif Naji remains my dear friend, what are the differences in religion?
09:52My dear, we can achieve this with enough sleep and exercise.
09:56Quit smoking and reduce your exposure to toxins
09:58And also creams that contain retinol
10:00This helps creativity to be renewed.
10:01Ahmed, I'm Hassan, you're going to release a promo box and tell me
10:06There is a discount on hair transplants at one of the Turkish clinics.
10:10Please, if this is an episode sponsored by a beauty agency
10:13Tell me because I'm not buying
10:15The client who put Fix Bonsorship in this thread
10:17I don't trust him at all; his money is worthless.
10:20Is this a view? This is Bfour?
10:22This is the first time I've seen a picture like this
10:23Abu Hamad, honestly, I'm not buying into this talk.
10:26Because I can't go to a dentist for a hair transplant
10:27I listen to Dr. Hossam Mawafi, for example.
10:29The topic there is easy
10:30Three tablespoons of honey, two tablespoons of marjoram, and a sprinkle of fennel.
10:32Not only will the illness not leave you, but more importantly...
10:34I want the rest of something from that book.
10:36All of this empty-headed woman is being treated at once.
10:38The disc, tell me, what pills?
10:40Honestly, my dear, the world hasn't yet discovered these pills that you're imagining.
10:44The philosopher's stone remains just a myth.
10:46For example, no medication will guarantee a longer duration of seizures.
10:49But the families involved in this are a long process.
10:51I'll take care of her and distract her, but I'll also learn about healthy lifestyle.
10:54There are things that speed up the cutting of the tokens
10:56Like stress and psychological strain
10:58And countries need to stop it
10:58I honestly don't know how
11:00If you received something and found out about my hats, please send a message to the page.
11:01I'll get even more stressed, so don't look at her.
11:03These countries, my dear, don't need to provide evidence; they happen to Omar, the letter Y.
11:05There are also things, my dear, that slow down the cutting of these numbers.
11:08It's like you're being lazy and committing to sports.
11:10Proper storage procedures remain.
11:12It remains on the plateau like that
11:13One Amr Diab
11:14Regular physical activity
11:15And those healthy foods you don't like
11:16They were associated with a period of increased health.
11:18And the health span that exists in humans
11:20Look, my dear, there are also systems like intermittent fasting.
11:23Restricting the calories that enter your body
11:25All these things caught the attention of scientists.
11:27After they carried out experiments on animals
11:28They found that it reduces the harmful effects of aging.
11:31No, my dear, your idea is simply that you are temporarily depriving yourself of food.
11:34This causes the cell to perform a process called autophagy.
11:37Autophagy
11:38And this, my dear, recycles the cell's benefits.
11:40Therefore, it may slow down aging.
11:42I mean, my dear, even with the appearance of traces
11:44For example, a few wrinkles appearing on your face
11:46She also says that with a few changes
11:48In your lifestyle, you can achieve what we call
11:51healthy aging
11:52Mohammad, I think you're describing a lifestyle.
11:54What I see in American movies
11:56I see a small digital alarm clock, Perrin, at 4 AM.
11:58I need to take a shower at 4:30 AM
12:01Go down and you'll find me at the level in my sidebound.
12:03Or in Manhattan, at the expense of praise, pictures in it
12:05I'd rather run, run, run, run, run
12:07He greeted the people and was a companion of the Prophet, and so on.
12:08Then I'll go back and take a shower.
12:10And then I'll start trading in the crypto world.
12:12And then I put on a watch like that.
12:16And then I put on my face
12:26This is Abu Ahmed Hamou, one of those things I don't want to live through.
12:28I'm already telling you, so you're talking about the right thing to do.
12:30And I locked up and slept
12:31I'm Abu Ahmed, if I go to work I'll come back and sleep
12:33It's impossible for me to do all of this
12:34Did he tell me, my dear, to try to avoid sleep?
12:35Getting enough sleep is a very important factor in resisting aging.
