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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:00Ah! Ah! Doctor, you've got me in a bind!
00:03I'm sorry for all your troubles, Ramah.
00:07I promise you that I will do everything in my power to help you overcome this ordeal.
00:21What's wrong, doctor? Why did you stop?
00:23What a disaster, Rimah, what a disaster!
00:24What?
00:25I was sure I wasn't alive
00:27North always has other expectations for the person
00:29No, no, no, no, that's not it.
00:30Thank God, I was sure that the North was inclined
00:33But why, Doctor?
00:35Raat, my lord
00:36He sent me a very strange message
00:38She says, "I want to tell you something."
00:40I'm sorry, doctor.
00:42I don't want to interrupt this family moment
00:44But I have a bullet in my belly
00:46And I have a moral bullet in my heart, O spears
00:48As long as this bullet is in my heart
00:50I can't take your bullet
00:52I seek forgiveness from God, the Almighty, O Lord
00:54I'll tell you, okay, maybe I can help you.
00:55Sir, I am married and the marital relationship is excellent.
00:58One saddle
00:58Isn't she your wife? Go ahead and shoot her!
01:01What does the message say?
01:03She says, "I want to tell you something."
01:04Okay, so what's the problem?
01:05I want to tell you something in one
01:07That's not what worried me.
01:07Then she came
01:08a point
01:09a point
01:10a point
01:11God, God, teacher!
01:12That would mean there would be a dialogue.
01:13These three points could represent many things
01:15Yes
01:15You might mean she's pregnant
01:18Each dot symbolizes a member of the new family.
01:21or
01:22Her mother will move out with you.
01:23And you and she remain her mother, who is not new.
01:26Oh God, protect us!
01:27Ma'arish asks us
01:30What a mess!
01:31She's telling me to divorce her
01:33What do you think this means?
01:35Ali Hassan
01:35If it's just one point, then it's a normal shot.
01:37Okay, three points
01:38mmm
01:39Three shots remain
01:40Three shots
01:41no
01:42What did he tell you, doctor? I have one bullet in my stomach.
01:44We can remove it later, it's a mess.
01:46I'll be a bullet
01:56Welcome to two new episodes
01:59From the greeting program
02:00I'm sorry if you overstepped my bounds.
02:02I'm sorry if I was too harsh, my dear.
02:04I didn't say "my dear"
02:05I apologize
02:06Sometimes, my dear, our bodies get fat
02:10Oh Abu Hamid, she's not even enough for most
02:12Original means that she might have a point of view
02:15Different from our point of view
02:16X-Z
02:17That's enough, my dear Khardin, finish the episode already!
02:19Hazizi, this isn't him, he didn't think of giving up on a new album.
02:21No, Abu Hamid
02:21For tourism, more
02:22One of the stories that shows how our bodies betray our religion
02:24It is one of the accounts of the death of the Egyptian king, Menes.
02:28Those who believe Egyptologists
02:29He was killed in an encounter with hippos
02:31But after 1033
02:32In a different hypothesis
02:33The port of Cannes travels extensively
02:36It is said that on one of his trips, a wasp stung him.
02:39And he dies in that state
02:40Of course, my dear, the story is still a point of contention in the translation of the texts.
02:43The two of them
02:44Not because of the hippopotamus attack
02:46More vicious than a wasp sting
02:47Ah, the hippopotamus is grazing 50,000 feet a year.
02:50But the sting of wasps and bees
02:52With the entry of 22,000 people
02:55Hospitals are closed every year
02:56Before there were hospitals
02:58God knows how much revelation it contains.
02:59Buhamad is the one who dies from wasps
03:01I don't want to tell you, my dear, that it's not the wasps
03:03Your body is what's killing you
03:05Not a wasp
03:05A wasp that doesn't bite
03:06Another weighs on the ruin of his life
03:07But he didn't kill
03:08I will not betray a single friend.
03:09Wasp stings usually cause pain.
03:10Come here
03:11scratch
03:11or swelling
03:12And after an hour, his palace disappears.
03:13An average person can withstand more than a thousand stings
03:16But as you say, the body sometimes overreacts.
