vegan health

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My Kids Have Been Vegan Since Conception — “Why Isn’t Everybody Else Vegan?” | Maribeth Abrams

My Kids Have Been Vegan Since Conception — “Why Isn’t Everybody Else Vegan?” | Maribeth Abrams

That was the question asked by Maribeth’s children — who have been vegan since conception.

In this conversation, Maribeth shares her journey of going vegan in 1993 and raising two children vegan for their entire lives — not through force or fear, but by teaching critical thinking, informed choice, and compassion.

This interview explores:
• What it means to raise children vegan from birth
• How to teach kids how to think, not what to think
• Navigating school, doctors, family gatherings, and social pressure
• Health outcomes of lifelong veganism
• Why veganism can feel obvious once you truly question it

Rather than asking “why be vegan?”, this conversation flips the script — and challenges deeply ingrained assumptions about food, culture, health, and ethics.

🌱 This is not about perfection.
🌱 It’s about awareness, choice, and raising thoughtful humans.

🔔 Subscribe for more conversations on plant-based health, ethics, critical thinking, and lifestyle medicine.

Resources:
To learn more about raising children vegan visit https://RaisingChildrenVegan.com

For Vegan Summerfest visit https://navs-online.org

My name is Jeff. If you like my work and want to help me keep the cameras rolling and website going please consider contributing here https://veganlinked.com/fundme/ and/or becoming a member to the channel https://www.youtube.com/veganlinked/join and/or adding a free listing on VeganLinked.com and upgrading it.

Join https://VeganLinked.com to share your story, interact, add your profession to be hired or simply admired, add your organization, programs, and/or event all free to help build up vegan communities worldwide.

For more vegan stories check out the playlist “Vegan Stories, Insights & Perspectives” https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmSzj4R9w2MC2b0L_07bRyphvPsxcz7Px

00:00 – Why Isn’t Everybody Else Vegan?
00:16 – Vegan Since Conception: Raising Lifelong Vegan Kids
01:25 – Going Vegan in 1993: How the Question Finally Flipped
04:32 – Health, Ethics, and the Moment It All Clicked
05:12 – Did Anything Change After Going Vegan?
05:48 – Menopause, Cholesterol, and Going SOS-Free
07:53 – What Actually Made the Biggest Health Difference
11:35 – How Menopause Changed Everything Overnight
13:29 – The Rochester Wellness Jumpstart Experience
15:04 – Becoming Editor of Vegetarian Voice & Deep Nutrition Education
17:16 – Summerfest, Emceeing, and Vegan Leadership
19:42 – Crafting Hall of Fame Stories & Honoring Advocates
22:49 – Dr. Milton Mills & the Vegan Hall of Fame
25:10 – Communicating Clearly on Stage & Finding Your Voice
27:25 – Counseling, Nutrition, and Helping People Change
29:41 – Why Her Kids Asked “Why Isn’t Everyone Vegan?”
31:05 – Teaching Children Critical Thinking, Not Rules
33:40 – Explaining Meat to Kids Without Fear or Pressure
35:45 – Birthday Parties, School, and Social Situations
37:49 – Lifelong Health Outcomes for Vegan Children
40:17 – Doctors, Protein Questions, and Educating Pediatricians
42:42 – Is Raising Kids Vegan the Best Gift You Can Give?

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This Doctor Went Vegan In 1991 — And Proved It Reverses Disease; Dr Ted Barnett

This Doctor Went Vegan In 1991 — And Proved It Reverses Disease; Dr Ted Barnett

What happens when a medical doctor goes vegan in 1991 — before it was popular — and actually tracks the results for decades?

Dr. Ted Barnett is a lifestyle medicine physician who made the switch more than 30 years ago, raised his children vegan, published data, and watched biomarkers change in ways most people were told were “impossible.”

In this conversation, Dr. Barnett explains:
• Why he went vegan in 1991
• What medical school got wrong about heart disease
• How cholesterol can drop dramatically in weeks
• Why food can reverse disease — not just manage it
• What 30+ years of real-world data actually shows

This is not ideology. It’s lived experience, peer-reviewed evidence, and outcomes measured over decades.