12:39This is because it supports the process of religious reform.
12:41Hormonal balance
12:42While lack of sleep and sleep deprivation accelerate the biological aging process
12:47This is the aspect that relates to your lifestyle.
12:49But who knows, maybe things will get easier in the future.
12:51So, should I bring an apple or a cucumber?
12:53I'll take the fruit as we agreed and come back to you.
12:56Oh, we're back to simplifying science in a way that makes people's skin bleed.
12:59Ask, my dear, what scratch remains, the one who tries to resist the wrinkles of torture.
13:01But I found it to be a constant truth.
13:03I entered the nape stage
13:04Remember, my dear, when I told you that the issue has a genetic aspect?
13:06You are an angel, whatever you wish.
13:07In the future, it might be possible for you to have a hand
13:09Because scientists no longer consider imprisonment as it was in the past.
13:11The Prophet's prayer on the forty light
13:12Prophetic light remained
13:13Nour El Nabawy is now Abu
13:14Those who are blind now, my dear, are looking for radical solutions to aging.
13:17For example, through processes like the most amazing programming of the cell itself.
13:19So that you will make her young again
13:21A team, for example, from Harvard University
13:23He succeeded in restoring sight to an elderly woman.
13:26They created a genetic makeup for them and told you that instead of covering wrinkles
13:29Come on, I'm fixing this myself.
13:31You have a gene ambush called Cloto
13:32This creates a protein associated with youth.
13:34But his output is limited by age.
13:36The scientists made a copy of it and injected it into France.
13:39The result was that the treated rats lived 20% longer.
13:42Their memory has improved significantly.
13:44There has been an awakening in the world of bakeries.
13:46Everyone who grew old became young again
13:47All the old bakers were standing in front of the drains, picking at the water.
13:50We will remain burdened by what we are going through.
13:51In the name of God, what a wonderful thing! You're talking to me in the city?
13:53Not in the future
13:53Dear friend, this is still just an experimental phase on the ovens.
13:55Not everyone who succeeds with them will succeed with us.
13:57And our night is a night
13:59It needs FDA approval and five or ten years.
14:02We'll try it here, and there are no side effects here tonight.
14:05My dear, on the day of the blossoming, many things might happen.
14:07For example, the body might reject the virus that carries the gene.
14:10Or the modification that works to disrupt it in other things
14:12Also, the idea that we are tampering with human genes
14:14To live a more developed time
14:15This is a moral dilemma, not just a scientific one.
14:17Because the genes you manipulated
14:20De Hattors the hungry ages
14:21Do you have the right to make this decision for yourself?
14:23And your children in the future
14:25Generally speaking, the topic of genetics is full of problems.
14:27We have another solution, which is stem cells.
14:29Didn't we say that what's happening is normal with age?
14:32Our normal cells
14:33What did the scientists tell him?
14:34We will bring in new cells
14:35We inject it into the face or the heart.
14:38or in the joints
14:39Cells like that, making a scrotum
14:40Cut it, leave anything
14:41skin, muscle, immunity
14:43Backlift plays in all positions
14:44Indeed, my dear, the people who took these cells
14:46They said it was better if they stayed asleep.
14:48They felt they were ten years younger.
14:50And their skin remained softer
14:51Their arrogance has decreased
14:52Their reaction remained larger
14:53But still, my dear
14:54This road is fraught with dangers
14:55If the cells are from a donor
14:57Fuward receives immune rejection
14:59Even if the clinic is half a kilo
15:00You can take your money and put salt in it for you
15:02Aren't you Dr. Magdini Aqoub?
15:03You won't know if the cells are stem cells or not.
15:05And here you'll get badly hurt, my friend.
15:06Because the topic is not private
15:07Stem cell skin rejuvenation session
15:10It could cost four thousand dollars
15:13Buhamad, how did they put this raw material on the screen?
15:15Take her quickly
15:15Don't take it off, my dear Rick, it's special
15:17Just type in the promo code for Al-Dahih
15:18Luxo Younger
15:19I will speak to them for you, God willing.
