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  • Hello Everybody! Firstly I want to say

  • how very sorry I am that I have not uploaded

  • in two weeks.

  • I think that's the longest I've gone on this channel

  • for a really long time

  • without uploading.

  • I do have a good reason for it..

  • I have been so busy.

  • The reason I'm out of breath is I've just run to the top of the stairs..

  • ow, I've got a blister..

  • Always wear socks with trainers!

  • And the reason I'm out of breath is because I've run up all the stairs

  • and this room is like a sauna!

  • So I'm a sweaty mess.

  • I'm just gunna be a bit of a mess in this video I think.

  • I've had the same make-up on all day..

  • I'm just not really sure what this looks like.

  • But we're here! We're making a video!

  • And yeah, as I said, really sorry I have been so busy

  • it's actually unreal, and I didn't feel very well last week

  • so, here I am! Up in my attic!

  • Uh! Listen to the seagulls!

  • Aww it's like being back in my old flat on the sea front,

  • who remembers that?

  • I've got my legs open, this is not a good look, it's a good job you can't see!

  • I know you guys really like my more kinda chilled,

  • chatty videos or Q&As,

  • whether that's just me or with a friend.. umh..

  • and so I thought I would do one today! Do another little

  • chatty Q&A. Have I got lipstick on my teeth?

  • Nah. So the biggest portion of my viewership or

  • audience on YouTube are people over the age of

  • eighteen, but

  • there are still a huge, huge amount of you

  • who are under eighteen, and I always

  • notice a lot of you have a lot of questions about

  • what it was like for me being a teenager and how I

  • dealt with certain situations growing up

  • and I don't feel like I've ever done a video like this..

  • umh.. so, I asked you

  • all on Twitter if you had any.. oh and on Instagram actually!

  • I said on Instagram story, if you've got any questions

  • then, come Tweet me. I feel like the first thing

  • I should point out though is how different

  • it must be, being a teenager

  • to when I was a teenager, because funnily enough,

  • as much as I hate to admit it, that was actually quite a long

  • time ago for me, so I was

  • seventeen, ten years ago, so my early teens

  • was a wee while, I'll let you do the maths

  • and I get asked the same question quite a lot

  • which is, if you were a teenager now

  • how would you find it, and honestly

  • I don't know, I think you all deserve a medal

  • because things like social media

  • and Instagram, and likes and like this whole kind of

  • popularity thing

  • wasn't around when I was in school, we had MSN

  • messenger

  • and there was like AOL chat-rooms, and we

  • could text if we had credit, and

  • there is a huge part of me that is so thankful

  • that

  • things like MySpace,

  • Beebo, and Facebook, only really

  • happened, towards

  • the end of my teens. Which was the first one we had?

  • We had.. I feel like I had MySpace first, and then

  • Beebo, and I must have been fifteen, sixteen

  • And I feel like, no one really knew how to use

  • it, and it was all very new,

  • and it wasn't the same. Although I would say for any of

  • you nineties kids out there

  • who may have also use Beebo and MySpace, the only thing we

  • ever really had arguments about, was

  • in what order your friends were

  • In your top 8 friends. *laughs*

  • I used to hate doing that!

  • I think I used to shuffle mine, or put them on random, because it was like

  • That was, the only thing that caused rows in our friendship group

  • Or did it? I don't know; maybe I just secretly got really sad if i wasn't like at least someones top 5 *laughs*

  • The most interactions I ever had with people would be on MSN messenger

  • and in those days, you only had your friends - that was it.

  • and the only thing you really had to think about was which song lyrics you were gonna put in your MSM messenger like tagline

  • what was it called? bio? tagline? I can't remember

  • but hey! if we didnt have twitter you wouldnt have been able to ask me these questions

  • so...

  • theres that i guess!

  • Julia did actually ask "How do you think

  • being a teenager in present day differs from when you were a teen?

  • and I guess I sort of answered that. There's

  • more pressure now outside of your friendship group, which

  • I didn't have back then. The only

  • interaction with people who we were really friends with was

  • actual face to face conversation,

  • and then by the time we were sort of friends, that's when you'd get

  • their MSN and that's when you'd get their number, but

  • there wasn't that same

  • kinda of image to portrait on social media

  • I guess. I don't know, I would love to chat to

  • like a room of teenagers to find out how they really feel about it.

  • That would just be so great. Please let me know in the comments!