Whether you’re skeptical, curious, or already plant-based, this interview challenges some of the most common assumptions about diet, disease, and modern medicine.

Watch with an open mind. Decide for yourself.

#VeganDoctor #LifestyleMedicine #PlantBasedHealth #ReverseHeartDisease #FoodAsMedicine #evidencebasednutrition

Resources:
Rochester Lifestyle Medicine: https://www.rochesterlifestylemedicine.org
Pale Blue Dot Community: https://paleblue.community
Lifestyle Telemedicine: https://lifestyletelemedicine.com

Nate’s website: https://www.natebarnett.com

Vegan Summerfest: https://summerfest.navs-online.org

To learn more about raising children vegan visit https://RaisingChildrenVegan.com

My name is Jeff. If you like my work and want to help me keep the cameras rolling and website going please consider contributing here https://veganlinked.com/fundme/ and/or becoming a member to the channel https://www.youtube.com/veganlinked/join and/or adding a free listing on VeganLinked.com and upgrading it.

Join https://VeganLinked.com to share your story, interact, add your profession to be hired or simply admired, add your organization, programs, and/or event all free to help build up vegan communities worldwide.

For more vegan stories check out the playlist “Vegan Stories, Insights & Perspectives” https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmSzj4R9w2MC2b0L_07bRyphvPsxcz7Px

0:00 Meet Dr. Ted Barnett (“Doctor Veggie”)
0:10 “In 1991, we became vegan” (the “experiment”)
1:13 Ornish + Esselstyn: reversing heart disease through lifestyle
2:36 Raising vegan kids + discovering Summerfest
5:03 Rochester Lifestyle Medicine Institute + CHIP origins
5:47 The 15-Day WFPB Jumpstart + collecting data on ~400 people
6:48 Pandemic pivot: closing practice + moving programs online
7:39 “Pale Blue Dot” community + “best diet for humans/planet”
9:05 How the community works (free vs paid) + office hours
12:05 Coaches, telehealth, Lifestyle Telemedicine + deaf cohort
14:16 Most intensive program + why insurance doesn’t cover it (yet)
16:17 Why food is the “controversial” pillar + “see what happens in two weeks”
24:15 Sleep + bird walks + structuring life around sleep
26:11 Loneliness, community, and how vegans cope socially
28:49 Raising vegan kids (school, parties, being “another minority group”)
32:12 Vegan kids: supplements (B12) + basics of what they ate
38:11 Oil, oxidation, and why whole foods beat extracted oils
39:32 Ideal day of eating (oatmeal + flax + berries + greens)
45:42 “Belly of the beast”: publishing papers, CME, grand rounds
52:59 “Show me the data”: bypass vs lifestyle + cholesterol drops fast
56:50 Blue zones + “stepwise” disease risk (more plants vs more animals)

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The Autopsy That Changed My Life — Doctor Explains Why He Went Vegan | Dr Ruben

The Autopsy That Changed My Life — Doctor Explains Why He Went Vegan | Dr Ruben

In this powerful conversation, Dr. Ruben shares the true story of a medical case he witnessed early in his career — an autopsy that completely transformed how he understood health, longevity, and the human body. What he discovered led him down a path that ultimately changed his lifestyle, his career focus, and his mission in life.

Now a board-certified lifestyle medicine clinician, Dr. Ruben explains how that moment reshaped his beliefs about disease, prevention, and what it truly means to live a long, healthy, vibrant life. From whole-food plant-based living, to mindset, leadership, community, and vitality — this conversation goes far beyond diet and dives into what it really means to fully live.

This is not just a story about going vegan — it’s a story about:
• Longevity
• Lifestyle medicine
• Self-leadership
• Personal transformation
• Community and connection
• Preventive health
• Purpose-driven living

If you’re interested in health, longevity, plant-based living, lifestyle medicine, or personal transformation, this conversation will challenge the way you think about what creates a truly healthy life.