15:20I'm trying to blackmail them into giving me a discount.
15:23Buhamad, I'm swimming because I'm entering from outside.
15:25Contrary to usual, it means
15:26I timed my words with a question
15:28My respect to the scientific community
15:29and the community of scholars
15:30But I could be in my twenties or thirties
15:32And my feeling about myself is that I'm a young man who hasn't even turned 22.
15:35The artist Edward is still portrayed as a university student.
15:37I might even lift more at the gym than younger people.
15:39Honestly, this statement doesn't apply to me.
15:41My age is just a minor issue on my ID card.
15:43Even though you overstepped your bounds
15:44I entered from the inside; I like to enter it.
15:46However, the irony is that your feeling is very true
15:48Researchers have recently begun to differentiate between digital age
15:50Your age on the card and your biological age
15:53Biological, such as edge
15:54Which is, how exactly does your body work?
15:55Medicine these days, my dear, can now measure biological age.
15:58Through a need like
15:59I want to leave a lasting impression of you, one that changes over time.
16:01The issue has escalated to the point where some people have asked questions.
16:03If we could measure biological teeth
16:05With the emphasis on accuracy, it would be beneficial to make it our legal age.
16:08And then Omar will remain a real number on the card.
16:10And by my dear in the Netherlands
16:12One named Emile Ratelban
16:13The man is 69 years old.
16:14He filed a lawsuit to change his birth date.
16:17And his mother made himself twenty years younger.
16:18Azizi relied on the argument that his body was that of a young man.
16:21But my dear, the court refused.
16:22This situation, my dear, makes us people. The question is very important.
16:24What difference does it make to this man?
16:26It means if your health is fine
16:27Why does it matter to you?
16:28Age on the ID card
16:28Someone told her, "Deeb, my old man said..."
16:30What's wrong with you, riding the metro?
16:32What kind of talk do you tell people to buy from you?
16:33People respect you and listen to your wise words.
16:36Even if you're saying nonsense
16:37What's wrong with old age? I'm inclined towards old age.
16:39The truth, my dear, is that the idea of ​​hating old age
16:41What is the idea I want right now?
16:43One of the main reasons for this is unity.
16:45You and I both know her very well.
16:46Who is Abu Hamad Ruby?
16:47No, Ruby was doing it well.
16:48It is the head of the mill
16:50Mohammed, I honestly don't agree with you.
16:51Because I feel Ruby is a socialist, since we all love her.
16:54Dear, our lives are slipping away in the episode
16:55Can we please focus and finish this?
16:57So that we know how to fight aging
16:58A person knows himself in his current state
17:00He remained very attached to his work.
17:01And the production, too, from when I felt that you were young
17:04If you reach the age of sixty, you will receive a pension.
17:05Her assistance to many people makes them feel that her time is diminishing over time.
17:08But the biggest problem is the issue of biological age.
17:10It doesn't completely prevent external changes.
17:12Oh, I believe you! Your body inside might still be young.
17:15But from the outside
17:15You are a decrepit old man
17:17Your hair for white curls and face
17:18Your baldness is accompanying a Mongolian advance
17:20Life, my dear, is what we've come to see.
17:22In this era
17:23There's no longer strong interest in it.
17:24Your health is acting like
17:26As much as
17:27You look quite old
17:30It means she might be doing everything hacily
17:31And I deliberately and slowly made your snorting
17:33But people are sick, their focus is solely on your appearance.
17:35And he controls it based on that
17:36This brings us to an important question.
17:37Can we judge a person's health based on their appearance?
17:40This question has puzzled researchers on the subject of age.
17:43The answer, my dear, is to some extent that
17:45no
17:45Many doctors have noticed that patients look much older than their age.
17:48A difference of, for example, ten years or more
17:50They often have chronic illnesses and general weakness.
