Sunday, May 17, 2026

Short Story: Thank You For The Flowers

 

The rain had started before dawn and never quite stopped.

In the industrial quarter outside of Mawlamyine, the gutters overflowed with muddy water while stray dogs prowled between tea stalls and shuttered mechanic shops. Inside a narrow concrete house with rusting window grilles, Nay Chi tied her long hair into a knot and retrieved her purse from a locked drawer.

In the back room, men were still awake from the night’s work. Cigarette smoke drifted beneath the door. She heard murmurs, the scrape of chairs, someone cursing softly.

Her husband, Ko Min, lived in shadows. She had learned long ago not to ask too many questions.

When they first married, she told herself she could still build a decent life around an indecent trade. He was kind to her in his own way. He never struck her. He bought medicine for her mother. Paid school fees for her youngest brother. In a country where survival often came dressed as compromise, she accepted what she could not change.

Still, there were nights she lay awake listening to trucks arrive at odd hours and wondered how much of a soul could be traded away piece by piece before nothing remained.

She slipped on her sandals and stepped outside with her basket.

“Wait,” one of the men called from inside. “Boss needs you.”

She hesitated.

Ko Min emerged from the back room, his face drawn from lack of sleep. “Buy extra water,” he said quietly. “We may have guests another day.”

Then, after a pause: “Don’t come into the storage room.”

She nodded automatically.

But as she crossed the courtyard, another vehicle pulled in through the gate — a mud-streaked van without plates. Two men climbed out. Between them was a figure with his hands bound and a black cloth over his head.

The hostage stumbled.

Nay Chi stopped walking.

One of the accomplices laughed. “Rich man’s family still bargaining.”

“Enough,” Ko Min muttered.

They dragged the man toward the side room.

Then the hostage spoke.

“Please… water.”

The voice was hoarse. Foreign, but familiar somehow.

One of the men yanked away the black cloth briefly to check his face for bruising.

And time folded for Nay Chi ... a supermarket aisle ... bright lights ... chrysanthemums wrapped in plastic ... Cold Storage in Singapore!

She had been twenty-three then, homesick and exhausted, working six days a week for a family near Novena. On her only Sunday off, she had received the call from Myanmar.

Her grandmother was dead.

The old woman who had raised her while her parents worked in the fields. The woman who had sold her gold earrings so Nay Chi could go to school.

She remembered sitting on a bench outside the mall afterward, unable to breathe properly.

She had wanted flowers. Just flowers. Something to place before the phone screen during the funeral prayers so her grandmother’s spirit would know she had not forgotten.

But at the cashier, her hands searched her bag and found nothing. No purse. No money.

The humiliation had burned hotter than grief.

“I’m sorry,” she had whispered to the cashier.

Then the man ahead of her who was gathering his paid grocery — perhaps in his fifties — turned quietly to the cashier.

“Add her flowers, too.”

Nay Chi protested immediately. “Sir, no, I can repay—”

He shook his head gently as he made the payment and collected the printouts.

“It’s all right. No problem at all.”

Just that.

No sermon. No flirtation. No expectation of repayment.

He left before she could even ask his name.

For years afterward, she remembered his face only in fragments: tired eyes, thinning hair, kindness without hesitation.

And now those same eyes stared at her above split lips and bruised skin. Older. Terrified. But, alive.

Nay Chi felt something sharp move through her chest — not fear, not shock, but shame. Shame that goodness could travel across years only to arrive here, in this foul courtyard, tied and bleeding at the mercy of criminals.

Ko Min noticed her expression immediately.

“What is it?”

She walked toward him slowly.

“That man,” she said, her voice trembling. “Years ago in Singapore… when my grandmother died… he helped me.”

The courtyard fell silent except for rain ticking against corrugated metal.

Ko Min frowned. “You’re certain?”

“Yes.”

One of the men scoffed. “Boss, ransom still short. We can’t just—”

Ko Min silenced him with a look.

Nay Chi rarely interfered. In all their years together, she had never asked him for anything involving his work. Never judged aloud. Never questioned.

That was why he listened now.

“He showed kindness to me,” she whispered. “When nobody needed to. Please… let him go.”

Ko Min stared at the hostage for a long moment.

Then he rubbed his face wearily, as though exhausted by the weight of all the choices that had led here.

“Put the blindfold back properly,” he said at last.

