TL;DR call flop is good, close fold on the turn, easy fold on the river
Definitely not folding TT on the flop here in a 5/5 live game cause people are leading 88, 99, 87s, A7 and are limping a capped total garbage range but you should also realize that this is probably "supposed" to be a fold.
As played turn it's starting to get close to where I'd consider folding TT. I don't expect 88, 99, 7x to barrel this turn with that sizing. We have better calls with our JJ+ cause TT blocks T8s and T9s and one could argue that 65s/87s/45s might be better calls if we don't expect him to barrel 7x, 88, 99 with this sizing. I will say that TT is for sure close and I'd probably end up folding. Flop was 4 ways! FWIW I'd definitely fold 88 and 99 as they block more bluff hands than TT and are more vulnerable to being outdrawn by T9s/T8s.
As played river the same type of logic applies as the turn. So we fold 89s and T8s, ok easy. The rest of our range looks something like 45s/65s/78s/76s that we raised pre, TT+, sets that didn't raise the flop, and straights that didn't raise the flop and decided to raise pre.
Assuming villain's range is full houses, trips, and straights + bluffs which hands do we wanna call? JJ/45s and sets/straight that didn't raise the flop are first. But I'm raising a set/straight (if we even have those combos pre which I don't) on the flop 100%. We want to call QQ, KK, and AA because they don't block any/as much bluffs (AA blocks A5s). We call 76s as well as it blocks flopped sets. Now we're left with 65s and TT (if we called turn with it) and 65s blocks value, TT blocks bluffs. Seems to me like
TT is the worst hand to call with on the river and we should actually consider folding AA as it blocks A5s cause we got plenty of better calls to call him with.
Now, all of this changes if you assume he's bluffing too often, if you don't ever have 65s type hands preflop etc etc so whatever man call if you think he's bluffing and fold if you think he's got you beat