  • Let's have like a discussion about this. How do you feel

  • being a teen with things like Twitter,

  • Facebook.. things like Ask.fm. Honestly.. just sounds like a nightmare to me!

  • When I was at school someone created the like "Rate my teacher"

  • or something and that was about as like savage as it got.

  • "How do you control your hormones as a teenager?" and that is

  • by Shannon.

  • You can't!

  • Is the answer to that. You can't, really.

  • And actually when I think back to when

  • I was a teenager. Tean-ager? Teen-ager...

  • my hormones were quite

  • extreme, but it's only as I look

  • back at some of my behaviour..

  • I wasn't terrible, don't get me wrong, but my mood swings

  • and I remember I used to have arguments

  • with my mum and dad and I

  • definitely

  • struggled

  • with the hormones.

  • I wouldn't have ever admitted it at the time, but looking back I can

  • see that I did. Being a teenager is such a..

  • weird time, because

  • you've gone up to secondary school, you're

  • sort of trying to figure out who you are,

  • who your friends are, you're getting put with people

  • who

  • you might not necessarily have a lot in common with

  • but feel you need to be friends with and

  • you see these people every day

  • five days a week.. like for

  • a massive portion of your life.

  • No wonder you're gonna struggle with it

  • sometimes. So it's only natural again

  • when hormones are included within

  • that

  • that you are gonna struggle sometimes and also

  • you start to feel all the feels. You start to feel

  • sad, you start to feel jealous, you start to feel bitter,

  • you start to feel angry, you start to feel over

  • emotional, you start to feel overly

  • excited, overly happy. It's like all the

  • feels, all the emotions and all the feels

  • and I definitely had that.

  • Emh.. but

  • it made some of the best moments

  • and the best memories and some that I'd look

  • back on and be like, "wow, I was a beatch!"

  • to my parents and my brother probably. You need to remember

  • everyone else around you is also experiencing

  • that and it kinda varies

  • person by person and you know..

  • hormones affects people so differently,

  • but essentially you're all on the same boat and it's happening to everyone,

  • so don't feel weird or feel like

  • you have to control them in any way. I think hormones are something that's

  • very difficult to control but I do think

  • trying to find a bit of kinda you-time

  • and chill and have like a space that you like

  • to be in and to be able to go

  • and have a moment.. I think it's really important, so obviously

  • like.. your bedroom, like maybe ligh a candle, put some fairylights

  • on.. like it's about making yourself feel

  • at ease if everything is getting a little too much.

  • I feel like this video is gonna be really long cause I'm such a rambler.

  • Faith Dorsen said "Pressured to smoke/vape?"

  • I did not have a group of friends that ever

  • pressured me into anything, actually.

  • Umh.. but I have seen

  • where other people have felt pressured to do it.

  • And I guess I.. when I was a teen I did think..

  • See the thing is I never felt pressured by anyone else

  • and my parents weren't very like.. strict in that sense,

  • like they would never lecture me about don't drink,

  • don't smoke and..

  • They sorta left me and my brother to make decisions

  • ourselves, which I think was kind of clever,

  • because neither of us are very wild.

  • Uhm..

  • And.. I think the only pressure

  • I ever had was myself. Like I had friends

  • who smoked, who drank, I had..

  • I hung out with groups of people who were much, much

  • older than me doing worst things at house parties.

  • Some of those memories still haunt me to this day.

  • Some of the things I saw in house parties just..

  • I don't think you should see it as like a fifteen or sixteen years old to be quite honest, but

  • I never felt like I needed to do that.

  • I didn't feel like I needed to..

  • smoke or drink or do drugs.

  • I just.. I kind of..

  • watched everyone else do it and I was like, "that doesn't really look fun,

  • I think he just looks stupid"! Like I just used to look

  • at people and just be like, "you just look stupid"! I don't know,

  • like.. it..

  • for me it was like.. it was actually quite like a.. turn off?

  • I was just a bit like.. "ugh, no.. that's not for me!"

  • Umh.. and the only sort of like pressure I had really

  • was me at the back of my head thinking

  • "but I am a teen, like.. should I be trying these things? Like..

  • shoud I be.." It was almost like it was me

  • pressurizing myself? It was weird! It was like.. well I guess

  • everyone should try something once in their life!

  • Turns out.. you don't really have to because

  • I can see what everyone else is doing and I really don't feel like I was

  • missing out and luckly I wasn't

  • within a group of friends where I felt pressured.

