💚LABUBU GIVEAWAY💚
I’m giving away an Exciting Macaron Labubu✨
I will ship anywhere in the world! 🌎✈️
How to enter:
Follow me @kryptobaby777
Like & Repost this post
Tag 2 friends 🍻
Bonus: Comment which color is your favorite for extra luck🍀
📅 Ends: 9/25, 12pm est
🏆 Winner announced: 9/26, 12pm est
I will be using a twitter picker website
Good luck, Labubu lovers 💚
@kryptobaby777 When I was just in Europe…it reminded me of how much I love the PNW drinking water. I feel like europes water feels like sandpaper. Ours here is like…water/life…I couldn’t believe I would have killed for desani…shame
“Just Let the Kids Fight”: The Dangerous Myth of Untrained Conflict
Some parents believe that kids should be allowed to fight. Physically. To settle things themselves. To “toughen up.” It’s an old-school idea rooted in a romanticized view of resilience, often passed down from generation to generation. But here’s the problem: these same parents rarely—if ever—teach their kids how to fight. Not how to throw a safe punch. Not how to read a situation. Not how to de-escalate. Not even how to walk away.
And what’s worse? They rarely teach them how to manage emotions either.
So what we’re left with are children navigating complex emotional situations with underdeveloped brains, charged with adrenaline and confusion, and no tools to work through it. The message is clear: if you’re angry, hurt, embarrassed, or insecure—just swing.
It’s not conflict resolution. It’s chaos.
There’s a fundamental flaw in the “let them fight it out” logic: it assumes that fighting will somehow resolve the issue. That kids will “figure it out” through bruises and black eyes. But in reality, most fights leave children more confused, more ashamed, and more isolated than they were before. It doesn’t build strength. It builds fear. It builds silence. It builds shame.
And here’s the kicker: most adults would never apply this logic to themselves. Can you imagine breaking out into a fistfight with a co-worker? Throwing a punch in a grocery store because someone cut in line? We’d call the cops. We’d press charges. But when kids do it, we call it “normal.”
The truth is, allowing children to physically fight without giving them the emotional or physical literacy to understand conflict is neglect dressed up as toughness. It’s a refusal to parent. A refusal to teach.
There are better ways. Teaching kids to name their emotions, to set boundaries, to speak up or walk away, to process their anger instead of stuffing it down or acting it out. These are the real lessons of resilience. And yes, teaching self-defense or martial arts can be incredibly empowering—but it’s very different from telling kids to scrap it out in a field or behind a school.
We all want strong kids. But strength is not measured in fists—it’s measured in self-awareness, compassion, and the ability to face conflict with courage and clarity.
Letting kids fight without teaching them how is not strength. It’s abandonment. And we can do better.