Arnold Schwarzenegger opens up on his secret health battle as he admits he ‘struggled’ with the long days at his annual sports festival after actor reveals he had a pacemaker fitted

Arnold Schwarzenegger opens up on his secret health battle as he admits he ‘struggled’ with the long days at his annual sports festival after actor reveals he had a pacemaker fitted

Arnold Schwarzenegger has opened up about his secret health battle, following his announcement that he had a pacemaker fitted last Monday.

The actor, 76, underwent the procedure after previously having three open heart surgeries, explaining that he had an irregular heartbeat for a few years.

He admitted that despite his famous athleticism, the condition had ‘worn him out’ and that he had ‘struggled’ at the Arnold Sports Festival earlier this month.

 

The former politician created the annual multi-sports event in 1989, with mayor of Worthington, Ohio, Jim Lorimer.

The festival consists of professional bodybuilding, strongman, fitness, figure and bikini weekend expo, with events taking place in both the US and UK.

Arnold Schwarzenegger has opened up about his secret health battle, following his announcement that he had a pacemaker fitted last Monday, admitting he struggled to get through 16-hour days at the Arnold Sports Festival earlier this month (pictured at the event)

+7
View gallery

Arnold Schwarzenegger has opened up about his secret health battle, following his announcement that he had a pacemaker fitted last Monday, admitting he struggled to get through 16-hour days at the Arnold Sports Festival earlier this month (pictured at the event)

The actor, 76, underwent the procedure last Monday after previously having three open heart surgeries, explaining that he had an irregular heartbeat for a few years (pictured after surgery in 2020)

+7
View gallery

The actor, 76, underwent the procedure last Monday after previously having three open heart surgeries, explaining that he had an irregular heartbeat for a few years (pictured after surgery in 2020)

He admitted that despite his famous athleticism, the condition had 'worn him out' and that he had 'struggled' at the Arnold Sports Festival earlier this month (pictured)

+7
View gallery

He admitted that despite his famous athleticism, the condition had ‘worn him out’ and that he had ‘struggled’ at the Arnold Sports Festival earlier this month (pictured)

 

Arnold explained that the long days he spends at the festival, going to all the sports and meeting the fans made him realise it was time for him to get the pacemaker fitted.

He first underwent elective heart surgery in 1997 to replace a defective, congenital aortic heart valve.

He also had his aortic valve replaced in Cleveland, Ohio in 2020, to go with his new pulmonary valve that he had inserted in April 2018 in Los Angeles.

Speaking on his podcast Arnold’s Pump Club on Monday, Arnold said: ‘Last Monday, I had surgery to become a little bit more of a machine: I got a pacemaker.’

Arnold Schwarzenegger opens up on his secret health battle as he admits he ' struggled' with the long days at his annual sports festival after actor  reveals he had a pacemaker fitted |

He explained: ‘They also advised me that it was time to go through with this because some scar tissue from my previous surgery had made my heartbeat irregular.

‘It had been like that for a few years, so I stayed in touch with my medical team and visited in person at least once a year to get a full check-up and see how my heart was doing.

‘My doctors told me it was more important than ever to stay on top of the situation, and I checked in all of the time, sharing heart rate information from home.

‘We knew the heartbeat was irregular, and my fantastic team watched it like a hawk. They told me they would let me know when it was time for a pacemaker.

The former politician created the annual multi-sports event in 1989, with mayor of Worthington, Ohio , Jim Lorimer

+7
View gallery

The former politician created the annual multi-sports event in 1989, with mayor of Worthington, Ohio , Jim Lorimer

Arnold explained that the long days he spends at the festival, going to all the sports and meeting the fans made him realise it was time for him to get the pacemaker fitted

+7
View gallery

Arnold explained that the long days he spends at the festival, going to all the sports and meeting the fans made him realise it was time for him to get the pacemaker fitted

‘I went in for my normal checkup at the beginning of March on my way to the Arnold Sports Festival, and they did a full series of tests. When I got home to LA, like it was fate, I was talking to one of my best friends.

‘They told me that they had a pacemaker implanted, it was a quick recovery, and their energy levels were back to what they were used to.’

The former professional bodybuilder then admitted: ‘That’s one thing you learn about an irregular heartbeat: all that extra work your heart does wears you out.