  • Umh.. but

  • I know I would've stood

  • my ground and just said "no, I'm okay, thanks" and I do think

  • if you ever feel that pressured within a group of friends

  • you have to put your foot down because you'll never look

  • back on that memory of trying something for the first time

  • and feel confortable about it because

  • you'll never be too sure if you really wanted to or not

  • and I'm just not sure that that's a nice

  • way to ever do anything. I think everything

  • you do and everything you experience should ultimately be down

  • to you because it's your life. If anyone

  • is making you feel pressured to have sex, to smoke,

  • to drink, to do anything you are not hundred percent

  • confortable with

  • say no

  • and if they are your friends they will understand that

  • and if they don't understand that they are not your friends. "Did

  • you ever question your body or feel insicure about your figure?

  • How did you overcome it?"

  • Yes! I feel like I've touched on this a little bit

  • in my Question I've Never Answered.

  • I went through a stage where

  • I had grown in height and

  • I was super skinny

  • and all my friends were getting like hips and boobs

  • and a bum and I was still a bit like.. ugh,

  • when's mine coming?

  • And then

  • they happened and they happened very quickly

  • so my boob.. it's like I almost woke up one day and my boobs were there and my bum was there.

  • So now I've got like stretchmarks , umh..

  • and

  • for a while I didn't like it

  • because it almost made me look skinnier?

  • Because it was like.. ugh, these boobs don't like..

  • go with my body and like.. I don't look

  • like my friends. Why can't I put weight

  • on and I struggled with the fact that I just

  • felt like I looked so skinny, umh..

  • and I was quite self conscious at like PE and I hated

  • putting shorts on but what's so interesting is

  • people assume you

  • can't feel insicure about your body when you're skinnier.

  • Like I would put shorts on and people were just kinda of assumed

  • that I'm confident because I've got my shorts on

  • and I've got my legs out and

  • I'm sure there were people around me who would

  • have wanted to have had my legs, yet

  • in my head I was like "I hate my legs!"

  • Hated swimming.. oh my God, that for me

  • was the worst! That's like.. you know when you remember swimming and you get

  • like

  • a wave of like *mumbles*. I hated swimming

  • and I honestly belive ninety eight

  • percent of the girls in my swimming group hated

  • swimming for this very reason. If

  • you're gonna put like twenty girls who were

  • all like

  • growing and changing at very different rates

  • and getting used to their bodies and trying to learn

  • why things are, how they are or why you're

  • not like Sally next to you or why

  • you've got one boob that seems to be growing faster than

  • another boob or why you've got like a wobbly bit

  • or why you feel so skinny.. you're never gonna

  • have a great lesson!

  • Like it's never gonna be a great lisson.. lesson. We.. we

  • all

  • hated swimming so much. Like

  • no one enjoy.. who enjoyed swimming apart from that one

  • girl that was there in her like blister sock and swim hat

  • and goggles and nose clip? Like she's the one that loves swimming, but

  • everyone else

  • did not love swimming. And.. I just felt like

  • everyone stared at me in a swimming costume because I was

  • so skinny and I hated it

  • so much. I still did it,

  • I still put the swimming costume on, I still.. and I

  • hated swimming anyway. Like.. I.. I'm just.. I

  • hate swimming.

  • Umh..

  • But.. I don't know. It was kinda like

  • a phase that came and went. I remember feeling quite

  • insicure between the ages of about twelve and fourteen

  • and then past that I think I stopped caring because

  • I sort of settled with the fact that

  • everyone's bodies were growing and changing at different rates

  • and everyone had something about them that they weren't happy with

  • or something that they felt they wanted to change

  • and that was very reassuring to me because

  • I felt like I was the only one who

  • was the odd one out, but actually everyone feels like

  • they're the odd one out at some point, which I'm very

  • lucky for, because there's a lot of people who can't do that,

  • which I feel really sad about. Eve said, "How to

  • tell friends you can't or don't want to go to parties because they don't

  • understand? I love you!" I love you too!

  • That's hard because there were a lot of things I

  • never wanted to go to because of my anxiety.

  • Umh.. but I feel like I just said, "I don't wanna go!" *laughs"

  • The worst part of it for me

  • was

  • that I couldn't go, not that I didn't want to

  • go.. if that makes sense. Is that I felt like I couldn't,

  • not that I didn't want to. So

  • I would be at home knowing they were

  • all on a night out and they were all like having a fab time

  • and I wished more than anything I could be

  • there but I knew I couldn't

  • be and it was.. that was quite

  • a hard time for me actually. That was probably in my later teens.

