Heldig2.0

Heldig2.0

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Chairperson of University of Limpopo Boxing Club 2025/26

19/04/2026

"The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man who lives fully is prepared to die at any time." - Mark Twain 🥊🔥

Heldig, Chairperson of UL Boxing Club, lives that quote daily. Catch his fearless journey as he’s featured AGAIN in the 2026 Keyaka Magazine Edition 💫 "THE UNSTOPPABLE RISE OF A YOUNG BOXER
By Ntsako Welani"

Photos from Heldig2.0's post 22/03/2026

2026 Season starts 18 April🔥🤫🥊

14/03/2026

Perhaps a bit late😅 but welcome, 2026🥊🚨

Photos from Heldig2.0's post 21/12/2025

No wahala, yet!🥊🚨

30/10/2025

Bring Back Shame.

In today’s culture, often described as “woke,” there’s a strong emphasis on tolerance, inclusivity, and non-judgment. While these values are crucial for building fairer societies, there’s a side effect: the erosion of personal accountability and, perhaps, a diminished sense of self-reflection. People often drift through life, “searching” for identity, purpose, or fulfillment without truly knowing what they seek. They hope to find meaning, validation, or direction in external symbols, trends, or fleeting experiences.... and in this drift, shame has been largely excised from the social toolkit.
Shame, when understood properly, is not about humiliation or cruelty. It’s an internal signal, a moral compass that tells us when our actions diverge from our values, social norms, or the collective good. Historically, societies used shame to teach restraint, empathy, and responsibility. Without it, people may pursue desires or make choices without considering consequences, assuming that self-expression or entitlement automatically justifies all behavior.
Reintroducing a healthy sense of shame could foster introspection, humility, and self-awareness. It helps people to pause and ask themselves: Am I truly acting in line with my values? Am I being honest with myself and others? In a culture where praise and recognition are abundant and criticism scarce, shame provides balance... a reminder that not every action or desire deserves public applause. The goal is not a return to punitive social norms or moral policing. Rather, it’s a recalibration: combining the empathy and inclusivity of the woke ethos with the self-regulation and humility that shame can inspire. When individuals are aware of how their actions affect themselves and others, they can pursue purpose with clarity instead of wandering aimlessly, hoping that something sticks. The argument isn’t for fear or guilt but for intentional reflection. A society that allows people to feel the subtle nudges of shame.

Mobile uploads 27/10/2025

❤️🥊

Photos from Heldig2.0's post 26/10/2025

UL Sport Awards 2025🔥
🥊

21/10/2025

Mike Tyson - People are Opportunities

Photos from Heldig2.0's post 20/10/2025

Fam🥊🔥

23/09/2025

Why do stuff feel heavier when you speak them in your native language? Words in your native language often carry stronger emotional associations because you first learned them in personal, emotional contexts (family, school, culture).
Speaking in a second language is like wearing a mask. It creates a bit of distance, so words feel lighter, less personal, and less emotionally loaded.
When speaking in your native language, everything feels closer to your core self, so words carry more weight and can feel more intense, awkward, or vulnerable.

Photos from Heldig2.0's post 20/09/2025

Ahoooy mates💪🏾🥊🚦

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