Arnold Schwarzenegger, 76, Reveals He Received 'Machine Part' Pacemaker  After THREE Open-heart Surgeries

‘Man, if I can be honest with you, I struggled with those 16-hour days at the Arnold Sports Festival US at the beginning of March and in the UK last week, visiting as many sports as possible and walking through those crowds of hundreds of thousands of fitness fanatics.’

He went on: ‘The same day I talked to my friend, one of my doctors called to tell me that after looking at all of my results and data and knowing I had six weeks until it was time to film FUBAR Season 2, it was time to go for it. The doctors told me they want many more seasons of FUBAR, and this was the best way!

‘I told them I’d stop in Cleveland on my way home from the UK, and we’d do it. Monday, I went under and got my new machine part installed.

‘That’s life with a genetic heart issue. But you won’t hear me complaining.’

Arnold reassured his fans that he is recovering well and joked he now has a ‘machine part’, just like his Terminator character..

Arnold Schwarzenegger Got a Pacemaker After 3 Open-Heart Surgeries

He added: ‘I want to thank my whole team at the Cleveland Clinic. All of the doctors and nurses took amazing care of me and made the surgery as painless as possible.’

And while he lamented that he wouldn’t be able to hit the gym hard for a while, he insisted he was doing ‘great’.

Arnold admitted that it went against his nature to be upfront about his medical issues, as in Austria, he had been taught to keep such matter private.

But he said that knowing speaking out helped others with similar conditions had convinced him to open up.

He said: ‘I have to tell you, just saying this to all of you goes against so much of my upbringing in Austria, where nobody — ever — talked about medical issues. Everything related to healthcare was kept to yourself.

‘But I’ve gotten so many messages and emails from people who were born with a bicuspid aortic valve, like me, telling me that talking about my valve replacement surgeries has given them courage and hope to deal with their own.

‘So, since I know that going against my secretive instinct and being transparent helps people, what choice do I have?’

 

Arnold reassured his fans that he is recovering well and joked he now has a 'machine part', just like his Terminator character (pictured with Jane Fonda on Friday after surgery)

Arnold reassured his fans that he is recovering well and joked he now has a ‘machine part’, just like his Terminator character (pictured with Jane Fonda on Friday after surgery)

 

And while he lamented that he wouldn't be able to hit the gym hard for a while, he insisted he was doing 'great'

+7
View gallery

And while he lamented that he wouldn’t be able to hit the gym hard for a while, he insisted he was doing ‘great’

He added: ‘I could have kept it a secret. But I know that we have more than 750,000 subscribers now (775,000 to be exact — the village is a city now!), and a lot of you are probably dealing with your own health challenges.

‘I want you to know you aren’t alone. And if you’re putting something off out of fear, I hope I inspire you to listen to your doctors and take care of yourself.

‘This village is a place for us to be open and honest because it’s impossible to be truly positive when you keep everything bottled up.

‘That’s what Arnold’s Pump Club is all about. There are weights that none of us can lift alone. But together, we can lift anything — we can lift up the world. You are never alone here.’

Arnold Schwarzenegger announces he has pacemaker fitted following 3 heart  surgeries

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger gets a pacemaker, becomes ‘a little bit more of a machine’

Arnold Schwarzenegger recently underwent surgery, but he’s already back.

On the “Arnold’s Pump Club” podcast, the “Terminator” star and former governor of California, 76, shared that he had surgery for a pacemaker last Monday, joking that he “became a little bit more of a machine.”

“I’m doing great,” he said in the episode released Monday. “I had my surgery on Monday, and by Friday, I was already at a big environmental event with my friend and fellow fitness crusader, Jane Fonda.”

Schwarzenegger said he was born with a bicuspid aortic valve, which according to the Cleveland Clinic is a congenital heart defect affecting the valve between the heart and the aorta. “Normally, your aortic valve has three cusps that regulate blood flow from your heart to your aorta,” the Cleveland Clinic says. “But if you have a bicuspid aortic valve, you only have two cusps.”

Arnold Schwarzenegger, 76, fitted for pacemaker after 3 open heart surgeries

The “Predator” star explained he underwent open heart surgery in 1997 to have his heart valves replaced. More than 20 years later, he had open heart surgery again in 2018 to replace one of the two valves. The other was replaced in 2020.