  • That's something I knew I had to deal with.. like that's not

  • something my friends have to deal with. That's

  • me and what I should've done

  • was spoken to someone earlier,

  • got help earlier and kind of

  • then lived my kind of late teens,

  • early twenties anxiety free rather than trying to sort that

  • out a little bit further down the line, but

  • umh.. yeah, I feel like

  • you just tell them and again, if they're your friends

  • they'll understand and if they don't

  • understand that's

  • okay, because it means that

  • it's not something they experience

  • but at the end of the day if you don't wanna go out

  • or you feel like you can't

  • then

  • don't.

  • And you might get FOMO but

  • that's a choice you've made and if they love you

  • then they'll still say they miss ya. Abby said,

  • "What were your favourite things to do with friends etc. during

  • highschool?" Oh my God, okay. So this probably

  • was my favourite thing. We would like go to each other's

  • houses and we would make..

  • uhm.. with photographs

  • and Window's Movie Maker.. we would make umh..

  • little films and I still have them, that's what's..

  • and

  • now.. nowdays I would be uploading them to YouTube

  • and back then YouTube didn't exsist, so I was just like making them

  • and like saving them and we would like reenact

  • things so we.. we did Mean Girls, we

  • did.. oh my God.. we did like

  • weird.. me and my friends did The Ring..

  • like.. we would reenact a whole

  • film in photos with slides

  • and like texts

  • and music and it was

  • great fun. So that's what we did. As I got a

  • bit older it was like house parties,

  • umh.. umh, we used to.. there was a park

  • next to our school so we used to hang out in the park quite a lot.

  • Yeah.. there was a lot of great times, actually.

  • A lot of great friend times. We used to go shopping

  • on the weekends, we would all get the bus in

  • and we would get disposable cameras and like take pictures

  • and lots of sleepovers. We would always trying to do all ,

  • nighters

  • and.. funnily enough you'd all think I would

  • suck at that but I was actually not that bad.

  • "What to do when you're in a friendship group that fall out because

  • of nothing? How do you deal with it?"

  • Oh.. we had a fair amount of these, we really did.

  • Umh..

  • as I said at the beginning of this, when you're

  • put into a..

  • situation for the majority

  • of your life for five years with the same people

  • you're.. you're never gonna always get on.

  • Like you're just not. There's gonna be something

  • that brushes one person up the wrong way

  • and there's tension and then it's awkward

  • and then the group divides and then some people are on that side,

  • some people on that side, then there's a whole division

  • and they don't speak to these people and it.. and it'll

  • be over something that you don't even remember what it's over.

  • And I think what's different today

  • that is so different from back then is when that used to

  • happen with our friends a lot of them making up

  • and the sorting out had to happen face to face

  • which I feel like probably wouldn't happen as much now

  • because there's things like Facebook

  • and like Messangers and Twitter and..

  • there's loads of different places that you can see like..

  • snidey indirects and things like that, but

  • in the olden days..

  • in the olden days.. that makes me sound so ancient, but

  • back when I was a teenager it would've been something like

  • it would've.. there would've been something

  • said at school and someone would've taken it the wrong way, or someone would've been having a

  • bad day and someone else would've cared as much as they should

  • have.. umh..

  • and then there would be like little tiffs..

  • I wouldn't say we have all like fell out big time,

  • but there were certainly like..

  • little arguments here and there.

  • Hello!

  • Hello Buzzy!

  • We've got Buzzy at the moment.

  • Wanna jump on that?

  • Are you gonna sit down or are you just gonna breathe heavily behind me?

  • Hello!

  • Uh! You're in.. you're all in my hair! You're all..

  • Buzz!

  • Oh!

  • Alright, you're like a parrot!

  • Buzz!

  • Right, sit!

  • Good boy. Good boy. I feel

  • like at the time arguments feel so

  • huge and so

  • like.. like it's the end of the world and that you'll

  • never be friends again and that is gonna be so awkward

  • but

  • eventually you make up because what's

  • the alternative? Like you see eachother everyday.

  • When you're so close to someone, like a sibiling

  • or like a relative

  • and you're spending so much time with them you do

  • just rub each other up the wrong way, and sometimes you are gonna have

  • an argument, but then you make up and then you are stronger than you were before

  • because you've had to like talk through your diffrences and you're kind of..

  • growing up together and actually

  • I think it would be weirder if

  • growing up you never had arguments with your friends because..