The accomplices exchanged confused glances.

“Boss?”

“You heard me.”

“But the money—”

“I said let him go.”

There was danger in mercy. Everyone in the courtyard knew it. Weakness invited betrayal. Compassion cost money. Sometimes lives.

Yet no one argued further.

The men shoved the hostage back into the van. One cursed under his breath. Another spat into the mud.

Before the doors slammed shut, Nay Chi stepped closer.

The blindfolded man could not see her, but she spoke anyway.

“You bought flowers for me once,” she said softly in English. “For my grandmother.”

There was a stunned silence from inside the van.

Then, barely audible, she said, “I remember.”

The doors closed.

The van disappeared into the rain.

For a long time, nobody moved in the courtyard.

Finally Ko Min lit a cigarette with shaking hands. “One day,” he murmured, almost to himself, “Mercy comes back looking for us.”

Nay Chi watched the empty road where the van had vanished.

Years ago, a stranger in a supermarket had spent a small sum on flowers and forgotten about it by the next morning.

But kindness, she realized, never truly disappeared.

It waited.

Quiet as rain.

Patient as memory.

And sometimes, when darkness had nearly swallowed everything, it returned to lead someone home.


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Note: The above short story was generated using ChatGPT with editing. 


The River Does Not Argue With the Rock

 

Watch a river long enough and you will understand resilience. It does not rage against what blocks it. It does not abandon its course. It simply finds the way — around, beneath, between — with patient and unstoppable persistence. 

Life will hand you obstacles that seem immovable. Some of them are. But you are not meant to move them; you are meant to find the way through. Every setback carries within it a hidden geography — new routes, new strengths, new views you never would have found on the original path.

Keep moving. The river always reaches the sea.
What bends without breaking is always stronger than what refuses to bend at all. 

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Note: The above image and article have been generated using AI agents.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Will Smith's Oscar Incident

For your refreshing on what to make sense of Will Smith's Oscar incident, the following image and article have been generated using ChatGPT.

The incident involving Will Smith slapping Chris Rock after a joke about Jada Pinkett Smith became one of the most polarizing celebrity moments in recent memory because it touched on several emotionally charged themes at once: love, masculinity, honour, humiliation, race, public performance, comedy, violence, marriage, and emotional control.

Your instinct — that Will Smith was defending his wife’s honour — was shared by many people around the world. It was not a fringe view at all. In many cultures, especially honour-based cultures, allowing one’s spouse to be publicly humiliated without response can itself feel shameful. A number of psychologists and commentators noted that Smith’s reaction aligned with deeply ingrained “masculine honour beliefs,” where a man feels morally compelled to protect his partner from insult.

At the same time, the backlash was immense because many people believed that crossing into physical violence — especially on a global live broadcast — violated an important social line. Even those sympathetic to his emotions often argued that the slap itself was unacceptable. Mental health experts interviewed afterward frequently described the moment as one of emotional dysregulation: a sudden impulsive act triggered by humiliation, stress, personal history, and public pressure.

One reason the reaction became so explosive is that people were not merely debating “a slap.” They were debating competing moral values:

  • Is defending a loved one noble?
  • Does intention matter more than method?
  • Is violence ever justified for verbal insult?
  • Was the joke harmless comedy or cruelty toward a woman with alopecia?
  • Should public figures be held to higher standards?
  • Did race and celebrity distort the reaction?

Different people answered these questions differently.

There is also another layer many experts pointed out: the psychology of public masculinity. A Harvard psychologist suggested that boys and men are often socialized to equate protection with aggression. Some analysts felt Smith was acting from a deeply internalized script: “A real man protects his wife.” Others countered that true strength would have been restraint, verbal confrontation, or addressing the matter privately afterward.

An especially revealing detail to many observers was that Smith initially laughed at the joke before noticing Jada’s visible discomfort. Several psychologists and commentators interpreted this as evidence that his reaction may have been less calculated defence and more sudden emotional panic once he realized she was hurt or embarrassed.

As for Jada “leaving him,” the situation is more complicated than headlines implied. Jada later revealed that she and Will had actually been separated for years before the Oscars incident, though they remained deeply connected in an unconventional relationship. So it would not be accurate to say that the slap caused the separation directly.