 

This latest procedure was necessary because scar tissue from Schwarzenegger’s previous surgery made his heartbeat irregular, he said. “With all of those surgeries, my doctors told me it was more important than ever to stay on top of the situation, and I checked in all of the time, sharing heart rate information from home,” Schwarzenegger shared, adding that his team watched his irregular heartbeat like “a hawk.”

 

Fit for "FUBAR 2" - Schwarzenegger shows off his “pacemaker” | krone.at

 

Recently, Schwarzenegger said his doctor told him it was time to get a pacemaker, and the actor joked this must have been because his medical team wants “many more seasons” of his Netflix show “Fubar.”

Although Schwarzenegger can’t do “serious training in the gym for a while,” he said he resumed his normal work the same week as the surgery and “nobody knew anything,” adding that he’ll be “ready” to film “Fubar” next month.

 

On the podcast, Schwarzenegger reflected that sharing information about his health “goes against so much of my upbringing in Austria, where nobody ever talked about medical issues.” But he decided to ignore his “secretive instinct” after fans who were also born with a bicuspid aortic valve told him his previous surgery updates gave them “courage and hope.” He also shared that his mother and grandmother’s bicuspid valves “killed them” and that his mom “refused” to get valve replacement surgery.

Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger reveals recent pacemaker surgery due to genetic  heart condition - ABC News

 

“I know a lot of you are probably dealing with your own health challenges, and I want you to know you aren’t alone,” he said. “And if you’re putting something off out of fear, I hope I inspire you to listen to your doctors and take care of yourself.”

Arnold Schwarzenegger reassures fans of ‘Fubar’ return after pacemaker surgery

In an X post Thursday, Schwarzenegger offered a playful update on his condition following his pacemaker surgery.

 

Posing with a “high voltage” timebomb prop that lay on his chest and plugged into his ear with a red cable, Schwarzenegger thanked fans for their support and reassured them the medical device will not interfere with Season 2 production on his Netflix series “Fubar.” He joked in the caption, “You can only see it if you’re really looking for it.”

 

 

“I’ve gotten so many kind messages from all over the world, but a lot of people have asked if my pacemaker will cause any problems with FUBAR Season 2,” Schwarzenegger wrote. “Absolutely not. I will be ready to film in April.”

 

Schwarzenegger reveals the biggest paycheck of his career and it wasn’t for Terminator

Rediscover Arnold Schwarzenegger as you’ve never imagined him before: the action movie icon has managed to surprise and defy expectations. Between an unexpected jackpot for a zany comedy and an upcoming role as an unconventional Santa Claus, what else is still hidden by this multifaceted actor?
Schwarzenegger reveals the biggest paycheck of his career and it wasn’t for Terminator

Arnold Schwarzenegger continues to redefine his career with boldness that defies categorization. From Terminator to Governor of California, and now, an unconventional Santa Claus in a comedy that already promises surprises. Through these unusual roles and unexpected career choices, this legendary actor proves he has much more to offer than muscles and iconic lines from his early days. Who would have bet that Schwarzenegger would find his way into comedy, transforming his legacy with unexpected humor?

From Terminator to Twins: Arnold Schwarzenegger, a career full of surprises

Arnold Schwarzenegger is inseparable from the character of Terminator, a role that has defined his career. However, his filmography is not limited to robots and spectacular action scenes. With successes like Predator and Total Recall, he has won over audiences, but he has also experienced resounding failures, notably with Batman and Robin. What might surprise is that his biggest paycheck does not come from an action film, but from a comedy.

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger Now Has a Pacemaker for His Heart

 

A career marked by highs and lows

During the 80s and 90s, Schwarzenegger became an iconic figure in action cinema. Films like True Lies brought him to the peak of his career. However, he also faced setbacks with projects like End of Days and the critically panned Batman and Robin, which did not find their audience. Despite these failures, he managed to reinvent himself by exploring new cinematic genres.

It was with Twins, a comedy directed by Ivan Reitman in 1988, that he took an unexpected turn. Alongside Danny DeVito and Kelly Preston, Schwarzenegger moved away from his muscular image to embrace the world of slapstick comedy. This bold choice redefined his career and proved he could charm audiences with lighter roles.