17:52While people's bodies look younger than their actual age
17:54They have better knowledge performance
17:56And less exposure to age-related diseases
17:58Like a bone-cutter, for example
17:59Researchers have also suggested that physiological processes
18:02The one that affects the face
18:03For example, the loss of the don under the chin
18:04Or the planes that might happen in Al-Basha in general
18:06It may reflect aging in other tissues
18:08What I'm trying to say, my dear, is that these studies say
18:11The face reveals, in one way or another, how healthy you are.
18:15And the extent to which you practice health needs
18:18But I repeat, if you hit my probability
18:20And it's not a rule that can be generalized.
18:22I see the wrinkles on my face
18:23The person in front of you, sir
18:25He stands filming the episode for six hours
18:2811 years, my dear
18:3011 years and she's not standing anymore
18:3211 years without a stunt double
18:34Ahmed Al-Shaeri is no longer
18:35It was a period of periods, meaning
18:36He honestly slept most of the time
18:37And honestly, it was also the ghost of Amr Wahba
18:39It's important, my dear, what I'm trying to say
18:40That means 11 years and I haven't tightened my belt
18:42By God's grace, I woke up perfectly fine.
18:43Although, as you can see, it's like this
18:44But some people feel they are growing up faster
18:46Due to sun exposure
18:47For example, smoking
18:48But their internal organs
18:50He's still in good health
18:51Other people's genes
18:52Or grooming habits
18:53Their skin has a youthful appearance
18:55But they might have back problems.
18:57Look, my dear, we confirm this as a rule.
18:59The cells that work inside your body
19:01It is governed by the same laws.
19:02The cells control
19:03The one that forms your outer skin
19:04The only difference is that the cell outside
19:06Among people, only in her gaze
19:07Or in its wrinkles
19:08What a problem, my dear
19:09This is what I tell you
19:10The society we live in
19:11And the northern woman
19:12We won't wait to see
19:13Scientific opinions
19:14The moment you see someone
19:16Your mind is constantly evaluating
19:17Through its wrinkles
19:18And the age that is apparent on him
19:20How old does he look?
19:21And here, my dear, comes the most important question of our episode.
19:23The question that many people ask
19:25Instead of one passing by, he hurts himself.
19:27And he eats boiled food
19:29He eats protein
19:30And he will eat young people
19:32He plays sports
19:33He pays him four thousand dollars
19:35And he gives me stem cells
19:36We're not laughing at the system.
19:37Smaller teeth
19:39We work a shift, we take a saw, we put in Botox
19:42We're smaller without doing the voting.
19:45I don't need to tell you, Abu Ahmed
19:47The book cover is much more eye-catching than the book itself.
19:50Prayer, what is the community like this?
19:51His gaze will judge her by her appearance.
19:53No one will touch my Reeb
19:54And nobody will stop me in the street to check my blood pressure and blood sugar levels.
19:57And how many times does my heart beat?
19:59They want an Instagram-like look
20:00I'll give them an Instagram-style look.
20:02And what every capable person can bear of handsomeness
20:05The year 2024, my dear, is approaching a wonderful film.
20:08Its name is Substance
20:10There's a movie, my dear, about
20:11One of the stars of the media world
20:14Elizabeth Sparkle
20:15The one who presents a popular sports program about sports
20:17Elizabeth, my dear, is energetic.
20:19And she performs her movements with precision.
20:20May God bless her, what God wills.
20:22Her biological age is exactly [perfect].
20:24But my dear, the problem is that her ID card says she's fifty years old.
20:26This shows in wrinkles, not in time.
20:28That's why her stardom starts to decline.
20:30They force her to retire
20:32And this, my dear, is a company that you contact.
20:34And give her a cheap substance
20:35This substance only hides the signs of aging in her.
20:37No, this creates an improved version of it.
20:40A young woman in her twenties
20:41This story, my dear, is action-packed and perfectly encapsulates the dilemma of our current era.
20:44One has completed his biological year
20:46And the number is not working properly.
20:47It's obvious to people that he's reached old age.