What probably intensified public sympathy loss for Will Smith was the aftermath:

  • he had just won the Oscar of his career,
  • the moment overshadowed the achievement,
  • he appeared emotionally unstable afterward,
  • and the public increasingly viewed him through the lens of marital turmoil already circulating online.

Internet culture can also become merciless once a narrative hardens. Online discussion shifted from “he defended his wife” to portrayals of Will as emotionally manipulated, weak, unstable, or trapped in a troubled marriage. Reddit discussions especially became highly polarized and often cruel toward both Will and Jada.

My conclusion is this:

Will Smith’s feelings were understandable. Many decent people can empathize with the instinct to protect someone they love from public humiliation — especially over a medical condition. Chris Rock’s joke was insensitive, even if intended as comedy.

But understandable emotion does not automatically make the action wise or justified.

The problem was not that Will Smith cared too much about his wife. The problem was that he acted impulsively in anger and turned a hurtful joke into physical confrontation on one of the world’s biggest stages. In doing so, he unintentionally harmed:

  • his own reputation,
  • the dignity of the moment,
  • his family’s privacy,
  • and perhaps even the cause of defending people from mockery.

Ironically, if he had calmly confronted Chris Rock verbally, many more people might have rallied fully behind him.

At the same time, I also think some of the backlash became excessive and self-righteous. Human beings are complicated. One terrible public moment should not erase decades of otherwise admirable work, kindness, artistry, and personal growth. The internet often swings from idolization to total condemnation with very little nuance.

In the end, the incident was tragic because nobody truly “won”:

  • Chris Rock was assaulted publicly.
  • Jada became the centre of ridicule and controversy.
  • Will Smith’s career-defining night became infamous for the wrong reason.

It was less a story about villainy than about how quickly pain, pride, love, ego, and public pressure can collide in one irreversible moment. 

Daily Refreshing opines that, with hindsight, a replay of the incident might have unfolded differently as follows:

  • Will Smith walks up the stage and verbally exacts an apology from Chris Rock,
  • Chris extends his apologies to Will and Jada,
  • Will and Jada replied with: "Apology accepted.",
  • Chris and Will shake hands or hug each other as a sign of reconciliation,
  • Will returns to his seat,
  • and the award ceremony continues.


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Friday, May 15, 2026

The Handbag Mystique

For your refreshing, the following image and article are generated using ChatGPT.

Why Luxury Bags Fascinate So Many Women — And Why Men Often Don’t Fully Understand It

In the polished windows of luxury boutiques from Paris to Singapore, handbags sit beneath warm lights like museum pieces. Some cost more than a family holiday. Some have waiting lists stretching months or even years. And yet millions of women around the world continue to desire them — not merely as accessories, but as objects of fascination, aspiration, and emotional meaning.

To many men, this can appear puzzling. After all, a handbag carries things. Why should one stitched from calfskin by a luxury house command such longing when another bag serves the same practical purpose?

But the answer lies far deeper than leather and logos. The phenomenon touches psychology, neuroscience, anthropology, identity, storytelling, and even evolutionary biology. The branded handbag is not simply an object. It is a symbol — and humans are profoundly symbolic creatures.



More Than Fashion: The Handbag as Identity

A luxury handbag often functions as a form of personal narrative.

Unlike clothing, which changes daily, a handbag travels with its owner through meetings, airports, celebrations, heartbreaks, promotions, and ordinary afternoons. It becomes part of a woman’s visible identity — almost an extension of self.

A well-chosen bag quietly communicates:

  • taste
  • status
  • discipline
  • ambition
  • femininity
  • success
  • belonging
  • individuality

This is not unique to women. Men have their own symbolic objects — luxury watches, performance cars, rare sneakers, guitars, fountain pens, tailored suits, or even high-end tech gadgets. Yet handbags occupy a uniquely visible and socially coded role in many women’s lives.

In many cultures, women historically possessed fewer overt symbols of economic power than men. Luxury fashion gradually evolved into one of the socially accepted arenas where women could express achievement, refinement, and autonomy.

A handbag, therefore, is rarely “just a bag.”

It may represent:

  • a first major salary,
  • years of saving,
  • emotional reward after hardship,
  • entry into a desired social world,
  • or a declaration: I have arrived. 


The Science of Desire

There is, in fact, a scientific explanation for why luxury handbags can feel so emotionally compelling.