03:19Zay Bu Hamad, I'll tell you
03:21Who is more dangerous than the century?
03:22And we know that our bodies are threatened by many powerful people.
03:25And many strong kin
03:26It is very possible that they cause us diseases
03:28Like bacteria, viruses, worms, and toxins
03:31The problem is that our immune system fights them.
03:33An army of cells releases chemical reagents
03:36She prepares herself for all these dangers and kills them.
03:38But we remained with the time, our ears
03:40Our immune system can also cause problems.
03:42In the early twentieth century
03:44Physiological scientist Charles Richet conducted a daring experiment on his field dogs with poison.
03:48This poison was extracted from a coral animal called the sea anemone.
03:52After the dogs ingested this poison, they experienced fainting spells and vomiting.
03:55How many days later did it get better?
03:57I'm your uncle Charles, he waited a week and told them to take a dose of poison, it turned them upside down a lot
04:01You've finally recovered this time, Abu Ahmed, the body has gotten used to it.
04:03He knew how to handle this poison and nothing happened, everything turned out alright.
04:06I fear, my dear, that these dogs died instantly, and within minutes
04:10Here's what's most important: learn about a concept known as hypersensitivity.
04:15This means that when the immune system was exposed to the poison again, it reacted more aggressively.
04:19And what protects dogs is killing them.
04:21It's like you, my dear, saw a huge iron bar.
04:24And if you lift it from the ground, then you have qualified yourself and put all your powers into it.
04:28Then you discover that the bar you're holding at night is light
04:31Then all the forces within you pull you down, and you stand upside down on your back.
04:35Here you are being acted with far more force than the situation requires.
04:38The process begins when the allergen comes into contact with the body's surface.
04:41On the skin, eye, airway, or intestines
04:43These surfaces are full of immune cells that act as guards
04:47When the guards encounter an allergenic substance, they swallow and destroy it.
04:51They leave some fragments of it and pass these fragments to other immune cells.
04:55These cells produce these harmful substances. There's a bit of a metaphor here, but no, no, no.
04:58Come, come, and it will produce what is called meiogenoglobin A, also known as GI.
05:03These antibodies will remember and accurately identify the substances that caused the body's allergic reaction.
05:08The substances that would have caused problems in the body stimulated and helped me understand them.
05:12I feel that when the body is exposed to it again, it activates a part of the immune system called immune cells.
05:17Which releases a barrage of chemicals to dilate blood vessels and swell tissues, so you experience symptoms
05:24Don't experience a runny nose, cough, cold, vomiting, or diarrhea; this could be a chemical reaction triggered by your immune system.
05:31It causes your blood pressure to drop and disrupts your heartbeat.
05:34Or it might block your airway, preventing you from breathing, or it might not cause symptoms but still affect you psychologically.
05:38Scientists refer to it as asymptomatic sensitization in their book.
05:43Dr. Sheri Rogers says that X-sensitivity is one of the least diagnosed causes of cervical reflux.
05:48So, my dear, I want you to imagine that all this noise is created by your immune system to protect you from something that isn't harmful in the first place.
05:55Like a lizard, or dust, or pollen bath, or antibiotics containing peanuts
06:01Imagine, my dear, there are people whose bodies go crazy because of this peanut.
06:05Are you crazy?
06:06And I, my dear, have a white immune system.
06:07I hope he can't hear me. If he can, I'm sensitive, my dear. My pampering is fine, but thank God.
06:12Thank you, Middleson
06:13Should I tell you, my dear, that a certain percentage of Americans have allergies to certain foods?
06:16The doctor diagnoses this sensitivity by exposing you to a small amount of the proteins found in this food.
06:22They measure the IGE, which are the opposing sections I told you about.
06:25Scientists have found that it always comes out with the senses, and its reaction is terrifying.
06:29The strange thing, my dear, is that scientists have found that this IGE is like the Prophet's prayer.
06:33It doesn't fight viruses or bacteria, but it fights things like peanuts.
06:36Professor, please forgive me for the 35 viruses and 150 bacteria he has.
06:41But be aware that I'm very focused and alert, I just caught 8 kilos of salted peanuts.