20:49The material that my daughter is taking temporarily fulfills her dreams of regaining her youth.
20:53But it's like ancient myths
20:55It causes it to atrophy completely and become ugly.
20:58The current one, my dear, is also the one we're being fair about.
21:00The reality of today doesn't present us with the tragedy we saw in the film The Substance.
21:04God was watching over his viewers
21:05Our reality presents us with unknown material.
21:08It brings back the youth
21:08But only after scientific solutions
21:10Which allows us to appreciate old age
21:12We put our display case in place
21:14We're changing our destination
21:15I'm fed up, my dear, with fillers and Botox.
21:18And people who speak in a normal way
21:20Hey Mohammed
21:21Are you sitting?
21:22I know, my dear, that it might be
21:24Bibiani al-Julaim and the movements and stuff
21:26But no
21:27I just exercise and eat healthy
21:29And she hits
21:31Botox, my dear, is a substance derived from a neurotoxin.
21:33It is a toxin produced by bacteria and its trade name is Botox.
21:36But his real name
21:37Tullinam Tucson
21:38Oh my dear, oh my dear, no one has ever lived nor will ever live to be like you.
21:42I'll explain it to you now.
21:43Botox works by stopping the secretion of the responsible substance.
21:47About muscle contraction
21:48That's why, my friends, the Goliath are doing this.
21:50It's like a temporary muscle paralysis treatment.
21:54This substance, despite its name, is poisonous.
21:55However, it is diluted and highly purified before use.
22:03Cosmetic, but of course a rose.
22:05Theoretically, and according to an experiment conducted by Queensland University in 2015
22:08The poison I'm telling you about can indeed travel long distances within the nerves.
22:12However, the number of doses tested was much higher than those used in cosmetic procedures.
22:17Therefore, the risk to humans was very low.
22:19Yes, it is poison, but it is treated.
22:22The problem with Botox isn't that it's literally toxic.
22:24However, its psychological effect on him could be toxic.
22:27Oh, right, you'll look younger and have fewer facial lines.
22:30According to a study conducted in 2023 at UCL
22:33University College London
22:3469% of participants report experiencing long-term symptoms after the injections.
22:39Like pain, headache, and anxiety
22:41Some of them faced psychological problems
22:43Especially since, my dear, there is little research on the long-term effects of Botox.
22:46Most of them only follow up with patients for 6 months.
22:48According to some studies, repeated injections
22:50It can change facial muscles, making them weaker and less expressive.
22:53In a study of the year 2022
22:55I found that the changes in the muscles were preferable to supplementation.
22:57Even after 4 years since our last right
22:59My dear, we're supposed to have had Botox done.
23:01So that when people look at us, they feel that we look younger.
23:04But my dear, the problem with Botox is that you might see it on Ramadan TV screens.
23:07The actors and actresses whose job it is to bring us Aziz
23:11We don't know if anything good came from them.
23:13My dear girl is creating a bigger problem
23:14It is human communication
23:16According to a 2023 study by a California university
23:18Botox changes the way the brain responds to whispers.
23:22It means you won't just stop expressing yourself.
23:23No, you'll stop feeling for people to the same degree.
23:26Because in order to feel love, you need to reduce your expressions and make faces so you can feel it.
23:29Your brain then begins to translate
23:31You changed your response to the happy and angry whispers in front of you.
23:34And you said that, so I'll stop taking Botox.
23:37It's all about Wuxi expressions
23:38Hey, my dear, expressions really do make a difference.
23:40According to some research, reducing the ability to frown...
23:43He is able to help with depression.
23:45Even if we're still fasting from Botox
23:46The most important need of the place
23:48And I don't mean places here, I mean places on your body
23:50Rather, the location where the cosmetic procedure is performed
23:52Injections must be obtained from a licensed doctor.
23:54And also in a medical environment
23:56Unfortunately, this is not what actually happens.
23:58Even in the world, my dear, there is progress like Britain.
