u/Normal_Company_6707

Tayne made a good decision. Sadaf is exhausting.

I genuinely don’t understand why everyone kept telling Tayne, “You portrayed something else” or “You should’ve told us earlier if you didn’t like Sadaf.”

Like… what exactly was he portraying? 😭 Through the TV screen, it was painfully obvious that relationship was going downhill for weeks. Every episode felt more uncomfortable than the last. Tayne would try to talk, Sadaf would shut down, walk away, refuse affection, refuse basic communication… even when he asked for something as simple as a hug.

And no, I’m not saying Tayne is perfect. But people are acting like TV relationships are legally required to stay good just because they started well. Tayne was absolutely right when he said, “Just because it started well doesn’t mean it stays that way forever.” Relationships can deteriorate. Dynamics can become exhausting. Why was nobody considering that? Everyone was still stuck on the “ideal couple” image from the beginning.

Honestly, even if they were eventually going to break up anyway, basic communication and mutual effort still matter. Watching them lately felt less like romance and more like two people emotionally dragging a dead relationship around the show.

I honestly think he made the right choice for himself. Sadaf just comes across as emotionally draining to watch. Every scene feels like an unsolicited therapy session. 😭 The negativity is so heavy that even as a viewer, it becomes exhausting. Not saying she’s a bad person, but she gives off the kind of energy that would completely drain me socially.

Also, Sunny walking up to comfort Sadaf after spending the entire season calling everyone else over instead was SO predictable. 💀

reddit.com
u/Normal_Company_6707 — 4 days ago

Severe deficiency and low dose prescription

Hi everyone, I’m a 32-year-old female living in Melbourne, and I recently found out my vitamin D level is severely low — it’s 12 ng/ml

My doctor prescribed 1,000 IU vitamin D twice daily (so 2,000 IU/day total). I was surprised because I’ve read a lot of posts where people with levels this low were prescribed much higher doses. I actually got a second opinion as well, and the second doctor (same clinic) recommended basically the same thing — just stick with 2,000 IU daily and repeat blood tests in about 3 months.

Both doctors said vitamin D can absorb quite quickly and that I don’t necessarily need a mega-dose approach, but I’m still feeling a bit confused because my level seems really low compared to what I’ve seen others mention online.

Has anyone else here had a vitamin D level around 12 and been treated with a relatively low daily dose instead of high weekly doses? Did it work well for you? And do you think it’s worth getting a third opinion from a different clinic or should I trust the two doctors and stop overthinking it?

reddit.com
u/Normal_Company_6707 — 4 days ago

Yogesh really paused, ran a full internal audit and concluded:

“yeah… I’m about to be the only Roadies loser” 😭

Not a single ounce of jealousy. Just pure, calm self-awareness.

Man saw the future, accepted it and announced it like a weather update. 😂

reddit.com
u/Normal_Company_6707 — 13 days ago