Topics covered in this interview:
• The autopsy that changed Dr. Ruben’s life
• Why he went vegan
• Lifestyle medicine and longevity
• Whole-food plant-based living
• Blue Zones and long-life communities
• Health vs vitality
• Mindset and self-love
• Leadership and legacy
• Community building
• Creating habits that last
• Preventive health over disease treatment

Connect with Dr. Ruben:
Website: https://coachruben.com
Facebook: Ruben J Guzman
Learn more about Lifestyle Medicine partnering with Bluezones https://lifestylemedicine.org/blue-zones-partnership

If this conversation inspired you, please like, comment, and subscribe for more long-form interviews on health, longevity, plant-based living, and human potential. 🌱

My name is Jeff. If you like my work and want to help me keep the cameras rolling and website going please consider contributing here https://veganlinked.com/fundme/ and/or becoming a member to the channel https://www.youtube.com/veganlinked/join and/or adding a free listing on VeganLinked.com and upgrading it.

Join https://VeganLinked.com to share your story, interact, add your profession to be hired or simply admired, add your organization, programs, and/or event all free to help build up vegan communities worldwide.

To learn more about raising children vegan visit https://RaisingChildrenVegan.com

For more vegan stories check out the playlist “Vegan Stories, Insights & Perspectives” https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmSzj4R9w2MC2b0L_07bRyphvPsxcz7Px

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10 Minutes & You’ll Crush Your Vegan Health Goals In 2025

10 Minutes & You’ll Crush Your Vegan Health Goals In 2025

🌱 Tired of chasing endless nutrition trends and “perfect” diets? In this game-changing talk, 35-year plant-based veteran Jeff Nelson cuts through the noise with powerful insights from decades of working with pioneers like Dr. Dean Ornish, Dr. McDougall, and Dr. Esselstyn. Discover why the Okinawans – some of the longest-lived people on Earth – thrived despite “nutrient deficiencies,” and learn how your body’s incredible nutrient recycling system makes optimal health simpler than you think.

You’ll learn:

* Why obsessing over “perfect” nutrition might be holding you back
* The surprising truth about nutrient recycling and why less can be more
* How to achieve lasting health with a simple, sustainable approach
* Which nutrients actually matter (and which ones you can stop worrying about)

Whether you’re new to plant-based eating or a seasoned vegan looking to optimize your health in 2025, this no-nonsense guide strips away the complexity and gives you the fundamental principles that really work. Based on real science and decades of clinical experience – not corporate marketing hype.

LINKS:

Nutrient recycling refers to the process where the body conserves, repurposes, or reutilizes nutrients and cellular components to maintain homeostasis, especially under conditions of stress or limited nutrient availability. Research on processes like autophagy, amino acid recycling, and urea nitrogen salvage provides excellent examples of nutrient recycling. Below are key studies or areas of research that highlight this concept:

1. Autophagy and Nutrient Recycling
Study: “Autophagy as an adaptive response to nutrient deprivation”
https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-319-40007-5_69-1
• Authors: Mizushima et al., Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2008.
• What It Shows:
o Autophagy is a cellular process where damaged organelles and proteins are degraded and recycled into amino acids, lipids, and other building blocks during periods of nutrient scarcity.
o This recycling mechanism helps sustain cellular function and survival when external nutrients are unavailable.

2. Protein Turnover and Amino Acid Recycling
Study: “Protein metabolism during starvation”
• Authors: Cahill et al., American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1976.
• What It Shows:
o During fasting or starvation, proteins in the body are broken down into amino acids, which are then reused for vital functions such as gluconeogenesis (the production of glucose from non-carbohydrate sources).
o This highlights the body’s ability to recycle amino acids to sustain energy production.

3. Urea Nitrogen Salvage in the Gut
Study: “Urea nitrogen salvaging in ruminants and non-ruminants”
• Authors: Lobley et al., Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1999.
• What It Shows:
o Urea produced by the liver is not fully excreted. In the gut, bacteria convert some urea back into ammonia, which is used to synthesize amino acids and proteins.
o This is an example of how the body recycles nitrogen to conserve essential resources.