Arnold Schwarzenegger reveals he nearly died due to “disaster” botched  surgery

 

Twins: a unique financial success

For Twins, Schwarzenegger adopted a different contractual strategy from his usual action films. By agreeing to reduce his fixed salary in exchange for a percentage of the profits, he made a winning bet. The film grossed over $216 million worldwide, offering the actor his biggest paycheck for a single film. This financial decision, shared with Danny DeVito and Ivan Reitman, became an emblematic example of negotiation in Hollywood.

In the shadow of a failed sequel

After the success of Twins, a sequel titled Triplets was in the works, reuniting SchwarzeneggerDeVito, and Reitman, with the addition of Eddie Murphy. Unfortunately, this sequel never materialized, halted by various obstacles such as scheduling conflicts and artistic differences. The return of the faux twins to the big screen remains an unfinished dream.

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger announces he has pacemaker fitted following 3 heart  surgeries

 

A new adventure in the works

At nearly 78 years old, Arnold Schwarzenegger continues to surprise. His next role? That of Santa Claus in The Man with the Bag, a film that promises to reinvent this traditional figure with an original approach. This project demonstrates his constant desire to reinvent himself and explore new cinematic horizons.

With Twins, Schwarzenegger proved his ability to innovate and take risks. In this new role, he may once again demonstrate that anything is possible, even when it comes to literally embodying the role of a legend. The Austrian actor seems to still have many secrets to reveal to Hollywood.

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger Birthday

How Arnold Schwarzenegger Became A Billionaire

The movie star has played many roles in his 76 years: bodybuilder. Box office star. Bureaucrat. And now billionaire.

here aren’t many movies as action packed as Arnold Schwarzenegger’s actual life. Born into a poor family in the tiny Austrian village of Thal (pop: 2,500), where he later discovered his father had been a member of the Nazi party, The Terminator and Kindergarten Cop star used his muscles and charm to be crowned Mr. Universe four times then conquer Hollywood and win California’s top political office. Along the way he’s spun his fame into fortune. The 76-year-old is now worth $1 billion, according to Forbes’ estimates.

The Hollywood actor is the latest in a wave of entertainers to successfully capitalize on their stardom. On its 2024 World Billionaires List, Forbes identified 14 celebrities who cashed in their celebrity for ten figure fortunes, including singer Taylor Swift, 34, Law & Order creator Dick Wolf, 77, and comedian Jerry Seinfeld, 70. Schwarzenegger is the second actor to join the ranks after Tyler Perry, 54, who is best known for his “Madea” franchise and is worth an estimated $1.4 billion. But Schwarzenegger took a different path to riches, one that has come primarily from smart investing, not just acting.

 

Arnold Schwarzenegger recalls open-heart surgery 'disaster' - Los Angeles  Times

Schwarzenegger, who moved to the U.S. in 1968 and initially struggled to secure roles because of his thick accent, has churned out around 50 films, which made $5.5 billion at the box office. He pocketed roughly $500 million from his movies, according to Forbes estimates, in part thanks to the way he structured his deals. When studio executives hesitated to make his first comedy Twins, which also starred Danny Devito, Schwarzenegger agreed to forgo a salary, pocketing nearly 20% of gross receipts instead. The 1988 movie became a blockbuster and he ultimately netted over $35 million, way more than he would have gotten upfront.“It became such a historic deal that the studio would never, ever make that deal again,” Schwarzenegger said in a 2016 interview.

 

He’s also made millions more from product endorsements and commercials like his “Agent State Farm” cameo at the 2024 Super Bowl. But, according to Forbes estimates, about 65% of all his entertainment earnings go to taxes and fees, like paying his agent, manager, lawyer and more, leaving him with closer to $170 million after tax. By his own estimate, he gave up another $200 million in Hollywood income to serve as California’s governor from 2003 to 2011.

Arnold Schwarzenegger announces he has pacemaker fitted following 3 heart  surgeries

Those who know him best point out one of the biggest reasons for his financial success: Schwarzenegger has always had a healthy appetite for risk. “I wanted big investments that were interesting, creative and different,” the billionaire wrote in his book, Total Recall. “Conservative bets – the kind that would generate 4 percent a year, say – didn’t interest me.”

