@PeachLovesGoma · Post #2322 · 08.05.2023, 02:30
The holiday is over, take it easy and get ready for work (ง •̀_•́)ง #Story👩💻@PeachLovesGoma👩💻
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TGINSIGHT SIMILAR POSTS
Quellkanal @startupgroundzero · Post #21 · 5. Nov.
Как заработать миллион (не сум) если тебе 18? Многие часто об этом задумывались. Что делать если в стране почти не дают венчурных инвестиций? 🤔🤔🤔🤔 Пример двух бразильских юношей, которые за год с небольшим создали свой единорог. Всё возможно в этом мире, господа 😉 #StartUpSchool#GroundZero#Story#Inspire
Allgemeine globale Suche
@PeachLovesGoma · Post #2322 · 08.05.2023, 02:30
The holiday is over, take it easy and get ready for work (ง •̀_•́)ง #Story👩💻@PeachLovesGoma👩💻
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@PeachLovesGoma · Post #2252 · 01.04.2023, 10:59
#story (1) P: Pls take a picture of me (✿>◡❛) G: Ok ^_^ (2) 3.., 2.., 1... (3) P: Let me see ^_^ G: ...ok, I'll just leave it on the table and run and hide in the WC... (;;↼_↼) (4) Aghh! Dislike it! (~double chin) ✌️📱@PeachLovesGoma📱✌️
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@English_easyly_learn · Post #1374 · 06.07.2020, 11:12
#story 🌸A Bad Dream Roderick was a small cat that lived in Mr. Geddes’s house. Every day, he would go to the kitchen to raid his stock of fish, milk and cheese. One day, he had so much food that his tummy was uncomfortably full. That night he slept on his side. He tossed and turned all night and dreamt of Tiger, Mr. Geddes’s dog, chasing him all over the place. Roderick woke up with a pounding heart. Next day, he was still greedy for more and went to the kitchen and ate a lot again. That night too he had bad dreams. The following day when he went to the kitchen, he found Tiger guarding the food. So he could not have his milk and fish. “Ok!- he thought, “I will have black berries and hazelnuts today.” That night he didn’t have any bad dreams. He decided that he would never eat too much again. @English_easyly_learn🇬🇧
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@English_easyly_learn · Post #1104 · 23.08.2018, 18:02
✅Story time The Two Wolves A wise old man was teaching his grandson about life. He said, “A fight is going on inside me. It is a terrible fight and it is between two wolves. One wolf is evil—he is fear, anger, envy, sorrow, greed and lies. The other is good—he is joy, peace, love, sharing, kindness and truth. This same fight is going on inside you.” The grandson thought for a minute, and then asked, “Which wolf will win, grandfather?” The grandfather replied, “The one you feed.” Which wolf do we feed daily? If we surround ourselves with negative minded people and talk negative things then we are feeding the evil wolf. On the other hand, if we spend our time with positive people, read good books, and help people in solving their problems then we are helping the good wolf to win over the evil one. Let us feed the good wolf. We will become more positive and happy! 😇 #story @English_easyly_learn
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@mountstorm · Post #680 · 29.07.2023, 19:05
Until that age, he experienced, even enjoyed, the pleasure of conformity, opinions of others, but when 17 knocked the door, things started to be controlled by him. Sometimes, he thought all night about his future: getting into college, test scores, what if fail bunch of negative thoughts. They almost killed him, his mind. They just made him lose. But this little hope inside the mankind did not let him to give up. Modern distractions withered his vision away, constantly letting him compare himself with others. Betrayals. With this term you might not be familiar, but it was like a lunch for him, facing it all the time. He put all faith in Almighty's hand. Everything started to change for the better side: bonds with family, mentality, passion for work, eradication of distractions. And believed he in his beautiful plan. #story
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@numonovdesign · Post #558 · 14.09.2024, 09:08
#story | INSTAGRAM story 🚥 Buyurtma uchun: @numonovsh Portfolio | Instagram | Blog
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@numonovdesign · Post #552 · 09.09.2024, 11:33
#story | INSTAGRAM story 🚥 Buyurtma uchun: @numonovsh Portfolio | Instagram | Blog
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@whydot · Post #167 · 06.09.2025, 11:01
#story Subscriber Story: "I Was a Top Student at Home, But in Poland, I Almost Failed" Hi everyone! In our Saturday column today, we have a very important story from Nodira, who came to study in Krakow a year ago. The following is in the first person: "I was always a good student. At my school and lyceum in Tashkent, I got top grades and was used to the system: listen carefully in class, take good notes, and answer when called upon. I arrived in Poland confident that I would have no problems with my studies. The very first seminar left me baffled. The professor asked a question, and I knew the answer from the textbook. But while I was waiting to be called on, several Polish students started an active debate, expressing their own, completely different opinions. And the professor praised them! Not for the right answer, but for an 'interesting perspective' and 'critical thinking.' I sat in silence and felt foolish. Group