
shark vs the universe
we're not kids anymore.
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Stranger Things

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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Mike Driver

JVL
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almost home

roma★

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Origami Around
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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Today's Document
dirt enthusiast
Cosimo Galluzzi
wallacepolsom
Keni
seen from Tunisia
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Armenia
seen from Armenia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Argentina
seen from Belarus
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
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seen from United States
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seen from United States
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@cashdamn
…holy shit
None of the characters ever figure this out because they stop taking math at age 11
this shit intense
I was rooting for dragon egg and he took a L smh
We’ll get em next time Comet.
Nigga I didnt know anything like this existed 5 minutes ago and I feel hooked now.
Throwing is handing out?
This is so dehumanizing.
Handing out supplies..I would expect the POTUS to be shaking hands with the people and hugging people. Not throwing items into a crowd like he’s an NBA halftime show throwing T-Shirts at fans.
Ive legitimately never been angrier
I really think hospitals and doctors that work with pregnancy and pediatricians need to make more literature available for how to, ya know, work with kids? Because the more conversations we have about spanking (and how it’s ineffective and harmful and does more bad than good), the more I realize that a lot of people don’t know the alternatives. Or like, anything about child development or where misbehavior stems from.
So, as someone who went through childhood development classes in college, works with kids for a living, and knows multiple people who specialized in childhood education, here are some pointers when you are working with kids:
1. Model emotional response for kids. Children are learning how to recognize and respond to their own emotions. All the way up through high school, children’s brains are still developing, and the emotions they are learning to process become more complex. So with really young kids, the easiest way to help them with this is to model emotional self awareness and self care.
“Oh wow, mommy is feeling angry because the cat made a mess. I’m going to clean this mess and then go sit in my room in the quiet for a short break so I feel better.”
“You know, I am feeling very sad about not going to the park because it is raining. I bet some hot chocolate and a book would make me feel better.”
”Huh, I’m feeling kind of cranky and hungry, but daddy won’t be home for dinner for another hour. I bet I’ll feel better if I eat a little piece apple while we wait.”
2. Understand what causes child frustration and work to preempt it.
-Transitions (from one activity to another, getting in the car, etc) can be stressful, especially if the activity or location they are leaving is fun. Give kids a warning when this is going to happen. With young kids, give them about 5-15 minutes of warning (”10 minutes until we are going to leave the park and go home. Do your last thing.”), with older kids, just give them a time frame. (We are can play at McDonalds for 30 minutes, but then we have to go grocery shopping, ok?)
Not being able to communicate what they want to is frustrating. Babies can learn simplified baby sign language months before they are verbal. Kids may not know the words for what they are trying to say. Be patient and help them find the right words. On a similar note, don’t ignore kids. If you really can’t respond to their question right away because of something else, at least tell the “Yes, I heard your question. I’ll answer you as soon as I’m done talking on the phone.”
Not being able to make choices or having too much choice can be overwhelming. Give kids a limited, reasonable selection of choices. “Do you want apple slices or juicy pears on the side for lunch?” is much better than “What do you want with your sandwich?” or just giving them apple slices. “Do you want to give grandpa a hug or a high five?” is better than demanding they hug grandpa right away.
3. Understand that kids are people to. They will get hungry, tired, an annoyed just like adults do. Sometimes you have to be flexible and give them time to self care. Talk to them, explain things to them, let them be people and not just dolls. “Because I said so” is really unhelpful for a growing kid. “We can’t buy Fruit Loops today because we are already getting Frosted Flakes. We only need one cereal at a time.” is going to do you a lot more favors. “Don’t pick up the glass snow globe. It belongs to grandma and can break easy. She would be sad if we broke it on accident.” is better than “don’t touch that.”
And look, no parent is perfect. No baby sitter, no teacher, no care taker is going to be awesome all the time. And no kid is going to be perfect. They will cry and have tantrums, and not be able to tell you what they need, and be stubborn sometimes. Sometimes they need space, or quiet time. Sometimes they need attention and validation.
But kids learn from every interaction they have, so adults need to make the effort to show all the love, and patience, and empathy, and thoughtfulness we want them to learn.
gotalittlesoul