4. Recycling Lipids in Starvation
Study: “Lipid autophagy balances energy needs during starvation”
• Authors: Singh et al., Cell Metabolism, 2009.
• What It Shows:
o During periods of nutrient deprivation, lipid droplets are broken down via autophagy into free fatty acids and glycerol, which are used as energy sources.

5. Nutrient Recycling in Aging and Longevity
Study: “The role of autophagy in aging and longevity”
• Authors: Levine and Kroemer, Science, 2008.
• What It Shows:
o Autophagy-mediated recycling of cellular components plays a key role in delaying the effects of aging and promoting longevity by maintaining cellular health.

6. Microbial Contributions to Nutrient Recycling
Study: “The human gut microbiome as a nutrient recycling system”
• Authors: Sonnenburg et al., Nature, 2005.
• What It Shows:
o Gut microbes metabolize dietary fiber and other compounds to produce short-chain fatty acids, vitamins, and other nutrients that the body can absorb and use.
o This demonstrates how external and internal processes contribute to nutrient recycling.

7. Nutrient Recycling in Plants (For Context)
Study: “Nutrient recycling in ecosystems and its role in sustainability”
• Authors: Chapin et al., Nature, 2000.
• What It Shows:
o While not specific to humans, this study shows how ecosystems recycle nutrients through organic matter decomposition, providing insights into sustainability principles that can parallel human physiology.

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My Vegan Story | why i went vegan, tips, and benefits

Welcome back to RainbowPlantLife. If
you're new here, my name is Nisha, and thank you for joining me. I get a lot of
questions from friends and strangers alike about why I'm vegan and what the
transition was like and some of the challenges. So, in today's video I'll be
answering some of the questions I get about my vegan story. Ummm, I would say it was a mix of things.

I think that's a pretty accurate statement. On the one hand, I ate a lot of healthy
foods. I ate a lot of fruits and vegetables, which I've always loved. And
whole grains. And I didn't eat fast food or drink soda, so I had a lot of good
stuff in my diet on the one hand. But, on the other hand I ate a lot of chicken. I ate a lot of freaking chicken. I probably ate chicken once a day, maybe less, maybe more, sometimes twice a day. And I a lot of dairy. Despite being told by my doctor that I was highly lactose intolerant, I continued to eat dairy and
suffered the consequences. I put cheese on everything. I ordered
pizza probably once a week, and I went through my fair share of Ben and Jerry's
ice cream pints. Yeah, so before I went vegan, I would say my diet was a mix of healthy and not so healthy. As I drifted into my late 20s, I noticed
something about my diet which is pretty common as you get older.

And I noticed
that when I ate meat, I felt heavy and weighed down so I
experimented with cutting out meat. When I didn't eat meat, not only did I not
feel that heavy feeling, but I also felt happier. I couldn't really explain why or
how I felt happier, but it was a really present feeling. And so I listened to my
body and I stopped eating as much meat, and eventually within a few months, I
became a vegetarian. I started to research a little more about
vegetarianism and veganism and I knew that I wanted to become vegan because it
was good for you, but I didn't really have a strong reason to do so. As I
mentioned, I liked cheese a lot and I live in New York City so it was really
hard to give up New York City pizza without a really strong reason to do so.

Then a friend recommended I watch the documentary Food Inc. And Food Inc. is
about how agribusiness and big corporations have made our food super
unhealthy, and in the process have polluted the environment and have abused animals and the employees that work on these factories and farms. I was really
moved by Food Inc., and I knew that I wanted to learn more and when I came
home from work the next day I cleared my schedule for the rest of the week and
basically just binge watched like ten documentaries.

And I think I cried in all
of those documentaries. Maybe not all, but most of them. And that was a really
big deal for me because I don't cry very often, so I knew that this was gonna be
important and life-changing for me. Basically, binge watching those
documentaries converted me into becoming vegan overnight. Or, I guess over the course of a few nights. Before I watched those documentaries, I wanted to become vegan
but didn't really have a strong enough reason to do it.