projects were even worse. I was on a team with a student from Germany and another from Spain. They argued, discussed every little detail, constantly proposed ideas, and just as easily discarded them. I was used to the group leader simply dividing tasks for everyone to do their part quietly. Here, I was expected to constantly participate in this 'creative chaos.' I felt lost and was silent most of the time. After a month, I was in a panic. I was studying everything, but I felt like I was failing. I didn't understand the rules of the game. Everything changed when I gathered my courage and stayed after a lecture to talk to the professor (they call it 'konsultacje' or office hours). I honestly explained that I wasn't used to this format and was afraid to speak up. He listened and explained something that blew my mind: 'Nodira, at a European university, we don't expect you to repeat what we say. We expect you to argue with us. A good question from a student is more valuable to us than a correct answer from a book.' That conversation gave me strength. I set a goal for myself: to ask at least one question in every seminar. It was scary at first, my voice trembled. But I saw that the professors genuinely liked it. In group projects, I started contributing at least one idea. And gradually, I got into it. It turned out that debating and analyzing is incredibly interesting. Three rules I learned in my first semester: - Your opinion is more important than a memorized answer. The university expects you to analyze, not just reproduce information. - Asking questions is a sign of intelligence, not stupidity. It shows you're engaged and want to understand. - University is a dialogue. Don't be afraid to approach professors, participate in discussions, and be active. This is what gets you the highest grades here. So if you're a first-year student right now and feel the same way I did, don't be scared. You just need to adjust. It's not that you're a 'bad student'; it's just a new, and very exciting, level of the game." @whydot
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@whydot · Post #164 · 30.08.2025, 12:15
#story Subscriber Story: "How I Defeated Polish Bureaucracy (and Got My Residence Permit)" 📄 Hi everyone! In our Saturday column today, we have an instructive story from Diyora. It's about the first serious "quest" that awaits every student in Poland-applying for a temporary residence permit, or "karta pobytu." The following is in the first person: "I arrived in Warsaw in October, and the first few weeks were euphoric. Studies, new friends, city walks... I kept postponing the thought of applying for my residence permit. My student visa was valid for a year, so it felt like I had plenty of time. In December, I finally decided to tackle it and was hit with reality. The online appointment system for the Urząd (immigration office) showed no available slots. At all. Not for January, not for February. I checked the site every day, but no slots appeared. Other students had the same problem. Panic began to set in my visa was expiring, and I was afraid of becoming an illegal resident. Salvation came from an unexpected place a student chat on Telegram. Someone wrote, 'Why are you waiting for an online appointment? Just go to the Urząd and submit your documents through the 'biuro podawcze' (submission office).' It turned out you could simply bring a complete set of documents, hand them in at a special window, and get a stamp in your passport that makes your stay legal while you await a decision. This was my chance. I spent a week meticulously preparing every single paper. In those same chats, I found up-to-date checklists, made three copies of each document, and filled out the application form (wniosek) in block letters, as advised by experienced students. With a huge folder of documents, I went to the Urząd. Yes, I had to wait in line, but an hour later, I had the coveted red stamp in my passport. A huge weight was lifted off my shoulders. I waited another 8 months for the plastic card itself, but during that entire time, I was in Poland legally, able to study without fear. 💡 My main lessons in the fight against bureaucracy: - Start IMMEDIATELY. Don't postpone your application. Start the process in your very first month after arrival. - Become part of the community. All the most valuable and up-to-date information is not on official websites, but in student chats and Facebook groups. People share real life hacks there. - Paperwork is your best friend. Be meticulous. Check every letter, make more copies than you need. Your organization is the key to success. - Patience, patience, and more patience. Processes in Poland are slow. This is normal. The main thing is to submit your documents on time and legalize your stay. I hope my story helps someone save their nerves and time!" @whydot
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@whydot · Post #151 · 16.08.2025, 13:32