okay this is great advice but adults aren’t hitting their kids to try and teach them to do a positive thing, they’re doing it to punish them for having failed to do a positive thing. you’ve given great examples for how to teach the positive behaviour, but not for what to do when your kid is being an awful monster and smashing things. what’s the advice for how to punish your kids in a way that teaches them but doesn’t hurt them?
I mean, I think part of that s a LOT of adults NEVER teach their kids good/healthy behavior. They ONLY punish bad behavior, which is, like, obviously unhealthy and unproductive.
But I think, as I’ve said before, that the entire notion of “punishment” fails us sometimes. The goal is to raise happy, healthy kids who grow into happy, well adjusted adults, and so our actions should be aimed that attaining that goal.
So when bad behavior happens, I think we need to 1) Identify what caused the behavior, 2) Take action to make the bad behavior stop, 3) Take action to prevent the bad behavior from happening again. And that isn’t always going to look like “punishment” the way we traditionally think of it.
So a kid is “being an awful monster and smashing things.” Why? Are they in a store, throwing cereal boxes on the floor and crying because they want fruity pebbles/they’ve been in the store for an hour/don’t know how to deal with disappointment in a healthy way? Hitting the kid, or taking away all their TV for a week, or putting back the poptarts you grabbed because they ‘don’t deserve it’ doesn’t really address the cause, stop the behavior, or prevent the behavior from happening again.
Instead we would want to remove them from that stressful situation (and yeah, that might mean that you dont get to finish shopping. Kids are rough like that.) When they’ve calmed down, you can talk to them about how they were feeling and why their behavior was a problem. Talk about and put in place systems to help the behavior not happen again. Maybe Kiddo just can’t do 1 hour in the store in one go yet. Maybe they need more adult interaction during shopping. Maybe they need clearer expectations next time about what foods you are buying/not buying and how long it will take. Maybe THEY need a shopping list and maybe they get to hold it and check off stuff when you put it in the basket.
If you need to have a “punishment” (which I tend to think of more for older kids who have broken clearly established rules), the consequence should be logical, reasonable, and when possible, REVERSIBLE. The kid should be able to lessen the punishment by taking ACTION. Jr gets no phone for a week because he totally trashed the kitchen with his friends and was rude when you asked him to help clean it up and refused to help? Maybe he can get his phone back after only 3 days if he does extra chores around the house.
I didn’t know cheetahs meow I’ve always thought they roar my whole life has been a lie
Ok but the other one is purring so hard
If I ever don’t reblog this assume I’m dead
you know when like…no one really knows you because you work really hard to keep components of yourself (some might say even all of yourself) completely hidden from people and so even people closest to you that’ve “known” you for years probably don’t actually know you as much as they think they do? and then you feel like a sense of disconnection, like that realization that no one really knows you–not your friends, family, boyfriend, girlfriend etc–and you’re kind of completely alone and you’re unsettled by it…but not enough to actually let people get to know you, because having people not know you at all is a big part of your identity now and it’s impossible to give that up?
“…and I told him, is you crazy?!”
“n den what happened” im in love
“They got water” 😂😂
Lmfaoo she said “no”
Her little shocked expression for sea world 😍😍😍
Cardi ain’t had to rap a SINGLE WORD
16-year-old Britney Spears performs Baby One More Time at a mall in 1998, before her music career took off.
Maybe if I reblog it it will become the truth
i reblog this everytime
This is the magic a$ap, if you don’t reblog it this will be the first year you’re broke
IM SCREMANIGN the caption is just fake roller coaster
so this kid he used to bully me in middle school before i got tough, well this is kind of a funny story. so i sugar from time to time but my latest sugar mommys house is so extra and i didnt bring my glasses but im going through the house because she told me to make myself at home and i see a family photo and im just like he looks really familiar but i cant make out shit. and so she and i start talking and shes like yeah i have a son your age actually and im just like wait… and she was like you’ll meet him later when we go to the car show, and im just like fuckin wait.. and we get to the car show and its me and her we’re holding hands being friendly and shes like and heres my son. and i shit u not this is the same dude who used to fucking bully me in middle school and he starts fucking crying because he didnt know his mom was lesbian and i was just like hey its been a while, but im getting fucked by your mom.
hey just so u know I’m here for the girls who have slept with people who they didn’t like and girls who look back on old hook ups and feel gross. girls who have slept with people because they needed the sexual validation but had bad experiences or wished that thy hadn’t gone near those people. girls who found out how bad the people were after the fact. the character of your hookups doesn’t reflect your character. you’re all wonderful and I’m here for u
petition for straight white boys to not be allowed to pursue a film major at any college anywhere for the next 50 years or ever
my roommate is a straight white boy pursuing a degree in film and i know exactly what this post is trying to stop
What is it trying to stop?
As a straight white male film major, never has a post brought me from offended to fair enough so quickly