23:5968% of what injections provide is not that much.
24:02In other words, Abu Hamad, should I cover them up with Botox or not?
24:04No, my dear, the researchers are saying that Botox was used
24:07From exercises on millions of people
24:09By comparison, my dear, with this number we see
24:11Side effects and very nightly
24:12The real concern is in the long term.
24:15As I told you, this is preliminary research, and we still need more research.
24:17If we were to delve into the topic of fillers, my dear
24:20So let me tell you, it's a gel.
24:23specially formulated gelatinous material
24:25To fill in the large gaps
24:26Time has carved its path.
24:27The most common filler material is hyaluronic acid.
24:30Your body actually does this for hydration.
24:33The body begins to reduce its production
24:35So let's start taking it.
24:36We distribute a little on the mouth
24:38Spread a little on the lips
24:39A little bit of blush on the cheeks to make them look apple-like
24:41You can inject it under the eye.
24:42So that we have a beautiful, flattering face
24:45What's with the cheeks like a child's?
24:47Crimped and squiggly
24:48So what are the problems with this, Abu Ahmed?
24:49Surely it's not sixty, what?
24:50No, I know
24:51There is nothing like a prize in this world
24:52And she calls it a cape
24:53okay?
24:54Fillers, my dear, are one of the problems.
24:55It can cause swelling or lumps.
24:57And small bodies like that under the skin
24:59It is corrected by massage or with injections
25:01From my goats, my dear
25:02Hyaluronic acid said
25:02It is possible to remove it easily.
25:04But the biggest danger is that it doesn't happen often.
25:06The injection is being administered incorrectly.
25:07It enters a blood vessel
25:09It may cause, God forbid, a blockage
25:11And it remains a disaster
25:12And here we go back to saying
25:14Where are you going to get the filler done?
25:16And this is the place you're going to
25:18And the second piece of advice, my dear
25:19If you're getting fillers
25:21You're exaggerating so that your face doesn't turn into what doctors call a vespall.
25:26It will be removed for the inflated gum.
25:27And doubt will remain, dear one.
25:29It would be a shame if anyone got hold of the ball
25:31Okay, Ahmed, if I don't want my poison to enter my body
25:33And no filler will touch my veins
25:35What should I do? Who can I turn to?
25:36Our last resort, my dear, is laser beams.
25:39A device that emits focused beams that are connected to the skin
25:43This device does two things
25:44It peels off a superficial layer of skin or gives tiny flashes of freedom
25:47Its goal is to stimulate cells; it produces new collagen.
25:50Therefore, superficial wrinkles are reduced.
25:52And the rest is just passing by, like it's opening
25:53And the skin feels softer
25:55Level: There's no surgery or anything like that.
25:57A topical cream and a look to complete your day
25:59But still, my dear, you don't know the risks involved.
26:02I probably got Herflon skin
26:03Especially if your hair is dark and the settings aren't right
26:06Or if you don't use sunscreen after laser treatment
26:09It's possible, my dear, that you might get a burn or something.
26:11And don't bother again, my dear, because it's expensive.
26:13Because it's a non-surgical and safe procedure if performed by a specialist.
26:16Of course, dear, I don't need to tell you that in order to get the benefits of Botox, fillers, and laser
26:20You'll need to pay your money and you'll need to do it more than once.
26:23But paradoxically, despite the cost, side effects, and catastrophic risks
26:27What might happen if the procedure isn't done correctly
26:29Botox, my dear, has become widespread and is no longer just for celebrities and actors.
26:32This is a procedure that many people do.
26:34Annual removal of Botox is really possible during 2024 and 2025
26:38Dear, I've reached 460 percent.
26:41Global sales of botulinum toxin
26:43It is estimated at around seven billion dollars
26:45And this, my dear, is the motivation that makes people risk their money and their health.
26:48He will always be stronger than any fears
26:51The motivation comes from the surrounding community, which is protected by appearances.
26:53Someone who can judge your entire personality based on details in your face
26:56This, my dear, is what we call age discrimination or discrimination.
