We live in a world where opinions travel faster than light and patience walks barefoot.Someone is late — irresponsible.Someone is quiet — arrogant.Someone says no — rude.Judgment is quick. Understanding takes effort. “We judge in seconds what took someone years to survive.” It’s almost funny how confidently we create stories in our minds. We become... Continue Reading →
How I Accidentally Raised My Own Emotional Coaches
Children don’t learn emotional health from lectures. They learn it while watching us look for our phone in the fridge, sigh dramatically at traffic, or whisper “I’m fine” with Olympic-level denial. Emotional health, it turns out, is a silent syllabus—taught not in words, but in moments.Parents often ask, “How do I teach my child to... Continue Reading →
Gentle Parenting Explained: Because ‘Please’ Has Become My Surname
If someone had told millennials that one day we would raise our kids using a philosophy called gentle parenting, most of us would have laughed, adjusted our Walkman earphones, and gone back to watching Small Wonder. Yet here we are—parents of a digital generation—trying to raise emotionally intelligent children while our own emotional intelligence is... Continue Reading →
The Psychology of Procrastination: Why Tomorrow Is Our Favourite Lie
Procrastination is not laziness. Laziness is doing nothing and feeling okay about it. Procrastination is doing everything else while feeling guilty about not doing the one thing that matters. It’s replying to emails you don’t need to reply to, reorganizing your cupboard at midnight, and suddenly remembering to water a plant that survived weeks of... Continue Reading →
Tiny Teachers with Sticky Fingers: How Toddlers Secretly Train Us in Patience
We often believe patience arrives with age, experience, or maybe after reading a self-help book with a calm-looking Buddha on the cover. But truth be told, patience actually enters our lives barefoot, drooling slightly, and holding a half-eaten biscuit it refuses to share.Toddlers are not just small humans learning to live; they are full-time professors... Continue Reading →
Tiny Decisions, Mighty Minds: The Power of Letting Kids Choose
Yesterday morning, my child stood in front of the cupboard like a confused fashion designer at Paris Fashion Week. One sock was blue. The other had dinosaurs. The T-shirt clearly did not match either. I opened my mouth to say, “No, no, no,” but then I remembered something important—I wasn’t raising a mannequin. I was... Continue Reading →
