This MRI study on young kids just exposed something terrifying:
They scanned the brains of 60 children aged 3–5 — including 5-year-old Rose — and found interactive screen time is causing measurable loss of white matter in their developing brains. Even just 2 hours a day is linked to impaired neural connectivity, language, and literacy development.
Professor Mike Nagel (neuroscientist and father) said his first reaction was simply: “Wow… I was not anticipating seeing anything like that.”
We’re physically changing children’s brains before they even start school — and the damage is visible on scans.
This one actually unsettled me. I’ve always suspected too much screen time was bad, but seeing real white matter loss in toddlers hits different.
Parents of little ones — has this kind of research changed how much screen time you allow?
Coach K shares a universal truth about failure, resilience, and growth.
"When you're getting your butt kicked, it's called changing a limit."
"So many parents today don't allow their kids to change limits...They're worried about them failing instead of learning. You learn through the experience of failure and success."
Growth requires discomfort. You have to be willing to look bad before you get better.
The problem isn't failure - it's protecting people from it.
"Failure was never a destination."
You can't grow without accepting that there will be challenges and adversity.
(🎥 Duke Fuqua School of Business )
Linton star Paul Oliver was
named to the Indiana Primetime 25 . Oliver is just the second Miner to ever earn this and he’ll be on the cover for next years Indiana Football Digest.
Conner Daily had 15 to lead Linton in regional title win, including 6-for-6 from free throw line. Paul Oliver scored all 10 of his points in the second half.
@kollinhayes12 Trey Burke got wild several times during their run… but I agree. Hield was the most fun to watch. Most of those dudes had boring games… except Kaminsky here of course: https://t.co/FYnamu3pXE