  • because there's so much going on and

  • so much is changing and it's a

  • crazy time, so of course you're gonna argue,

  • but you just have to know that those

  • arguments don't have to be the

  • be-all and end-all and I think talking

  • and communicating rather than being snidey

  • and indirect online is the way forward.

  • Faith said, "I'm not a teenager anymore, but when I was

  • I would like to know how important love really is at that

  • age."

  • What's so funny is

  • I thought I was in love

  • at that age

  • but actually being an adult it's not the same

  • kind of love

  • and.. I don't know, I think that's all I could really say on that.

  • I do think it exists in teenagers, like

  • I do belive if you truly love someone.. kinda like the

  • people that meet when they're young and then they stay together forever.. that is true love

  • and I think that can happen and if it happens to you

  • then you're really lucky, but I thought

  • it had happened but it hadn't

  • and it's only as I got older and met new people

  • that I can see that I hadn't

  • been, if that makes sense. So in ask to your question,

  • it's not that important. I think

  • what is important at that age is learning to love yourself

  • and learning to love

  • other human beings, whether that's friends or like family.

  • I think that's important, but

  • being in love with someone I don't

  • think is so important at that

  • age personally. "How do you cope with toxic

  • friends and how can I get out of a toxic friendship?"

  • If you are with a group of friends in school

  • who are toxic and

  • you are.. you just aren't happy

  • then you need to step

  • away from that group of friends and I know

  • it can feel so hard, but

  • I just feel like if.. if.. if you're.. if you're

  • with friends who aren't making you happy, if they're

  • bulling you, if they're making you feel unconfortable, they're pressurising you..

  • they're not the sort of people you'll ever gonna grow up and be

  • thankful that you're friends with, they're not the sort of people

  • that you're gonna invite to your like wedding in ten years

  • then.. there.. there's not point, do you know what I mean?

  • It's such a waist of you as a human being because

  • there are people out there who will appreciate you,

  • who will treat you with nothing but kindness and love

  • and you may feel like

  • there is no one else, but there is.

  • If you flip that and if you think you see

  • someone who is being bullied or

  • who is part of a very toxic friendship then

  • you should extend an arm.. like

  • ask them how they are, like check they're

  • okay, even if they're not part of your friendship group,

  • because there's nothing worse than feeling like

  • you're alone in something and

  • whether that's you feeling that way or you know

  • someone who feels that way or you've seen someone who looks unhappy

  • in their group of friends or is getting picked on or

  • who has no friends.. I think is just as important for

  • you to reach out to them. Just ask them how they are, ask them

  • how their day's been, ask them what they're doing later..

  • like..

  • message them anything because that can

  • make someone feel so much happier.

  • Cause as much as I can say, "oh, like, you'll find new friends.."

  • I think it's just as important for other people to open their eyes

  • and realize that there might be people that feel like they have no

  • one and when I was in school

  • I don't think I did that enough. I don't think I

  • extended an invite

  • or smiled at the people who probably needed

  • it more than I thought they did, if that makes

  • sense, and

  • it makes you feel good, it makes them feel good.

  • I really like the saying, "some friends are

  • for a reason, some are for a season and some are for a

  • lifetime" and that's okay.

  • If some are for a season, fine. They were great

  • for that season and it was fab and sometimes it's not meant

  • to last beyond that. Some are for a reason, so they might come

  • into your life for a purpose. Lifetime

  • is so rare. That was another thing..

  • in school I feel like it's such a big deal to have

  • a lot of friends and it isn't. Have your

  • select friend, whether that's one, whether that's two, whether that's three, whether that's

  • ten.. if you have those

  • cool people who make you happy, who bring something to your life,

  • who influence you in a positive way that's all you

  • need, and anyone who doesn't do that..

  • don't waste your time. Ella said, "if you could be

  • a teenager again, which teenage year would you go back to

  • and why?"

  • I would say..

  • uh, that's so hard.

  • Maybe like fifteen, like

  • start of GCSE's.. fourteen/fifteen..

  • what year is that? Year 9? I would go

  • back to Year 9 because I felt quite confident in myself..

  • although I didn't know what I wanted to do.. I felt

  • confident in the subjects I was doing

  • for GCSE.. I settled with like.. yeah I'm happy with these,

  • umh.. I had my like..

  • cool group of friends,

  • umh.. I had a social life

  • and I had a lot of fun

  • and I felt more confortable in myself, I

  • think.

  • Yeah.