#story Hi! In our Saturday column today, we have a short but very telling story from Timur, who is studying in a Polish-language program in Warsaw. The following is in the first person: "The first two months of my studies were hell. I passed the language exam to get in, but academic Polish is on another level. I would sit in lectures as if in a fog, understanding maybe 20% of what the professor was saying. I recorded everything, spent hours with a dictionary, and felt like I was hopelessly falling behind. I had only one thought: 'What have I gotten myself into?'. Then one day, I was in a sociology lecture. The professor was speaking quickly, the topic was complex. I had already given up mentally and was just doodling in my notebook. And then, amidst this stream of unfamiliar words, I clearly understood a full sentence. Then another one. I looked up. And another. The words stopped being just a collection of sounds. They started forming ideas. The professor said something, and a few Polish students in the audience chuckled. And I got the joke. I understood the context, the irony. And I smiled too. At that moment, I almost cried right there in the lecture. It was a quiet but huge victory. The wall that stood between me and this world had crumbled. What was my takeaway? Language learning isn't a straight road; it's a long plateau that ends with a sudden leap upwards. The most important thing is not to give up during the 'quiet' periods when it feels like nothing is happening. It's precisely at this time that your brain is doing the hardest work. And one day, it will definitely surprise you." @whydot
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@whydot · Post #145 · 09.08.2025, 11:05
#story Subscriber Story: "I Was Refused a Student Visa. I Thought It Was the End." Hi everyone! In our Saturday column today, we have a very tense but instructive story from Aziz, who shared his experience of getting a student visa for Poland. The following is in the first person: "Getting the acceptance letter from a Polish university was one of the happiest moments of my life. It seemed like the hardest part was over. Applying for a visa looked like a simple formality. I gathered all the documents on the list, submitted them, and started mentally packing my bags. Two weeks later, I received an email. I opened it with a smile, but a second later, my heart sank. 'Refused.' The reason stated was something like 'the justification for the purpose of the intended stay was not sufficiently provided.' I couldn't believe it. My world collapsed. How would I tell my parents? What did I do wrong? My first thought was, that's it, it's over, I'm not going anywhere. I was in despair for several days. Then I decided to write in a student chat group where I found guys already studying in Poland. One of them, Umid, agreed to have a call with me. We started going through my document package point by point. And then he asked, 'Did you attach the receipt for the first semester's tuition fee?' I said no, because the acceptance letter didn't mention it. Umid explained that for the consul, an acceptance letter is just an intention. But paid tuition is serious proof that your purpose is indeed studying, and not something else. This was the 'justification for the purpose of the stay.' Realizing my mistake, I felt a surge of energy. I contacted the university, urgently paid for the first semester, got a confirmation from them, and filed an appeal, attaching all the new documents and a short cover letter. The next two weeks were the most nerve-wracking of my life. But in the end, I got a call saying my visa was approved. What I learned from this situation: - The devil is in the details. The document list is the bare minimum. Always try to provide maximum proof of your purpose. Paid tuition, dormitory booking-all these things strengthen your case. - A refusal is not always a final verdict. It often points to a specific, correctable mistake. The main thing is not to panic, but to analyze. - Seek help from those with experience. The experience of students who have already gone through this path is priceless. Don't be shy about asking for advice in chats and forums. I hope my story helps someone not to give up in a similar situation." @whydot
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@whydot · Post #100 · 28.06.2025, 11:03
#story “My First Month in Europe: Fears, Discoveries, and Change” My name is Dildora, and I came to Italy for a Master’s in Architecture. The first month was tough: everything felt unfamiliar - the language, the food, even the air! I worried a lot about whether I could manage the classes and make friends. The most amazing thing happened during my very first week: on campus, I met a group of students from Georgia, Turkey, and Spain. We took a city tour together, and I realized that being a foreigner isn’t a weakness - it’s a superpower here. People respect your uniqueness and are genuinely curious about your home country; nobody cares about your accent. Later, I joined a student club, and now I meet up with friends from all over the world every week. The studies are very practical: we work on real projects and communicate a lot with professors. I was even assigned to design a small public park for an Italian town - I felt so proud! The most important lesson Europe taught me in this short time is: don’t be afraid to ask for help, and don’t be shy to be yourself. Every day here is a step toward independence and self-confidence. Yes, there are difficulties, but it’s worth overcoming the fear for these discoveries. P.S. If you’re thinking about studying abroad - don’t worry, you’re not alone. You’ll make it!” @whydot
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