And afterwards, I did. I
had this intimate, personal connection with veganism because I knew how animals were being treated and I knew how bad livestock production was for the
environment, and I wanted to live my best life possible without causing harm to
others and without playing a role in the destruction of the environment. My life has changed in so many ways. For
one, I'm happier. That intangible feeling of happiness I felt the first time I
stopped eating meat – well, I feel that all the time now. Alright, not all the time. That
would be a little unrealistic, but I do feel happier and I think it's because
I'm finally able to live a life that's consistent with my values.
I've always highly valued non-violence and not causing harm to
others and now that I don't eat dairy products or animal products or meat, I
feel like I can say that's actually true.

And that brings me a lot of happiness. Since going vegan, my health is better overall. I've always had high cholesterol
ever since I can remember, and I was always really bummed about it because I
was young, I was active, I didn't eat red meat, and I still had high cholesterol. And I got my blood work done two months after I went vegan and my cholesterol had
dropped over 20 points in just those two months. And I'm happy to report that I
now have normal cholesterol, which is a really huge accomplishment for me. I also suffer from IBS or irritable bowel syndrome. Very sexy I know. And since
going vegan, I have far fewer digestive issues and stomach problems. Apparently, if you're lactose intolerant and you don't eat dairy, you will feel better.
Simple as that. Since going vegan I tend to eat a little healthier as well. Of
course, I think that I'm eating healthier because I'm not eating animal products,
but I feel like I'm also eating healthier unintentionally.

I used to have
a little bad habit, or I guess I still sort of have it, of going to a bakery
during work in the afternoon to get a brownie or a cookie or a chocolate
croissant, something to satisfy my sweet tooth. And it's not that I can't do that
these days–I still do–but I don't do it nearly as often. I used to do it almost
every day. And not every bakery sells vegan baked goods, so I have to go a
little out-of-the-way, which makes me less likely to do it all the time.

I'm also a better cook now that I'm vegan. I've been cooking since I was a teenager, so there hasn't been a huge transformation. But when I want to
recreate comfort foods or favorite dishes, I have to get a little creative
in the kitchen. For instance, if I want to make pizza and I want to make cheese for the pizza, I have to use cashews or tofu or experiment instead of just buying cheese at the grocery store. And that experimentation and
creativity have helped me become a more confident and better cook. There is one change that is not necessarily a positive thing.

I'll let you be the judge
of what it is. I eat more bread and bread products now that I'm vegan. And I don't
necessarily think that's a bad thing because I don't believe in limiting food
groups, but I know that some people are concerned about eating more carbs or
more bread when they're vegan, so I just wanted to be upfront with you. And
this is a purely personal choice because I love bread and bread products and it's
often convenient to eat bread because when you're out, bread is usually vegan.
But I know plenty of vegans who don't eat as much bread or who actually are
gluten free as well, so this is just my story.

You certainly don't have to
eat as much bread as I do. This might be a little annoying to hear,
but I don't think being vegan is hard at all. It's actually really fun and
enjoyable for me, and that's probably because I love to cook and I also live
in New York City, which is really vegan friendly. As a result I have a ton of
variety in my diet and I never feel like I'm deprived or missing out. There are a couple challenges and I want to be honest with you about them. One relates to the social aspect of food. For me, food is so much fun to enjoy with
others, and I really love the social element of sharing food with people, so
if I'm with family or friends and everybody wants to go to a pizza joint
or go get ice cream, it can be a little challenging. Not because I want to eat
that particular dairy product or animal product because I don't, but because I
want to be enjoying what my family and friends are doing and sharing food with
them.

I try to get around that problem by inviting people over to my place where I
can host and make sure everything's vegan, whether it's a potluck or a vegan
barbecue. The other challenge for me is not related to food. It's about finding good beauty products, household products, and clothing that's vegan or
cruelty-free. And I don't want to suggest that there aren't any brands that offer
these products because there are tons of them, but you can't just walk into a
store like you ordinarily would and pick the first item off the shelf. You have to
do some research about which brands offer cruelty-free products, you have to
read labels and ingredients and all that kind of stuff.