When people anticipate acquiring something highly desired, the brain releases dopamine — a neurotransmitter associated with reward, motivation, and pleasure. Importantly, dopamine is often strongest before acquisition rather than after.

Luxury brands understand this exceptionally well.

Scarcity, exclusivity, waiting lists, limited editions, and social prestige intensify anticipation. Neuroscientists sometimes refer to this as the “reward prediction” mechanism: the harder something is to obtain, the more valuable the brain perceives it to be.

This is why certain handbags from companies like Hermès or Chanel can trigger emotional excitement disproportionate to their practical utility.

The object becomes psychologically amplified.

Luxury branding also activates another powerful human instinct: social signaling.

Humans evolved in tribes where status affected survival, influence, and mating opportunities. Modern society may look different, but our brains still respond strongly to prestige markers. A luxury handbag can subtly signal:

  • access,
  • competence,
  • wealth,
  • sophistication,
  • or cultural literacy.

Even when people insist they “buy only for themselves,” social perception still unconsciously shapes desire.


Why Women Often “Get It” More Than Men

One of the most common observations is this: many women instantly understand the allure of a designer handbag, while many men remain baffled by it.

Part of this difference is cultural conditioning.

From a young age, girls are often socialized to pay closer attention to aesthetics, detail, texture, color harmony, craftsmanship, and symbolic presentation. Fashion industries, advertising, films, and social media reinforce this sensitivity continuously.

Men, meanwhile, are often conditioned to value utility, performance, or technical specifications more directly.

A man may admire:

  • horsepower,
  • mechanical engineering,
  • processor speed,
  • investment value,
  • or athletic performance.

A woman may admire:

  • silhouette,
  • elegance,
  • texture,
  • heritage,
  • craftsmanship,
  • and emotional resonance.

These are broad tendencies rather than rigid rules, but they help explain the divide.

There is also the phenomenon of in-group fluency.

Women who are immersed in fashion culture recognize nuances that outsiders do not:

  • stitching quality,
  • leather grain,
  • design history,
  • hardware finish,
  • proportions,
  • archival significance,
  • rarity,
  • and brand heritage.

To someone outside that cultural language, many bags appear interchangeable. But to an enthusiast, the distinctions feel as obvious as the difference between a family sedan and a Ferrari 488 GTB.



The Emotional Architecture of Luxury

Luxury brands are masters of emotional engineering.

The fascination surrounding a handbag is rarely created by the object alone. It is constructed through:

  • storytelling,
  • heritage,
  • celebrity association,
  • exclusivity,
  • craftsmanship myths,
  • and aspirational imagery.

A bag is transformed into a narrative.

When someone purchases a handbag associated with elegance, success, or timeless sophistication, they are not merely buying leather. They are buying participation in a story.

This explains why branding matters so deeply.

Two bags made from similar materials can evoke radically different emotional reactions depending on the narrative attached to them.

Humans do not simply consume products. We consume meaning.


Is It Irrational?

Not entirely.

Some luxury handbags retain remarkable resale value and are increasingly viewed as collectible assets. Certain iconic models have appreciated over time similarly to art or watches.

Yet even beyond financial considerations, emotional value itself is real.

People routinely spend money on things that create identity, joy, confidence, memory, or emotional uplift:

  • travel,
  • music,
  • art,
  • cars,
  • sports,
  • watches,
  • gourmet dining,
  • gaming,
  • or collectibles.

Luxury handbags occupy that same psychological territory.

The criticism often aimed at handbags is less about irrationality and more about differing value systems.

What one person sees as frivolous, another sees as meaningful craftsmanship and self-expression.


The Deeper Truth

At its heart, the handbag phenomenon reveals something universal about humanity.

People long to:

  • belong,
  • express themselves,
  • feel admired,
  • celebrate achievement,
  • and attach emotion to objects.

Luxury handbags happen to be one of the clearest modern expressions of those desires.

Men may not always understand the emotional language of handbags — just as some women may not understand the obsession with rare watches, vintage cars, or custom-built audio systems. But beneath all of them lies the same human impulse:

the desire for beauty, meaning, identity, and recognition.

And perhaps that is why the fascination endures.

Because in the end, the handbag is never merely carried in the hand.

It is carried in the imagination. 


