Venice Instagram Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Venice Instagram. Here they are! All 2 of them:

In one life she was a travel vlogger who had 1,750,000 YouTube subscribers and almost as many people following her on Instagram, and her most popular video was one where she fell off a gondola in Venice. She also had one about Rome called 'A Roma Therapy'. In one life she was a single parent to a baby that literally wouldn't sleep. In one life she ran the showbiz column in a tabloid newspaper and did stories about Ryan Bailey's relationships. In one life she was the picture editor at the National Geographic. In one life she was a successful eco-architect who lived a carbon-neutral existence in a self-designed bungalow that harvested rain-water and ran on solar power. In one life she was an aid worker in Bostwana. In one life a cat-sitter. In one life a volunteer in a homeless shelter. In one life she was sleeping on her only friend's sofa. In one life she taught music in Montreal. In one life she spent all day arguing with people she didn't know on Twitter and ended a fair proportion of her tweets by saying 'Do better' while secretly realising she was telling herself to do that. In one life she had no social media accounts. In one life she'd never drunk alcohol. In one life she was a chess champion and currently visiting Ukraine for a tournament. In one life she was married to a minor Royal and hated every minute. In one life her Facebook and Instagram only contained quotes from Rumi and Lao Tzu. In one life she was on to her third husband and already bored. In one life she was a vegan power-lifter. In one life she was travelling around South Corsican coast, and they talked quantum mechanics and got drunk together at a beachside bar until Hugo slipped away, out of that life, and mid-sentence, so Nora was left talking to a blank Hugo who was trying to remember her name. In some lives Nora attracted a lot of attention. In some lives she attracted none. In some lives she was rich. In some lives she was poor. In some lives she was healthy. In some lives she couldn't climb the stairs without getting out of breath. In some lives she was in a relationship, in others she was solo, in many she was somewhere in between. In some lives she was a mother, but in most she wasn't. She had been a rock star, an Olympics, a music teacher, a primary school teacher, a professor, a CEO, a PA, a chef, a glaciologist, a climatologist, an acrobat, a tree-planter, an audit manager, a hair-dresser, a professional dog walker, an office clerk, a software developer, a receptionist, a hotel cleaner, a politician, a lawyer, a shoplifter, the head of an ocean protection charity, a shop worker (again), a waitress, a first-line supervisor, a glass-blower and a thousand other things. She'd had horrendous commutes in cars, on buses, in trains, on ferries, on bike, on foot. She'd had emails and emails and emails. She'd had a fifty-three-year-old boss with halitosis touch her leg under a table and text her a photo of his penis. She'd had colleagues who lied about her, and colleagues who loved her, and (mainly) colleagues who were entirely indifferent. In many lives she chose not to work and in some she didn't choose not to work but still couldn't find any. In some lives she smashed through the glass ceiling and in some she just polished it. She had been excessively over- and under-qualified. She had slept brilliantly and terribly. In some lives she was on anti-depressants and in others she didn't even take ibuprofen for a headache. In some lives she was a physically healthy hypochondriac and in some a seriously ill hypochondriac and in most she wasn't a hypochondriac at all. There was a life where she had chronic fatigue, a life where she had cancer, a life where she'd suffered a herniated disc and broken her ribs in a car accident.
Matt Haig (The Midnight Library)
8 Top Sites to Buy Old Gmail Accounts in Los Angeles in 2025 Telegram: helpdigitalshopusa WhatsApp: +1 (929) 688-3343 If you're running a side hustle from your apartment in Koreatown, launching a brand from a co-working space in Santa Monica, or managing social media for clients in Downtown LA, you've likely felt the digital squeeze. Google and other platforms have gotten incredibly good at spotting—and stopping—newcomers. That new Gmail account you just made for your business? Your emails might be landing in spam. Trying to create a few social media profiles? You might get hit with a block before you even start. This is where the search for "old Gmail accounts" comes from. It’s not always about shady activity; often, it's about trying to get legitimate work done in a system that doesn't trust new faces. This guide is for anyone in LA who's curious about this. We're going to talk honestly about why people look for these accounts, the very real risks involved, and then walk through the 8 main types of places where you can find them. Our goal is to give you the full picture so you can make a smart decision. First, Let's Be Clear on the "Why" Why would someone pay for an old email address? It boils down to one thing: digital trust. Think of it like car insurance. A 16-year-old with a brand-new license pays much higher rates than a 40-year-old with a 20-year clean driving record. Why? History and trust. Online platforms work in a similar way. Here are the main reasons people seek out aged accounts: 1. Better Email Deliverability: This is the biggest reason. If you're using any kind of email marketing or outreach tool (like Mailchimp, Instantly, or even just sending many emails manually), a brand-new Gmail account is a major red flag to spam filters. An account created in 2017 has a history. It looks more established, which makes it much more likely your emails will land in the primary inbox instead of the spam folder or promotions tab. 2. Bypassing "New Account" Limits on Social Media: Platforms like Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, and Twitter (X) are paranoid about bots. If you create a new profile with a new email, you'll have very low limits on how many people you can follow, message, or like. For a social media manager in Hollywood managing multiple client accounts, this is a nightmare. An old Gmail account makes the new social profile look more natural and trusted. 3. Smoother Business Verifications: When you set up a Google Business Profile for your new shop in Venice or a Yelp page, using a brand-new email can sometimes trigger extra verification steps. An older account can make the process smoother by adding a layer of legitimacy. 4. Accessing Software Trials: Many apps and online tools offer free trials. If you're an agency testing software for different clients, using aged Gmail accounts lets you access these trials without using your main business email repeatedly. The Risks You Absolutely Must Know Before we go any further, we have to talk about the dangers. This isn't like buying a book from Amazon. ● It's Against Google's Rules: Google's Terms of Service are clear: you cannot buy, sell, or transfer an account. If they figure out what you've done, they will delete the account without warning. Everything connected to it—your email list, a linked social profile—will be gone instantly. ● The Security Problem: You are buying a digital identity from a complete stranger. What was that account used for in 2015? Was it used for spamming or scams? The seller might say it's "clean," but you have no way to know. It could be on a secret "watchlist" and get banned a month after you buy it.
8 Top Sites to Buy Old Gmail Accounts in Los Angeles in 2025