  • Fourteen/fifteen and like no responsabilities

  • cause I hadn't started exams yet. *exults* Abby said,

  • "What was it like when you first got your period?" I actually

  • got my period in school.

  • It was in tutor time, right before last lesson

  • and I just.. I was one of the last ones out of

  • my friends and I was really excited about it.

  • I remember that we had someone come to our school who did like

  • a talk. She talked about like periods

  • and things you could use when you're on your period

  • and they gave you like the goodie bag when you left

  • and in it it had like two night time pads,

  • umh.. some tiny little tampons

  • and some like day time pads and then like a

  • leaflet and like..

  • it was just like a little information pack, and it made me

  • so excited to start my period and then

  • like a year later I did

  • in a lesson and I was a little bit embarassed by that actually.

  • I had to do the old tide the jumper around the waist cause I had nothing

  • on me and then I went home and I told my mum

  • and then I realized that

  • I uhm.. was gonna bleed like every month

  • for like the majority of my life, so I wasn't

  • that excited after that. *laughs*

  • *exults*

  • Jennifer said, "When did you start shaving?"

  • I thought this was quite a good one because

  • I had to really think about this and I had to think about

  • what the first thing was I shaved. I feel like it might

  • have been my armpits..

  • or maybe it was my legs? I feel like my

  • armpits took a really long time

  • to get hair.

  • I remember I had like a couple of hair there and I was like, "ugh,

  • that's weird.." Uhm.. and I had..

  • and I always used my dad's

  • razor that he would leave on like the side of the bath. I

  • must've been about fourteen..

  • thirteen or fourteen. Umh..

  • and the amout of times I sliced

  • my legs on my dad's blunt razors

  • was

  • a lot. *laughs* What I will say though is if you are

  • planning on starting shaving.. if you haven't yet gotten to

  • that point.. leave it as long as you can

  • because

  • again is something you get so excited to do

  • and then you just realize it is a chore

  • and a ball ache and the hair just grows back thicker..

  • I do remember though.. umh.. my

  • mum.. I remember

  • the first time I shaved down there..

  • I must've been like..

  • sixteen.. fifteen/sixteen.. because I thought

  • that that's what you have to do.. I wasn't sure, I don't know..

  • umh.. and I must have left the hair in the bath..

  • This is quite an embarassing story, I don't know if I really wanna tell this.. oh well.. I didn't was it

  • away..

  • and the next day my mum was like, "If you ever want

  • to shave your bikini line

  • you just.. you need to be very careful because

  • umh.. it grows back longer and

  • thicker

  • and I've heard it can start growing

  • down your legs." And I remember her telling me that

  • obviously to try and scare me umh..

  • and after that I was

  • actually really terrified to ever shave down there

  • again. Turns out..

  • it hasn't grown down my legs so thanks for that, mum.

  • I mean it might.. she might not have been lying, but.. I mean..

  • 00:29:17,575 --> 00:29:20,855 She could've just said, "Hey, I noticed you shaved you bits,

  • just be careful and umh..

  • let me buy you a nice razor so you don't have to use your dad's

  • manky old one. So I think I'm gonna stop there because

  • I have been rambling on for quite a long time now.

  • Thank you so much for watching this video, it's gotten dark

  • as I've been filming this and Buzz has gone

  • and the dogs are barking and Alfie's going crazy

  • so I should probably go, but thank you for being so patience with me

  • and waiting for this video. Umh.. I really hope it helps some of

  • you. Umh..

  • Being a teen is difficult, it doesn't matter what anyone

  • says. Everyone will have their troubles and tribulations, just remember

  • you're probably not the only one feeling a certain way.

  • Umh.. offer a hand or a smile

  • to someone who might need it because

  • umh.. that can make a lot of

  • difference and it may seem overwhelming at times, but look,

  • I've got through it, you can too.

  • And I look back at my teenage years and

  • reember some of the best

  • times

  • so I really feel like you will too, but please don't

  • hesitate to tweet me or leave comments..

  • umh.. everyone have a little chit chat, send your

  • reassurances, ask your questions.. there will be a

  • lot of people watching this video that can offer advice

  • so don't be scared to leave a comment and..

  • yeah, I love you very much and I will see you again very soon, bye!

  • captions by Laura Ross Russell

Hello Everybody! Firstly I want to say

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A2 初級 英國腔

我的少年 (The Teenage Years | Friendships, Bodies, Hormones & Periods | Zoella)

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    tevilywong 發佈於 2017 年 09 月 25 日
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