Top 50 Ladies’ Handbag Brands

Alphabetical List with Official Websites & Country of Origin

BrandOfficial WebsiteCountry of Origin
AkrisAkrisSwitzerland
AlaïaAlaïaFrance
BalenciagaBalenciagaSpain
BallyBallySwitzerland
Bottega VenetaBottega VenetaItaly
ব্রুনেল্লো CucinelliBrunello CucinelliItaly
BurberryBurberryUnited Kingdom
BVLGARIBVLGARIItaly
CelineCelineFrance
ChanelChanelFrance
ChloéChloéFrance
Coach
Delvaux
Coach
Delvaux
United States
Belgium
DiorDiorFrance
Dolce & GabbanaDolce & GabbanaItaly
FendiFendiItaly
FerragamoFerragamoItaly
GivenchyGivenchyFrance
GoyardGoyardFrance
GucciGucciItaly
HermèsHermèsFrance
JacquemusJacquemusFrance
Kate SpadeKate SpadeUnited States
KhaiteKhaiteUnited States
KwanpenKwanpenSingapore
Launer LondonLauner LondonUnited Kingdom
LoeweLoeweSpain
LongchampLongchampFrance
Louis VuittonLouis VuittonFrance
Mark CrossMark CrossUnited States
Michael KorsMichael KorsUnited States
Miu MiuMiu MiuItaly
MoynatMoynatFrance
MulberryMulberryUnited Kingdom
Oscar de la RentaOscar de la RentaUnited States
PolènePolèneFrance
PradaPradaItaly
Roger VivierRoger VivierFrance
Saint LaurentSaint LaurentFrance
SavetteSavetteUnited States
SerapianSerapianItaly
Stella McCartneyStella McCartneyUnited Kingdom
StrathberryStrathberryUnited Kingdom
The RowThe RowUnited States
Tod’sTod’sItaly
Tory BurchTory BurchUnited States
ValextraValextraItaly
Valentino GaravaniValentino GaravaniItaly
VersaceVersaceItaly
Vivienne WestwoodVivienne WestwoodUnited Kingdom
Yves Saint LaurentYves Saint LaurentFrance


Click here for These Are My Top 3 Designer Bags I Use Every Day!  

Click here for 11 BEST Designer Everyday Bags 2025.


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Plan and Make It Happen

The following image and article are generated using ChatGPT for your refreshing. 


There is a quiet tragedy in unrealized potential.

Not failure. Not defeat. But dreams that were never pursued with intention.

Every year, countless people carry brilliant ideas in their minds — businesses they could start, books they could write, ministries they could build, skills they could master, lives they could transform. Yet many remain suspended in the realm of “someday.” The distance between aspiration and achievement is rarely talent alone. More often, it is the absence of deliberate planning followed by sustained action.

Dreams inspire. Plans execute.

The modern world often glorifies spontaneity and overnight success, but history tells a different story. Nearly every enduring accomplishment — from great cathedrals to groundbreaking companies, from scientific discoveries to personal transformations — began with someone who first sat down and mapped a path forward.

Vision without structure evaporates.

Purpose without action fades.

Hope without discipline drifts.

To plan is not to restrict possibility; it is to give possibility a road to travel on.

The Architecture of Achievement

A meaningful life does not happen accidentally. It is built intentionally, one decision at a time.

Planning is the architecture of achievement. It turns abstract desires into measurable direction. A goal written down becomes tangible. A timeline creates urgency. A strategy creates momentum.

Consider the difference between saying:

“I want to get healthier.”

And saying:

“Starting Monday, I will walk 30 minutes every morning, reduce processed sugar, and track my progress weekly.”

The first is a wish.

The second is a blueprint.

The same principle applies to every area of life — career, finances, relationships, education, spiritual growth, creativity, and leadership. Clarity transforms energy into progress.

The most successful people are not always the most gifted. Often, they are simply those who learned to consistently convert intention into execution.

Small Steps Change Destinies

One of the greatest misconceptions about success is that it arrives suddenly. In reality, transformation is usually incremental.

A single page written every day becomes a manuscript.

A modest investment repeated monthly becomes wealth.

A daily workout becomes strength.

A prayer repeated faithfully becomes spiritual resilience.

Greatness is rarely explosive. More often, it is accumulated.

This truth should encourage rather than intimidate. You do not need to conquer the mountain today. You only need to take the next faithful step.

Momentum is a powerful force. Once action begins, confidence often follows. Many people wait to “feel ready” before they start, but readiness is frequently born during the journey itself.