06:46And the world was hanging over his head
06:48My dear, we had antibodies that specialized in making us sick.
06:52Bouhamid told her, "We couldn't just throw away these immune systems and be done with it."
06:55No, my dear, I used to think that until the time of the pediatrician Bridget Ogilvy.
06:59She is investigating how our immune system fights off worms.
07:02I found that the rats that have worms excrete a very large amount of IGE
07:07And you discover that these antibodies, these monsters, attack the worms, and we mentioned them previously.
07:12In the exercises, we learned that these IGE bodies are transcribed onto proteins found on the surface of the worm.
07:16And it gives a quick reaction to alert the immune system.
07:19Keep going, device! Keep going, device! Keep going, device! Here it is, like a worm.
07:22They said, "It's possible that these worm proteins are structurally similar to other molecules on their surface."
07:28It's possible that this could have a similarity to, for example, the proteins in peanuts.
07:31When IGE detects proteins on peanuts that are similar to those found in worms
07:37He told her, "Hello, worm, we need to finish this in an hour."
07:40He said the battle would be decided in favor of the worm.
07:42Hello, my dear?
07:42And that was the pioneering theory that dispels two senses
07:45But Dr. Razlan Mitsovic
07:48The professor of immunology at Yale University had a different opinion then.
07:51He told me, "Guys, there are people who are allergic to penicillin or sex."
07:54And without its composition from two parts, it is not like any worms.
07:57Besides, some scientists did something very strange.
08:00They modified the characteristics of some of the people, saying they don't produce IGE (General Secondary Education Certificate).
08:03It's perfectly normal, the worms' answers will repel it.
08:05And then, when we have the IGE clan that knows about worms
08:09Why are you allergic to peanuts and I'm not?
08:12Why are you allergic to things and I'm not?
08:14Why do you have allergies to things that you don't?
08:16Besides, sometimes we get sensations of things when we're young, and as we grow up we notice the comfort of the gentlemen.
08:20Or the opposite, you live your whole life normally and perfectly fine.
08:23Suddenly your body started to be affected by certain strange things.
08:25Here, Dr. Ruslan Mashhar researched her work in Nature.
08:29By injecting Fran with a substance that causes a sensory sensation present in the area
08:33This substance tears the cell membrane and opens it up.
08:36What I'm telling you, my dear, is that the immune system didn't respond to the substance itself.
08:40But he responded after the cells opened it, so he did what you did.
08:44Then the same person injected the rat with a larger dose of this poison and injected another new rat.
08:49Here the doctor found that the rats had not been exposed to poison before
08:52Her temperature has dropped and she may urinate.
08:54The poison her body was exposed to caused an allergic reaction, thus reducing the effect of the toxin.
08:58Here, he saw that the immune system is not the one that starts the battle.
09:02But when the material causes a problem, we fight.
09:05The alarm system detects theft but doesn't recognize the thief by their face.
09:08But he knows there's been a theft when the glass breaks, and he memorizes its shape so he can catch him next time.
09:13Let me tell you something strange, my dear.
09:15You know, my dear, that the higher the hygiene standards, the higher the sensitivity.
09:20Abu Ahmed, does that mean that every time I sit in a nice place with fresh air, I get more allergies?
09:25Oof
09:26Wealthy countries have the highest rates of sensitivity.
09:28Abu Ahmed, does this mean that the more I clean, the more my allergies increase?
09:35Out of sight, my dear, rich countries have the highest sensory perception rates.
09:38As developing countries improve their living standards, their sensory perception rates increase.
09:43Sensory perception rates in China increased from 1999 to 2008 from 5% to 8%
09:48And in my opinion, comedian Chris Rock, my dear
09:50We eat so much in America that we've developed a sensitivity to food.
09:53You feel, my dear, that the lack of clover leaves the immune system unable to find anything to expose itself to.
09:58He is my beloved, he dies but Hauran remains in him
10:05He's sitting there, chewing on anything, even if it will cause a little harm.
10:08This is a well-known hypothesis, the hybrid hypothesis.
10:11She also believes that there were microscopic organisms around us long before civilization.