So it's not hard per se,
but you do have to put in some time and investment into knowing what's out there. No, they are not. I'm vegan because I want to be vegan, because I love the way it makes me feel physically, emotionally,
mentally, spiritually. But it's not my place to judge what others do, including
members of my own family. We're all on our own individual journeys and we'll
all come to important realizations about life at different periods in our life,
and so it's not my position to force someone to come to that realization if
they're not ready to do so.

Of course, if I can inspire someone to eat less meat or educate them about the values of veganism, that's great, and I love when I
have that opportunity. But there is a difference between forcing and
pressuring on the one hand, and inspiring and educating on the other hand, and I
try to stick to the latter. Thank you so much for taking the time to watch this video. And if there's anyone in your life that
would benefit from watching this video, whether they're vegan or not, please
share it with them. If you found this video helpful or informative, I would
love it if you hit that "thumbs up" button, And if you want to talk more about
veganism, whether it's your story or mine, or just have questions, I would love to
chat with you more, so leave me a comment below.

And I'll see you guys next week
with a new video. Bye!.

Video Transcript – As found on YouTube

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Recreating IKEA’s Famous Veggie Balls – Healthier & Just As Delicious!

Recreating IKEA’s Famous Veggie Balls – Healthier & Just As Delicious!

Click here for the recipe! https://bit.ly/IKEAVeggieBalls

Move over IKEA…these whole food plant-based and oil-free IKEA-Style Veggie Balls are even better. Each ball is packed with flavorful veggies, herbs, and spices that explode with every bite. Dip these in the Creamy Cashew Sauce for an even more delicious experience. Make these for your next party or enjoy at home!

—-

Purchase our cookbooks today (bundle discount available):
Cookbooks

Order my SOS-Free Products here:
All Products

Sign up for my Live Cooking Show!
Live Cooking Show Membership

Download my FREE Meal Rotator!
http://wellyourworld.com/mealrotator

Follow me on Instagram! @wellyourworld
http://www.instagram.com/wellyourworld

Join us in the Well Your World Facebook group:
http://facebook.com/groups/WellYourWorld

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#vegan #healthy

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Dietitian Answers Commonly Asked Questions About Going Vegan

Dietitian Answers Commonly Asked Questions About Going Vegan

“Is it possible to get enough protein on a vegan diet?” and other common questions that people have about going vegan!

This video was filmed before shelter-in-place orders were announced. BuzzFeed employees are now practicing social distancing and sheltering in place. We encourage everyone to do the same.

Subscribe to Goodful: https://bzfd.it/2QApoPk

About Goodful:
Feel better, be better, and do better. Subscribe to Goodful for all your healthy self care needs, from food to fitness and everything in between!

Connect with Goodful:
Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/officialgoodful/
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Credits: https://www.buzzfeed.com/bfmp/videos/101830
Music Licensed via Audio Network
Stills & videos licensed through Getty Images.

https://www.youtube.com/c/Goodful

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What I Wish I Knew Before Going Vegan

What I Wish I Knew Before Going Vegan

After 10 years of being vegan and whole food plant-based for the majority of the time, I have learned quite a lot. It can be very difficult to change the way you eat and live especially when it comes to a healthy, whole food plant-based lifestyle. That is why I want to share with you what I learned through trial and error, so you don’t have to.
—-

Purchase our cookbooks today (bundle discount available):
Cookbooks

Order my SOS-Free Products here:
All Products

Sign up for my Live Cooking Show!
Well Your Weekend Live Cooking Show Membership

Download my FREE Meal Rotator!
http://wellyourworld.com/mealrotator

Follow me on Instagram! @wellyourworld
http://www.instagram.com/wellyourworld

Join us in the Well Your World Facebook group:
http://facebook.com/groups/WellYourWorld

—-

#vegan #healthy

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BEGINNER’S GUIDE TO VEGANISM » How To Go Vegan

BEGINNER’S GUIDE TO VEGANISM » How To Go Vegan

???? Get the Pick Up Limes iOS app (1-week free trial!): https://bit.ly/pul-app
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???? If you read this far, kindly comment that you will hereby solemnly swear to only share the message with love.

FEATURED IN THE VIDEO
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❤ Sadia

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