This risk-taking paid off for him as an investor, but may have backfired in his personal life. Schwarzenegger was mentioned last month in former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial (which the jury is now deliberating) by former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker, who said that he had a similar “catch and kill” arrangement with Schwarzenegger when he was running for governor as he had with Trump’s team. Pecker claimed that as many as 40 women approached American Media Inc, the then owner of the National Enquirer, with claims about the candidate. Pecker added that he shelled out “hundreds of thousands” of dollars to keep the stories out of the National Enquirer on behalf of Schwarzenegger, who was at one point paid $1 million a year by American Media to promote its fitness magazines. Representatives for the actor did not respond to Forbes request for comment at the time of publication. (Schwarzenegger did admit in a 2023 Netflix documentary series about his life that his behavior was “wrong”; The Los Angeles Times first reported numerous allegations of groping and sexual harassment against the actor in 2003).

His divorce from former newscaster and Kennedy heir Maria Shriver was finalized in 2021. While the terms of the divorce were not made public, Forbes assumes the pair didn’t have a prenup and split their assets 50/50, per California law. Had they drawn up a premarital agreement, Schwarzenegger might be worth nearly double what he is today.

 

THE $200 MILLION MAN

One of the highest paid and most productive Hollywood stars of all time, Arnold Schwarzenegger has made 13 films surpassing $200 million in box office earnings over three decades.

 

From the outset, Schwarzenegger put his cash to work. Soon after arriving in California in 1968, he used his bodybuilding, along with extra income from his side hustles – laying bricks with friend and fellow bodybuilder Franco Columbo, and a mail-order business selling fitness pamphlets – to start buying up apartment buildings in Santa Monica. He claims he was a millionaire before getting any major movie roles in the 1970s.

Since then, Schwarzenegger pumped his money into commercial real estate, private equity and stocks. He is the founding client of Main Street Advisors, which his longtime financial advisor Paul Wachter opened up in 1997 with the sole purpose of helping the movie star handle his money. (The firm has since expanded to advise such celebrities as LeBron James and Billie Eilish).

 

Among his bigger real estate investments: Schwarzenegger redeveloped an entire Santa Monica block that he then sold off in 2006. He bought 812 Main St., a 21,600 square foot commercial building in prime Venice Beach for roughly $12 million in the 1980s that he unloaded in 2013 for at least triple that sum. He previously owned a significant stake in the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Beverly Hills plus he’s a longtime investor in Easton Town Center outside Columbus. The mall, whose development was spearheaded by the embattled Victoria Secret billionaire Les Wexneris one of the top performing in the country. Schwarzenegger described Wexner as one of his “teachers” in a 2001 speech, and the retail billionaire reportedly hosted a $2,500-per-head fundraiser for Schwarzenegger at his Ohio home in 2004.

Another key mentor of his: Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett, who the actor has described as “the greatest investor ever.” The pair met in the late 1990s and Buffett later served as an economic advisor on Schwarzenegger’s campaign. More recently, in a 2021 interview with the New York Times, Schwarzenegger cited the “Oracle of Omaha” as the reason why he wouldn’t invest in Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies: “I am like Warren Buffett. I don’t invest in things I don’t understand.”

Instead, Schwarzenegger invested in some of America’s best known brands. He bet on Starbucks in the 1990s and still owns shares in the coffee empire. He was an investor in Google’s Series A round in 1999, sold off shares at some point and then bought some back more recently. Other stocks in which he’s had stakes at some point are Beyond Meat, AMC and the YES Network.

Arnold Schwarzenegger Reveals He's Gotten A Pacemaker

One of the more “creative” investments that he and Wachter masterminded was Schwarzenegger’s famous purchase of a $130 million Boeing 747 that he then leased back to Singapore Airlines. The actor put down around $10 million upfront. Wachter says they made money on the deal (he didn’t say how much) but admits it wasn’t the “huge hit” they anticipated, in part due to the decline in airline values after the Sept. 11 attacks of 2001.

Perhaps his smartest bet was buying a minority stake in $718 billion (assets) Dimensional Fund Advisors, founded by fellow billionaire David Booth, in 1996. Wachter’s former employer was at the time an investor in the investment firm, which was then managing around $12 billion in assets, and wanted to sell. Schwarzenegger was quickly convinced by Booth’s connections to one of his idols, the late economist Milton Friedman, who he called his “intellectual idol”: Booth had been one of Friedman’s students at the University of Chicago.