10:15It played a very big role in immune system regulation and sadness
10:18My dear old friends, the Old Fries
10:21Dr. Mushtuf believes that sensory perception protected our ancestors.
10:24Because the chemicals were present everywhere, in animals and plants.
10:27Fajays, there were pollen-like toxins that posed a great danger to us whenever we were hunting.
10:32So when its connections work for us, it makes us feel numb, like we walk in a place full of
10:36He also says that there is nothing common between the causes of sensory perception.
10:38Some people have a sensitivity to the house.
10:40Some people have an allergy to latex.
10:42There are people, my dear, about gold.
10:43Some people, my dear, are allergic to water.
10:45Unit por exemplo
10:45From the water, my dear, it was a remnant of the program's sweetness.
10:48Or one of the effects of the Dabke program, too, your view is clear
10:50With a sense of water
10:51People said it very much, they saw it
10:52Why should I keep trying to understand?
10:53But what all these senses have in common is what the senses do.
10:56And of course, not the causes of sensory perception.
10:58What things cause itching or coughing?
10:59Things that cause vomiting and their effects
11:01Things that cause a runny nose, sneezing, or watery eyes
11:04If you think about these symptoms, you'll find they all have one thing in common: they expel
11:07It removes something harmful from your body specifically.
11:17did not?
11:18Consider how our bodies perceive the world
11:20And the light in his life was a little bit of light, we were distracted.
11:22And I'll dot it and translate it into pictures
11:25The sound has some vibrations.
11:26The curse gathers and transforms them
11:29Every person is different in their temperament.
11:30They imposed on our immune system and the rest of our systems
11:33She has a way of gradually guiding the world
11:35And you're putting us on the world's chemistry
11:38They pick up signals and interpret them
11:39And each person interprets these signals differently.
11:42Life is a personal experience for every human being.
11:44The world is different in everyone's eyes
11:46Everyone lives a different reality than the other.
11:48Even in it, things are clearer
11:50What are the most common ones?
11:52Like the pain that isn't misled, that's for Chris Rocca, Abu Hamad.
11:55No, my dear, I meant
11:56What's the pain?
11:57In the experiment, I dealt with 17 different types of
11:59The doctor examined their brains
12:00They are connected to a device
12:02This device heats a spot on their feet to about 50 degrees Celsius.
12:06They are asked to rate the pain they felt from 1 to 10.
12:09And this led to differing answers.
12:10People are telling you that his grade is one
12:12And some people were saying that the degree of pain was seeking
12:14This isn't because it's cool or because it's a shout-out.
12:16But the point here is that we are talking about the same stimulus
12:19We are talking about different ways this stimulus is received.
12:22Dr. Roger in Lingem
12:24He says the book reduces your tolerance for pain.
12:27This means a psychological condition that reduces your tolerance for pain.
12:29Even just showing people a sad picture
12:32It increased their sensitivity to pain.
12:34Pain is influenced by psychological, biological, and genetic factors.
12:38Societal norms, hormones, mood, and blame
12:41There is no way for us to predict
12:43Every body will do the work of the men on the pain
12:45It's not something like blood pressure and temperature.
12:47No, this is how each person describes their sensitivity to pain.
12:50differently
12:50Personal experience
12:51Specific
12:52I really love this particular color, Abu Hamad.
12:54It's nice with the beggars
12:55In case of allergies, my dear
12:57Allergy means
12:58I had an allergic reaction.
13:01An allergy patient can clearly describe their problem and medical history.
13:05The reaction around him is always the same.
13:06They are trying to save him medically.
13:08If it's in a restaurant or at an event venue in a developed country
13:11They provide him with an environment
13:12But my dear
13:14What if there is an allergy?
13:16Not towards anything in particular
13:17Not a peanut allergy
13:19Or for the sting of the wasp
13:20But it is a difficult situation for its owner, a miser
13:22It's difficult for those around him to understand it.
13:24We followed different allergy tests
13:25Sensitivity of feeling
13:26Synthetic
13:27Let me explain this sensitivity to you
13:29As an example, we worked on it in its current state.