The person who starts imperfectly usually surpasses the person who endlessly prepares but never begins.

Obstacles Are Part of the Process

No worthwhile plan unfolds perfectly.

There will be delays, disappointments, financial pressures, unexpected responsibilities, criticism, fatigue, and moments of self-doubt. Plans will require revision. Timelines will shift. Some doors will close.

But obstacles are not proof that the vision is impossible. Often, they are the very conditions that shape perseverance, wisdom, and character.

Every accomplished individual has encountered setbacks. What separates achievers from dreamers is not the absence of difficulty, but the refusal to abandon the mission when difficulty appears.

Adapt when necessary. Learn continuously. Stay flexible in method, but steadfast in purpose.

A detour is not the end of the road.

Discipline Is Greater Than Motivation

Motivation is powerful, but unreliable. It rises and falls with emotion, environment, and circumstance.

Discipline, however, creates consistency.

The athlete trains on difficult mornings.

The entrepreneur continues after rejection.

The student studies when distractions compete for attention.

The leader perseveres when results are not yet visible.

Planning matters because it creates systems that continue even when inspiration temporarily disappears.

A calendar, a checklist, a routine, a deadline — these simple tools often accomplish more than bursts of emotional enthusiasm.

Success belongs less to the spectacular and more to the consistent.

The Courage to Begin

Many people secretly fear planning because planning makes commitment real. Once a goal is clearly defined, excuses become harder to maintain.

But there is also freedom in commitment.

A person with direction wastes less energy wandering. Focus simplifies life. Decisions become clearer. Time becomes more meaningful.

The future does not belong exclusively to the most intelligent, wealthy, or connected. It often belongs to those willing to begin before conditions are perfect.

Do not wait for certainty.

Do not wait for universal approval.

Do not wait for fear to disappear.

Start where you are. Use what you have. Learn as you go.

Make It Happen

At some point, every dream confronts a defining question:

Will this remain imagination, or will it become reality?

The answer is rarely found in inspiration alone. It is found in the quiet daily choices that follow — planning carefully, acting consistently, adjusting wisely, and persisting courageously.

Ideas are abundant. Execution is rare.

The world changes because someone decided not merely to dream, but to move.

So write the vision down.

Create the plan.

Take the first step.

Then the next.

And the next again.

Because remarkable things happen when ordinary people decide that “someday” will become today.

Plan for it.

And make it happen.


For your inspiration, let the following musicians move you to put your plans into action and build your momentum to keep learning, execute your plans and add to your progress in living your best life yet.

Click here for Ep.10 165 BMP Rock E Minor #enyaguitar #guitar #rock.

Click here for Building a better future together!

Click here for Sweet child o mine #drumcover #shortsvideo.


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Molly Could Become A Household Name For Tea

Tea is tea. But if you are into tea as a business like Molly Tea, then product differentiation, quality and innovation would be the order of the day for you.

As gleaned from from mollytea.com, "Molly Tea was founded in Shenzhen, China. Taking jasmine as its inspiration, the brand explores locally-sourced floral and fruity tea aromas from around the world, with a focus on floral-scented Chinese teas. Recognized by CIC (China Insights Consultancy) as the first freshly made tea brand dedicated to floral aromas, Molly Tea combines relaxed tea drinking with a creative scent experience, aiming to bring moments of joy to consumers—one cup at a time.

Rooted in Eastern cultural heritage, Molly Tea introduces a distinctive “Eastern Modern” aesthetic from a contemporary perspective. Unlike the visual style of traditional new-Chinese tea brands, it expresses refined aesthetics through every cup of tea, becoming a trendsetting favorite among young consumers."

Who is "Molly"?


Image credits: mollytea.com

"Molly is a kindergartener with a flower bud hairstyle and big eyes. She was born in 2022 and was inspired by the oriental jasmine flower.

She retains a sense of healing and innocence, symbolizing a pure and warm presence in urban life.

Full of imagination and curiosity, Molly explores the modern world, expressing joyful emotions through her ever-changing looks."

Recently, Molly Tea has opened a second outlet in Singapore at Raffles Place and it has been bustling since day one with long queues of tea aficionados. 





Click here to find out more about Molly Tea.

Click here for Tasting the Top 5 BESTSELLERS at Molly Tea 🧋✨ {Bay Area Must-Try!}


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