26:59This discrimination, my dear, affects women the most.
27:0194% of Botox treatments are done with them
27:05I've gotten up for you, my dear, and I want you to imagine that you are in the village of Ogimi in Okinawa.
27:10This village is dear to us. We found an old Japanese man named Bulina, whose village is known as the Village of Longevity.
27:15There are indeed people who appear much older, with curls and white hair.
27:18But they are happy with themselves and their handwriting is healthy.
27:20Because they did not experience the culture of the society and translated it into themselves
27:23They have a culture that is completely different from everything we've been talking about since the first episode.
27:27The village elders have clear tasks every day.
27:30There's no fair system; the sixty-year-old retires, sits in a coffee shop, and gossips about people.
27:34So you sit there and bring me something that will make my eyes water with the remote.
27:35What do the small families take their share of?
27:37No, in Japan they have jobs after sixty.
27:39Free farming, the branches of the descendants, that you will know how to do and do.
27:42Instead of thinking about society and the opinions of strangers about us
27:44We focus on the people who actually care about us.
27:47In this village, friends are linked from childhood.
27:57You will share the financial and moral burdens
28:00And they share the simplest activities with them, like lunch and tea.
28:02The bond between friends is one of the secrets of a lifetime there
28:06Because it gives people a sense of security and safety
28:09Especially the elderly who live there
28:11Every day they have a new goal for life.
28:13Even if we're having lunch today
28:14Because, my dear, even the simplest goals can lead to setbacks.
28:17This village, my dear, is being told to you so you can see an example of people
28:20She doesn't treat old age as an enemy.
28:22But it's something normal and natural that happens.
28:26The process of decay is an essential part of the life cycle.
28:28This story, my dear, shows us that the most important question
28:31You won't live by how many years, but by what you do.
28:33The sources, my dear, say that you need to sell; you have a reason.
28:36To wake up every day
28:37Japanese Ikigai Philosophy
28:39You have something you love, something you wake up for, something you're good at, something you can use to benefit others.
28:42And how wonderful it would be if you could make a living from it!
28:45And how wonderful it would be if you invested your youth in healthy food, the gym, and sleep, my dear sleep!
28:50Alongside all of this, invest in the reason why I'm waking up today.
28:54I set my alarm for 4 AM or 1 PM
28:57Thanks to three hours of Snooz working, but for a reason
28:59I have a reason why I'm getting up in the end
29:01In the end, my dear, it is our very, very right as human beings
29:03We dream of overcoming aging, whether through science or a balanced lifestyle.
29:07A system that allows us to become disabled in a healthy way, no matter how disabled we become.
29:10And it is certainly your right to choose which cape shape is best or most suitable for a particular stage.
29:14But my dear, it's important to know that this is just a choice, nothing more.
29:16Wrinkles and white hair are very natural phenomena.
29:18What I want to say, my dear, is that we have the right to ask for whatever we want.
29:21We use Botox, we use fillers, we play sports, and we change our appearance.
29:25We want to, but we remember that we are doing this
29:28Not because we're supposed to do it, but because we want to do it.
29:31And most importantly, my dear, as I told you, to preserve your youth as much as possible
29:35Take good care of your health
29:36You don't always live in a state of needing help from others.
29:39God forbid, at some point
29:40Play sports and sleep well.
29:43And you will always have a goal to live for
29:45One of the most important goals you can live for
29:47He's a niche in the previous case, in the next case.
29:49Look at the sources if we want to repent, subscribe to the channel
29:50Come on, my dear, I'll tell you if I go to a doctor
29:54By beautifying the well-known
29:55And the doctor, my dear, did something very strange.
29:57He refused to take a report from me
29:58He said to me, "Sir, are you subscribing here?"
30:00Every week she comes to me so we can see what we need to fix.
30:02And next time, he'll bring you something from the industry.
30:04No, it's a big deal, you take it from the last one.

Recommended