13:31He is the famous Dutch artist
13:33Vincent van Gogh
13:34When he visited Paris in 1890
13:36The country of officials that he dreams of
13:37But after a few days, he gets closer to her.
13:39Why, my love?
13:40Van Gogh, my dear, was extremely sensitive.
13:42Sensitive to the noise and activity level of the city
13:44To the point that it is his greatest work of his entire life
13:47We call it a rural setting or a psychological space.
13:49Some people are highly sensitive to stimuli.
13:51Which most people might see as ordinary
13:52This excessive psychological sensitivity
13:54It can sometimes make its owner different and fragile.
13:57But it also allows him to communicate with the world at a different frequency.
14:00And on another level
14:01In my article in The Times
14:02Andrei Sonny
14:03One of the authors of the book Sensitive
14:05He asks, "Have you ever taken a moment to proudly declare yourself a sensitive person?"
14:08He says that it probably never happened
14:09No one saw that he was good at it, that he was a sensitive person.
14:12He always sees this as a bad thing
14:14There are so many qualities we can be proud of
14:16Allergies don't affect any of them.
14:17Being sensitive is considered a weakness.
14:20A weak person takes everything for granted.
14:22He's overreacting
14:23In the eyes of society, a man is not considered sensitive.
14:25And six others blame her if she's too sensitive.
14:27They accuse her of being an emotional person.
14:29The message that society always conveys to sensitive people
14:32Overcome your sensitivity and dry up
14:33Salou says that regardless of the fact that this has never happened before
14:36A human being means to stop being sensitive
14:37So they entered
14:38Except for the one that started about 30 years ago
14:39I am certain that sensitivity is not just a human trait proven by experience.
14:43But it's also a powerful tool
14:45All explanations for you
14:45Allergies are not based on racism.
14:47The first element is the perception of sensitive inputs.
14:50The needs are conveyed through the senses
14:51Like sound, touch, taste, and smell
14:54The idea is that sensitive people absorb more information from their surrounding environment.
14:58This sound
14:59How was the tuna doing?
15:00How were the speech breaks working?
15:02What was the science of sound like?
15:03What was the effect of the whisper?
15:04What were the hand movements like?
15:06In what context is this statement made?
15:08In a study conducted on 16 people
15:10The researchers made people take a survey
15:11It permits sensory perceptions
15:12And then they send them pictures
15:14And it contains things that change
15:15They are required to notice what is changing
15:16When they worked F.M.R.I
15:18They found that people who scored high on sensitivity
15:21She has greater activity in the clitoris.
15:22noticeably
15:23Especially in the daughters of the mahm
15:24Responsible for visual processing
15:26This is another element of sensory perception.
15:28This is cognitive processing
15:29sensitive people
15:30It processes information more deeply than other people.
15:33Of course, again
15:34This treatment might still be correct
15:35But it happens more often
15:36Furthermore, research indicates
15:37People are three groups
15:39People with low sensitivity
15:40And people with average sensitivity
15:42And people with high sensitivity
15:43First group
15:44People have a new sense of self
15:45These countries represent 30% of sensitive people.
15:4740% of people are sensitive
15:49Average sensory
15:50As for those I felt were few
15:51Fadol also 30%
15:53Also, the difference in sensory perception is due to the second.
15:55It's not just something that exists in humans
15:56Scientists found
15:57There are more than one hundred types
15:59Animals, fish, and birds
16:01Their members differ from one another.
16:03sensory
16:03This suggests that sensory perception has a biological basis.
16:07And an important role in adapting to the environment
16:08And if there remains in individuals whose sensitivity is limited
16:10They remain bold and adventurous
16:12And we think about something
16:12We have people who don't have strong feelings.
16:14These people are following an adventure.
16:15And it sets off and discovers the world for us
16:17And other people are very sensitive
16:19So you sit and contemplate the scene.
16:20And they feel any anxiety before it happens
16:22Because of their deep processing, which we mentioned.
16:25Let them see the situation differently
16:26And they notice what people do
16:28This sometimes makes them misunderstand.
16:29Because they get annoyed by things
16:30We don't bother anyone
16:31For example, you have research that says
16:32Sensitive children get upset easily
16:34And they sell a lot
16:35And it takes time for them to reconcile.
16:37They are more afraid of strangers
16:49The mother has more than one fetus.
16:51Excessive sensitivity is pure and ingrained.
16:53To a large extent in paradise
16:54It's not something that's easy to do, and it's rare for someone to stand up for it.
16:55It also takes shape according to our upbringing.
16:58And our environment and their quality
16:59If I were to experience trauma, I would be with him.
17:01This kind of thing will make me sensitive to the environment.
17:04What caused this trauma to happen
17:05The one who calculates indicates that the difficult experiences
17:07In early childhood
17:08It contributes to the development of heightened sensory perception.
17:10During adolescence and adulthood
17:12Especially among people who are prepared and have a strong mindset.
17:14Larger for sensuality
17:15This does not mean that sensitivity is a disease or a disorder.
17:17On the contrary, delving deeper into thought and feeling
17:20It might be something that comes with gifts.
17:21One of the most important of these gifts
17:23For us as a society
17:24So, the saying is creative.
17:25A sensitive person feels things very deeply.
17:27So he sees it more clearly
17:28He expresses his feelings through forgetfulness.
17:30The one whose ink was not to be spilled
17:31He has no
17:31So what is this?
17:32I felt that way
17:34Maghzam
17:34Artists, poets, and musicians
17:37The writers are sensitive people.
17:39and creativity
17:40Not just limited to the arts
17:41The most important thinkers, philosophers, and scientists
17:44They were sensitive individuals with different needs
17:45Because it's not a requirement, my dear sensitive person.
17:47He remains sensitive to emotions, but
17:48It might be sensitive to certain patterns
17:50For certain changes
17:51I'm like we said
17:52Are you taking stimulus?
17:55This stereotyping makes you think and think
17:57A sensitive person is full of strong emotions.
18:00At a time when the problem overwhelms his mind
18:01The chances of reaching a better solution are met, and I strive
18:04Researchers compare people to those with less sensitivity.
18:07Chicory plants
18:08Because this plant is strong
18:09And you can complete it in any department.
18:11They describe the discussion as highly sensual.
18:13With the appearance of the orchid
18:14Because it needs a lot of care
18:16But when they find support and care
18:19They light up and become more beautiful
18:20Because they are affected by what is called the reinforcement effect
18:23The moo waking up
18:24These people are more influenced by positive and supportive things.
18:27In a study that will conclude twenty
18:28Look at the hundreds of couples at risk of divorce
18:31Let them take a course on how to improve their relationship.
18:34Then we find that the two researchers conducted tests on the participants.
18:37They found that sensitive people were more prone
18:39They use the information they learned in the course.
18:41Hashan to save his passport
18:42And the couples who had at least one bodyguard painting
18:44Their relationship was improving and they were happier
18:46The other two couples were not fortunate enough to achieve this result.
18:48This isn't just about relationships.
18:50The two researchers found that sensitive people
18:52They are motivated by any form of training and support.
18:56Even as humans, our nature
18:57We absorb some of the feelings of the people around us.
18:59Because our brains contain a creative force called nervousness
19:01Creative nervous system
19:04Merr Neron
19:04Farah enters, and you move with a certain intensity without having to say a word.
19:08Enter Azza, and you'll be transported by a different wave.
19:10The thousand throws at the cinema
19:11So she laughs with people even if the person isn't happy about it.
19:13This is called sensitive people; for them, the issue is a bit more serious.
19:18Those who are sensitive found that these people have a mind of their own.
19:20No extra mirror cells
19:22There aren't many Merr Nerons
19:24But the mirror cells they have are very small
19:27There's nothing more than the usual
19:28But those present are very active
19:30Especially in the parts of the brain related to emotional and social processing.
19:34Even in the experiments where the researchers put them with strangers
19:37Highly sensitive people would empathize with people they didn't even know.
19:41Of course, the effect was higher with their lover.
19:43Not like that
19:43The laughter we hear from them is like a thorn
19:45First, they prioritize themselves and set boundaries.