Schwarzenegger initially bought just under 5% of the firm’s equity for an undisclosed sum, but “he has not ever sold one share and he never would,” says Wachter, who described DFA as one of the “most incredible” investments he’s ever seen. That initial stake is now worth nearly $500 million, according to Forbes estimates. (Wachter adds the caveat that Schwarzenegger may sell some if the company ever goes public.)

Wachter recalls when Schwarzenegger was governor and he had to manage his client’s investments fully to avoid any conflicts of interest. They weren’t supposed to talk about his portfolio but after the market crashed in 2009 he turned to Wachter at a Los Angeles Lakers basketball game and said “you better not be selling anything,” Wachter recalls. “He’s that guy… He knows this is not the time to sell. And of course, things came roaring back after the financial crisis so he was right.”

In addition to his real estate and equity investments, Schwarzenegger continues to own several businesses: film and production company Oak Productions, Fitness Publications Inc and film and trademarking holding venture Pumping Iron America. His wide ranging investment portfolio also includes the Arnold Sports Festival, a three-day long bodybuilding and strength convention that takes place in Columbus, as well as in Madrid, the UK, Brazil and South Africa. He also owns an estimated $40 million in personal real estate, including a ski getaway in Sun Valley, Idaho and a seven-bedroom mansion in Brentwood, California.

Arnold Schwarzenegger gets pacemaker after multiple open-heart surgeries |  The Seattle Times

Not every investment was a winner. In 1991, Schwarzenegger teamed up with Bruce Willis and Sylvester Stallone to invest in Planet Hollywood. The themed restaurant chain peaked at a valuation of more than $3 billion in 1996 only to end up in bankruptcy three years later. Though he got nowhere near the $120 million his stock was once worth on paper, Schwarzenegger, for his part, ended up getting out largely unscathed. At the advice of Wachter, he spent two years negotiating his ownership stake to have significant “safeguards” when he decided to invest. His main saving grace was that he was able to sell stock earlier than other investors, according to Wachter, who claims Schwarzenegger sold enough that he made “significant” money on his initial investment.

Key to the actor’s success has been his relentless work ethic. During his time as governor, his staffers were not allowed to use the word “tired,” according to Margita Thomson, his former press secretary. Schwarzenegger called it “the T-word.” “He’s constantly driven day to day. Like there’s 24 hours in the day, buckle up buttercup. Work hard and be disciplined… It’s just who he was,” says Thomson.

Even now, the actor, who earlier this month revealed he’s had a pacemaker fitted following multiple heart surgeries, continues to keep a full schedule. Last year he released two shows on the streaming platform Netflix: “Arnold,” a three-part documentary of his life, and “FUBAR,” his first-ever starring role in a live-action TV series, which has been renewed for a second season. When that shooting wraps, he’s set to film a Christmas comedy. He also publishes a free daily newsletter to around 800,000 subscribers and has 20,000 members who pay $99 a year for his paid fitness app, The Pump.

“I think he might be the world’s busiest 76 year old,” says Schwarzenegger’s chief of staff Daniel Ketchell, who has worked with him since he was governor. According to Ketchell, Schwarzenegger begins most days at 5 a.m. when he wakes up to feed his animals including three dogs, a miniature horse, a donkey and a pig. He then checks his iPad for urgent emails and works out before starting his day. Ketchell says it’s not uncommon for him to get a Facetime from Schwarzenegger at 6 a.m. (he doesn’t mind as he’s an early riser also) or on Sunday evenings after “60 Minutes” airs.

Others say getting to him has gotten nearly impossible. “He has layers of people between the world and him,” says Steve Algermissen, the executive director of Cushman & Wakefield’s Los Angeles office. Forbes too was unable to get an interview with him through his representatives despite multiple requests for comment. His financial advisor Wachter answered questions but declined to comment on his client’s net worth.

Step into a world dedicated entirely to man's best friend - dogs. Our website is a treasure trove of heartwarming news, touching stories, and inspiring narratives centered around these incredible creatures. We invite you to join us in spreading the joy. Share our posts, stories, and articles with your friends, extending the warmth and inspiration to every corner.With a simple click, you can be part of this movement.
Share:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *