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Clips and Trailers
Clips and Trailers
3 hrs ·Youtube Cool & Interesting

YouTube
Surprised by her boss after a shower | The Housemaid | CLIP
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
3 hrs ·Youtube Politics

YouTube
Vance Just BROKE The NEWS!!
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Beyond Bizarre
Beyond Bizarre
3 hrs ·Youtube Wild & Crazy

YouTube
Man Claims Live Video Is A Sign The Prophecy Is Happening Worldwide..
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
3 hrs

5 Rare Deep-Sea Creatures You Won’t Believe Exist
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www.mentalfloss.com

5 Rare Deep-Sea Creatures You Won’t Believe Exist

Dive into the depths of the ocean to discover seven rare deep-sea creatures so strange and elusive, you won’t believe they exist.
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Comedy Corner
Comedy Corner
3 hrs ·Youtube Funny Stuff

YouTube
Legal Limit - Evan Hull
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
3 hrs

Mom stepped away from the bath for 3 seconds. Then her toddler said 5 words that made her sprint right back.
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www.upworthy.com

Mom stepped away from the bath for 3 seconds. Then her toddler said 5 words that made her sprint right back.

Every parent has a moment where they think: this is the one. This is how it ends. For Beth Moore, a mom of young children who shares her parenting life on Instagram as @bethgracemoore, that moment came during an otherwise ordinary bath time.She was bathing two of her kids together when she realized, mid-bath, that she had forgotten the towels. The linen closet was maybe five feet away. She made the call. "Before you come after me, I know that you were never supposed to step away from young children in the bathtub," she said in the video, which she posted on January 6, 2026. "But at this point in time, I was home alone, I needed to walk the five feet for literally three seconds."Those three seconds were all her three-year-old needed. See on Instagram From the hallway, she heard her son's voice, clear and confident: "I'm going to baptize her in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit." Moore dropped everything. "You can imagine my horror," she said.She ran back to find... her son solemnly dunking his doll underwater, over and over, presiding over a perfectly reverent tub baptism. Her younger child, sitting nearby, was watching the whole ceremony play out with complete calm. "She is just sitting there and she's just watching the whole thing happen," Moore said. Gif of baby being baptizedgiphy "So moral of the story is don't forget the towels," she concluded.The video has pulled in over 45,800 views on Instagram, and the comment section is full of parents who felt this in their bones. "Mine got on the bed and fell down doing a flip, it was so scary! She was fine, but it happened in seconds!" wrote @byandreahusic. "This is hilarious but also so sweet," added @lauras.lifejoy. "Why couldn't God have made children move slower, because my goodness, do they do those things so fast?" said @laura.hagerbaumer. Woman gives toddler a bath CanvaWorth noting: Moore's fear, while it turned out to be beautifully misplaced, is rooted in something real. The American Academy of Pediatrics advises that children under 6 should never be left unattended in the bathtub, and the Consumer Product Safety Commission has noted that bathtub drownings can happen quickly and silently, even in just a couple of inches of water. The CPSC's specific guidance states that if you must leave, you should take the child with you. As Moore herself acknowledged, she knew the rule. She made a judgment call, and this time it worked out in the most wholesome way possible.But the reason this video keeps getting shared isn't really about bath safety, or even about the perfectly executed toddler baptism. It's about that specific kind of parenting terror that arrives before your brain has had a chance to work out what's actually happening. The lurch in the stomach. The sprint down the hall. The absolutely unexpected relief."There is nothing that can prepare you for the heart attacks that you will experience while raising toddlers," Moore said at the top of the video.Forty-five thousand parents nodded.You can follow @bethgracemoore on Instagram for more parenting content. @doctor.bing Lesser known risk factors of drowning that everyone needs to know #brain #neurology #brainhealth #neurologist #drowning #water #safety #pool This article originally appeared earlier this year.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
3 hrs

Acclaimed leadership expert shares a simple hack that turns self-doubt into a huge asset
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www.upworthy.com

Acclaimed leadership expert shares a simple hack that turns self-doubt into a huge asset

Quite often, people receive a promotion, praise, or a new assignment at work and feel imposter syndrome when the stakes suddenly rise. They may feel like frauds or flukes, even though their past accomplishments are exactly what got them there. There is a feeling of being seen, paired with a fear of being "found out." If this sounds familiar, a leadership and behavioral expert has a tip to "take the spotlight off yourself and turn it into a flashlight."Dr. Shadé Zahrai went on TikTok to advise people experiencing imposter syndrome through what's known as the "spotlight effect." To put it briefly, the spotlight effect is a mental bias that causes people to vastly overestimate how much others notice, judge, or remember them. It can make someone feel as if they are under a spotlight, anxious that others are watching closely and ready to call them out. The truth, according to Zahrai and other experts, is that most people are too preoccupied with their own lives to notice, remember, or care enough to audit someone else. While that realization can be a relief, it still may not be enough on its own to offset imposter syndrome. @shadezahrai If you feel like a fraud and imposter, this is why – and what to do about it. My book is out in just three days! If you order it now you get thousands of dollars of bonuses - but you have to order it before Jan 20! Zahrai said people can flip the thought and energy of the spotlight away from their identity and aim it like a flashlight at the problem itself to find a solution. The internal narrative of "I don't know what I'm doing and I'm going to be exposed" becomes "This is the issue I'm concerned about. What do I need to do or learn to address it?" It takes "I'm a fraud" and flips it into "Why do I feel like a fraud?""Confidence doesn't require you to know everything in advance,” said Zahrai. "It just requires you to trust yourself enough to stay in the room, ask the question, and figure things out as you go." @aliabdaal Have you ever heard of the spotlight effect? Behavioral specialists weigh inOther behavioral experts and therapists who spoke to Upworthy shared what they would recommend to someone experiencing the spotlight effect."So much of anxiety is perception of how others perceive you and what they're thinking about you," said licensed therapist Cristina Billingsley. "Being that [the spotlight effect] is a common occurrence for people, I remind clients there's comfort in knowing you're not alone. Reminding ourselves that this theory has been tested and research shows that people overestimate how much people are actually thinking about or noticing them. Next time you're spiraling about this, ask yourself 'Yeah....and?' Does it matter in the long run...today, tomorrow, next week? Does this person's opinion truly matter to me? Would I judge someone or be this critical about them?" @wellwithraele Remember this for your next social interaction or conversation
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
3 hrs

'Spiritual shift': ICU nurse shares the one phrase that means someone will pass very soon
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www.upworthy.com

'Spiritual shift': ICU nurse shares the one phrase that means someone will pass very soon

When people in the healthcare world experience death on a regular basis, they begin to see patterns in the timing of when patients pass away. Hospice workers say that when people are in their final days, they begin to see their departed loved ones surrounding their hospital bed. They will also share many of the same regrets and have frequent hallucinations.Kirstie Robb, a TikToker who has worked as an ICU nurse for the past four years, has noticed a trend in people who are about to pass away. She says that when she hears a specific phrase from those who are brought in, regardless of the reason, they will be gone very soon: "Every single person who passes away says the same thing," she explained in her TikTok. "They say…'Can you please tell my family I love them? I don't feel good. I know I'm gonna die.'"Somehow, people know when they are ready to die @kirstierobbb those who are meant to see this will see it. Death is such a mysterious process that Robb can’t believe that so many people she’s seen know when the moment is upon them. We’re never trained to sense our death. Why is it that these people have such a clear understanding it's upon them? Robb says it is due to an internal, spiritual shift that defies medical understanding. "You guys, people know when they're gonna die," she says.“There's a shift that happens that's spiritual, that nobody can explain, right? Their vitals may be stable. Their condition may be the exact same way it was when they came in. There's nothing inherently dangerous,” she continued. “Yet in every single circumstance, no matter what brought them in initially, no matter how many hours it is from the last time that they said that, they always die. Always.” Holding a hospice patient's hand. via via Canva/Photos Lessons from being among the dyingRobb’s experience with the dying led her to remind everyone how important our lives are and to focus on what truly matters, rather than chasing material possessions. “Life is not meant to be an endless pursuit of things. Life is meant to be enjoyed. Life is meant to be appreciated. Life is meant to be explored. Why are you actually here?” Robb asks.There is no research-based reason for this shift that occurs in people when they know they are going to pass, but David Casarett, M.D. explained his experience with it in Psychology Today. A man walking towards the light.via via Canva/Photos“What they tell me is that they feel—something. Something different, or changing, or new. One young man dying of a sarcoma told me he felt free. Another middle-aged woman dying of liver cancer said she felt like she was falling out of a plane. Both had been correct to sense something amiss, and both died within the hour,” Dr. Casarett wrote. “I don't know how we could possibly foresee our own deaths. I'm not saying it's impossible; it's just beyond my power to explain.”While there is a lot of mystery surrounding death, Robb and Dr. Casarett’s experience with it shows that those who are ready to pass away seem to be at peace and accepting of their final journey home, wherever that may be. It should give all of us a feeling of relief that our final hours may be the most peaceful we ever experienced.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
3 hrs

Millennial mother updates tough-love Boomer parenting lines to make her daughter feel loved
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www.upworthy.com

Millennial mother updates tough-love Boomer parenting lines to make her daughter feel loved

The biggest difference between Baby Boomers and Millennials as parents is the older generation preferred a tough-love approach to raising their kids. In contrast, Millennials are more likely to choose gentleness. There are many reasons for this shift—some say it's a way for Millennials to heal their inner child, promote greater emotional intelligence, and break intergenerational trauma cycles. A recent study by Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago found that 74% of Millennial parents prefer gentle parenting, whereas Boomers generally used a mix of authoritarian and authoritative styles. This means that when Millennials became parents, they had to set aside certain methods their parents used. One of the big ones was letting go of Boomer parenting one-liners and comebacks that, these days, can be seen as incredibly negative. A mom motions to her young daughter.via Canva/PhotosPopular Boomer parenting phrases:"I’ll give you something to cry about.”"I brought you into this world, and I can take you out of it.”"As long as you live under my roof, you’ll obey my rules.”“Because I said so…”“If your friends jumped off a bridge, would you?”“Back in my day, we had to…”“Stop being so sensitive.”“Wait until your father gets home.”“Do as I say, and not as I do.”“I love you, but I don’t like you right now.”A great example of how parent-child relationships have evolved across generations is an Instagram post by Mariela De La Mora (@mariela.delamora), a leadership and business coach. In the video, the 44-year-old mom asked her 9-year-old daughter how a parent would finish a series of sentences that Millennials and Gen Xers heard growing up. "I’ll give you something…" De La Mora asked her daughter, who responded, “to clean your room?""I brought you into this world and…” her mother asked, and the daughter responded, “I love you.”"As long as you live under my roof…" the mother asked, and her daughter responded, “You’re safe." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Mariela De La Mora | Leadership & Business Coach (@mariela.delamora)The daughter’s answers were telling because she didn’t expect a parent to say something snarky and authoritative to their child. Instead, she assumed a parent would say something loving and affirmational. It really shows how gentle parenting has changed the mindsets of the younger generation. De La Mora believes that by stopping the use of these toxic phrases, children carry less burdens than previous generations.“Sometimes you don't realize how far you've come until you look around and realize who is walking around this earth more ‘unburdened,’ because of you,” she wrote on the post. “Children or not, there is someone who is more unburdened because of how hard you had to work to reparent yourself. Let this be your reminder.” A mother and daughter having a close conversation. via Canva/Photos“Okay, we millennials are obviously not perfect parents, but I feel that as a generation we have collectively decided to attempt and raise our children in the safest, most self-aware and emotionally intelligent homes,” one person wrote in the comments. “I never realized how traumatic and heartbreaking these phrases were. Until hearing them end differently,” another added.There is much debate over whether authoritative or gentle parenting styles are best for raising children. The simple takeaway is that children raised by authoritative parents tend to be more independent and free-thinking, whereas those raised under gentle parenting tend to have higher emotional intelligence. But what De La Mora’s video proves is that, even though there may be good debates over which parenting styles are better, we can probably all agree that some parenting phrases are best left in the past.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
3 hrs

The Slipknot album that forced Metallica to change their ways
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

The Slipknot album that forced Metallica to change their ways

“There is no question that we pay attention to the outside world..." The post The Slipknot album that forced Metallica to change their ways first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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