Bella Poarch Speaks Traumatic Childhood Experience #bellapoarch #shorts #trending

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Just because you think she has it easier than other abused kids doesn’t mean she wasn’t abused

How about everyone watches the full vid…

Rose
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Guys this part of the clip just shows a glimpse of what her adopted parents did to her. They did way worse than just not letting her shower in the morning, like calling her “bitch” instead of her actual name and hitting her to the point where she couldn’t write in class. There’s obviously more but it was to the point where she felt more FREE in the military.

roxanahernandez
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Shes so strong, she turned into a good person despite those abuse and neglect. Shes so mature as well!

mioakisan
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I know this only talks about one part of her abuse but I give her so much credit and respect for being open about the abuse she endured. She is so young and I’m sure she has young fans in abusive homes, I hope they see that there is hope and they will get out. You aren’t alone ❤

Ydce
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People It’s ok if y’all don’t shower in the mornings. She wanted to shower in the mornings because she was doing farm chores before school and didn’t want to smell like a farm.

abrianaramirez
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I was placed in relative foster care with my aunt and uncle. They treated me and my twin sister well for a short time. They lived on a farm as well 80 Acres to be exactly. It was my twin and I responsibilities to take care of all the chores in the house and on the land. Given that the fact that we were in elementary school is when it started. We would be allowed to shower once a week and would be Sunday. I lived with them for close to eight years. That was just the surface of the abuse too. I can look back and say I'm both an abused child but I'm also a survivor of it.

GiovannaFlammia
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I’m so happy that she made it through. She’s the victor now. I just pray her brother made it out too.

Ulove
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I'm so glad my Aunt and Uncle don't treat me any different from their own children, I'm basically the baby of the family and I once met someone with the same situation like me (living under other relatives homes) and was so shock on how different they treated her. She's always late for school cause she fed the pigs and chickens, clean their pens and do other chores before going to school. My Aunt and Uncle wouldn't even let me do chores as long as I'm studying or just reading for leisure. My tasks are limited to house chores and I barely go near our farm animals. They treat me so well, they're like real parents to me, they even support my reading addiction lol. It's just so sad not everyone can be lucky to have good people taking care of them.

p.s.e.
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Baby girl, I am so sorry.My heart goes out to all the kids who were treated bad.

ktrb
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She sounded like she was about to cry, it makes me greatful for my mom even if she can make me angry sometimes...

ScreamingAtTheTopOfMyLungs
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There are so many problems in this world like famine, killer heatwave, earthquake, Yolanda typhoon victims, Turkiye earthquake, etc.

dorismay
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I’m okay with showering at night before I sleep. Keeps my bed clean instead of sleeping with an all day germs and bacteria and bad hygiene.

Jovi
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OMG she's so strong I couldn't imagine having to take one shower a day instead of two

jacobeparsels
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Yall PLEASE watch the whole Interview before you call her privilliged. She isnt complaining about having to do chores nor does she say chores are abuse. Its all the things she mentions after, like being beaten until she wasnt able to do school work anymore among other things.

Jillberto
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Maybe it's just me but as Filipino who grew up in the Philippines, this was normal. Because my parents were not around and my grandparents were the one raising us, my siblings and I helped around the house. We cooked, we cleaned, we helped in the garden, the harvest, we raised farm animals. During summer, I had to fetch water at the bottom of a hill where we lived. We walked three miles to school, three miles back. I'm 32 now so that was over twenty years ago. Our chores were hard but it taught us discipline and perseverance. We were humbled by it. Now that I'm living in the US, I don't resent my grandparents for what my siblings and I had to go through. My grandpa was disabled and as the only male figure in the family, we understood he couldn't do much for us. We lived simply. No power, no running water. So yeah, life is hard sometimes and I understood early that each family member sometimes have to pull their own weight. I was not forced, I helped.

ziajang
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me watching when i dont shower in the morning 😔
thx for the likes

thatBoyzer
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I know how she feels, being abused by my step father didnt feel right.
It happened when i was 7 my step father married my mother due to an agreement.
He needed papers but he never told her that, mother thought it was love, since my biological father left due to my mother wasnt providing much so he didnt have to work. My step father would tell me to wear clothes that was revealing, and such at a young age. When i was 9, i started my monthlys. Thats when he started molesting me, eventually raping me.
I thought that was okay, i didnt tell anyone till one day i missed a whole 2 months. Nurse did a test, and said positive. They brought me to the hospital, and called my mother. They found out that i wasnt pregnant, i had a tumor. But, had truma down there. They suspected my step father, i never saw him ever since he ran and lives out of the country. Mother and i have restraining orders, and he has a warrant for arrest once he comes back to the states.
Im now 26. And yes i have Aspergers Autism, my husband loves me for me, protects me from night terrors of my step father. Unfortunately i cannot have children 😕.

mrs_xgaming
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I was homeless off and on from 13-17, when my coach adopted me. I had no idea what I was doing; I definitely slept on peoples’ property though on multiple occasions. Thinking back now, it’s wild that my parents (well, my mother - my father did) didn’t ever get arrested or anything, and I didn’t reach out to like CPS or something. But that’s what happens, I was conditioned into thinking the police or any other authority was worse or more menacing than my parents at the time. The only thing left about it now is in my head though. Like fighting against me, deep in my sub-conscience. Almost like I “identify” (would be the term used nowadays I think) as that homeless poor kid still, which is tough here in med school. And the guilt of seeing my siblings not thrive - actually they fell into the generational cycle that seems to have come upon the family - it eats at me. We’re all making it though, on our own journey. It’s tough, but resiliency gets people out of tough situations. I also joined the military, then got my BS in Chemistry and am in medical school. The only thing missing is the happiness I used to have in middle school or the beginning of high school. Like I’ve been consistently saying “I’ll be happy/proud if I get into college… no… if I graduate… no… if I get into medical school? Not really. Still working on it. Can’t let them keep stealing from me. Anyway, thank you for reading my vent.

Cheesecow
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Being required to work is not abuse. If you're working outside and around animals you need to shower at night and not go to bed dirty.

stevelux
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Its hard seeing her back track and gaslight herself abuse is abuse and it breaks people

sliverhalo