Song of the Day-NoTheme Thursday (3/9/23)
“Y.M.C.A.” by Village People
Reblog or Comment If You Listened To It
seen from Türkiye
seen from Russia
seen from Spain
seen from Colombia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from Ukraine
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from China

seen from Germany

seen from Canada
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Japan

seen from Italy

seen from Greece
seen from United States
seen from France
Song of the Day-NoTheme Thursday (3/9/23)
“Y.M.C.A.” by Village People
Reblog or Comment If You Listened To It
Song of the Day-TobyMac Tuesday (3/14/23)
“Boomin” by TobyMac
Reblog or Comment if you listened to it
Song of the Day- “Wes”nesday (3/1/23)
“Great Is They Faithfulness” by Wes Hampton
Like If You Know The Song/Reblog or Comment If You Listened To It
When I was ten, I watched Disney channel, got in trouble because I was up way past my bedtime playing with my Nintendo ds, played in the park with my friends and if I wasn’t I would draw to pass time.
Now, we see children on TikTok, going to Sephora, getting products from 50-900 dollars. And when they get home they try these products, some they can’t pronounce but still got. When I see these videos, first I think “yeiks.” Then, I think “why?”
Perhaps, it’s insecurity. We’ve all been there. With how the world moves today, children have easy access to internet. Perhaps they come across an add manipulating them into thinking that they need these products to be better and beautiful.
Or they see their favourite influencer promoting a product and because they want to support said influencer they get their parent to get them these products. I’m not saying that every influencer is at fault for this, I just feel like some of these parents should be careful with what they let their kids see and do on the internet.
But, let say they know better and don’t buy everything they see on the internet. But, when they walk to school the next day, they see either their friend, or the other kids having “beautiful” skin and a bit of makeup, and they think to themselves “if they can have it, why can’t I?”
Or maybe, it’s the parents? Them making a TikTok of their child going around Sephora, for a “social experiment,” to see how much their kid can get under a certain time frame. They get the product and the parent get their five second of fame. Great right? NO!
They are 10! Some, even younger! Sephora isn’t a playground. And, not to mention, the mess they make for trying them!
Sure when we were younger, we saw our mom put on lipstick and we wanted to try it so we ask. Either we find out it’s weird or it was a great bonding experience. But these children shouldn’t even worry about pimples or have 50-900$ worth of makeup and skincare products to fit in.
I probably sound like a broken record, and I probably don’t add anything to this conversation, but my heart breaks a little when I see these kids, do hauls of the products they got at Sephora, that they do not need.