19:47Because their actions, by abandoning them, are merely a consequence of their presence with someone who feels their emotions.
19:51Because they absorb a lot of information about their surrounding environment.
19:54Is there anyone who will listen to you when you go to such lengths?
19:55A highly sensitive person will not listen to you.
19:58He will hear you and will want to see your facial expressions and movements.
20:00Your body language, your speech patterns, and how you are affected by your surroundings.
20:03Why does he just take all this information?
20:05no
20:05He won't take it and treat it; its treatment is deeply ingrained in his brain.
20:08A royal step, my dear.
20:09There is confusion between sensitive people and introverted people.
20:12In fact, Dr. Ellen Aron
20:13The one who set the HSB definition
20:15The highly sensitive people
20:17She says that 30% of the people are guards
20:19Extroverts or open-minded
20:20She says that there is a lack of awareness of this characteristic
20:22This makes things more difficult for people with a new sense of self.
20:24When he tells them something like, "I saw them."
20:26Their self-confidence is shaken and they hate this nature.
20:28But education is a supportive environment.
20:30And awareness of the hyperactivity of their nervous system
20:32And they have a complex inner life.
20:34It helps them because it makes them prosper.
20:42perfectly identical
20:43Everyone differs in their beliefs
20:45Each individual is unique in their personality traits.
20:47It benefits him in certain situations.
20:48It can also be stored in certain situations.
20:50Allergy has one Arabic term
20:52But in English
20:54Allergy and sensitivity are different.
20:56Allergies and allergies, we still don't know their causes.
20:58And Manoush's condition is different; he may have entered the doctor's office.
21:00No matter how hard you try to convince your body that you are safe
21:02And peanuts are a sword, by God.
21:04Your body type will defeat you
21:05But this sensitivity
21:12We can spare its owners the problem
21:14If we understood their discrimination
21:15If you are sensitive
21:16It might tell you that you're not suited to the world
21:18And you wanted to remain less sensual
21:20To feel a sense of belonging
21:21Or life will be easier
21:22Nor if he spoke
21:23But nobody, my dear, chooses your nature.
21:25But my dear, the matter is in your hands now.
21:26Use your exceptional tools
21:28And honor your talent
21:29And accept your shortcomings
21:30Set healthy boundaries with everyone around you.
21:32In the end, my dear
21:33This episode is not an excuse
21:36Because we say whatever we feel
21:38Or anything we feel we react to
21:40Nor is there any justification.
21:41That we suppress our feelings
21:42And we dry it up for the sake of society.
21:44We need to stay tough
21:45What's up, Abu Hameer?
21:46Dragon, my dear
21:47What we're talking about, my dear
21:48It is the balance of him
21:48It is the Ornis
21:50There are different people
21:51I want you, my dear, to hear all this.
21:53The summary of all this
21:54There are different ways of dealing with the world
21:57Not all of them are wrong
21:58And I'm not entirely sure.
21:59but
21:59And I'd like to conclude with this beautiful sentence.
22:01The one who says
22:02Weigh it, it's better than being sad
22:03and the wind of the self
22:04Light of pleasures
22:05Let's look at the previous cases.
22:06And the upcoming cases
22:07So let's look at the sources
22:08Even if we're on YouTube
22:09Sweat on the canal
22:11Dear viewers
22:12Peace and blessings of God be upon you
22:13Welcome
22:14This is the moment when I say
22:16The season of the Dabke program has ended.
22:18Thank you so much for following us
22:19Stay tuned for next season!
22:21The one coming soon
22:22hopefully
22:23But I hope you enjoyed it.
22:24I hope you watch the previous episodes very carefully.
22:26Look at its sources
22:27And wait for the new episodes
22:28eagerly
22:29And you sent me messages
22:30Tell me, where are you, Abu Hamad? We miss you.
22:32Can I tell you
22:32You are an ambush
22:33See you, God willing
22:34May God grant the group well-being.
22:34We'll come to you then
22:36New position
22:37And new needs
22:37And they carried out a plan
22:39You know, my dear, I'm at the beach resort, I mean
22:40I don't know them

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