Mary Bella's Issue

Mary Bella's Issue Periodt.

I came across this illustration that stayed with me:One candle lights another.Then another.And the first candle? Still b...
27/08/2025

I came across this illustration that stayed with me:

One candle lights another.
Then another.
And the first candle? Still burning.

In leadership and business, many people operate as if success is scarce...like recognition, growth, or opportunities diminish when shared.

But light doesn’t work that way.
The more you share it, the brighter the entire room becomes.
And often, people remember where the first spark came from.

It’s leverage.

- Mentorship builds loyalty.
- Collaboration multiplies impact.
- Referrals strengthen networks.

Remember:
Your influence grows strongest when your light becomes the reason others can see.

© Peso Rules

Research shows patience isn’t taught through lectures, it’s shaped through practice.If you want your kids to be more pat...
26/08/2025

Research shows patience isn’t taught through lectures, it’s shaped through practice.

If you want your kids to be more patient, don’t just tell them to wait. Give them waiting work.

Baking bread, where the dough needs hours to rise. Gardening, where seeds sleep beneath the soil for weeks before sprouting. Even small daily moments like watching water boil or waiting for paint to dry.

Because here’s the truth:
Patience is not a switch we flip. It’s a muscle, built slowly through experiences that require us to pause and trust the process.

🧠 According to Mischel et al. (Developmental Psychology, 1989), children who practiced delaying gratification through real-world tasks developed stronger self-control and long-term resilience later in life.

Why does this matter?

Because in a culture of instant everything, instant meals, instant streaming, instant answers—we forget that some of the most meaningful lessons take time. And when children never get the chance to wait, they never get the chance to grow roots of endurance.

Here’s what growing patience looks like at home:

→ Letting them stir the batter and then wait as it bakes.
→ Planting seeds together and celebrating tiny shoots weeks later.
→ Choosing board games over digital games.
→ Modeling patience yourself in traffic, long lines, or daily frustrations.

Patience isn’t a punishment. It’s a gift.

Because waiting teaches children more than how to sit still; it teaches them how to trust the unseen, endure the in-between, and believe that good things can take time. 🌱

©️Mercy Lupo

Follow for more parenting truths that hits the heart and are backed by research. 📚

I’ve been that parent.The one who left a half full cart in the middle of the shopping trip because my toddler was throwi...
26/08/2025

I’ve been that parent.
The one who left a half full cart in the middle of the shopping trip because my toddler was throwing a tantrum.
The one who packed up dinner in a to go box after only a few bites because the baby cries were louder than the restaurant music.

And I’m not embarrassed by it.

Because babies and toddlers are just that, babies and toddlers. I don’t expect them to act like adults, because they’re not. They’re learning, they’re growing, and sometimes that means big feelings in public places.

For me, it’s not about “giving in.” It’s about knowing when enough is enough. Sometimes the best parenting choice is walking out, not sitting there pretending nothing is happening while everyone else suffers through it.

Some people will judge. They’ll roll their eyes.
But those aren’t the people I’m raising.

Because one hard moment in public doesn’t define me as a parent. It just means I knew when to step away. And at the end of the day, I don’t owe strangers a performance.
I owe my child patience, even on the messy days.

© Kylie Brown

Smile often.
26/08/2025

Smile often.

When you feel someone is evading, distance yourself. Stop running after people who disregard your presence. Guard your p...
26/08/2025

When you feel someone is evading, distance yourself. Stop running after people who disregard your presence. Guard your peace and value yourself enough to leave. You can’t force your way into someone’s life; it only causes more damage. The right people will never walk away or make you feel like a burden. Don’t forget: You should be with people who pick you, not people who make you feel that you are unwanted. Stay strong, and let go with grace — that’s actually the mark of genuine self-love.

© Mson Justine

WHEN YOU HAVE YOUR OWN FAMILY, JUST REMEMBER:Your life is no longer just yours, but it is for them and for them, your fa...
26/08/2025

WHEN YOU HAVE YOUR OWN FAMILY,
JUST REMEMBER:

Your life is no longer just yours, but it is for them and for them, your family needs happiness and your priorities should always be for the members of your family. Before your friends, your family comes first, they always wait for your arrival.

© Arriane Grace Mendoza

i can’t stand when i hear someone say, “we all have the same 24 hours.”because no, we absolutely do NOT. some people wak...
26/08/2025

i can’t stand when i hear someone say, “we all have the same 24 hours.”
because no, we absolutely do NOT.

some people wake up to silence.

some wake up to screaming kids, dishes, laundry, and a mile-long list of needs before they even think about themselves.

some people have a full support system.

some are doing it all alone.

some people are rested and ready.

some are fighting invisible battles you can’t even see-running on fumes, battling postpartum, grief, burnout, or just trying to survive another day.

some people have a safety net and some ARE the safety net.

so don’t sit on your high horse preaching about hustle and discipline like everyone’s playing the same game.

we’re not.

hustle doesn’t look the same on everyone.
discipline doesn’t erase REALITY.

you don’t get to judge someone’s grind when you’re not carrying their weight.

©Heather Hurt

Imagine placing a frog into a pot of cold water, then slowly turning up the heat. At first, the frog remains calm, barel...
26/08/2025

Imagine placing a frog into a pot of cold water, then slowly turning up the heat. At first, the frog remains calm, barely reacting to the gradual change. It quietly adjusts its body temperature, slowly adapting to the warming water, thinking, “This is still okay. I can handle this.”

As the water continues to heat, the frog tolerates the rising temperature, convincing itself that it’s still bearable. It adapts little by little, accepting discomfort bit by bit, believing it can survive whatever comes next.

But here lies the danger: when the water becomes unbearably hot—too hot to endure—the frog finally recognizes the urgent need to escape. It realizes, “Now, I must jump out to save myself!”

Unfortunately, by this time, the frog has already exhausted its energy simply enduring the increasing heat. It’s too weak, too depleted to make the leap to safety. Despite its desire to escape, the frog is trapped. Slowly, it succumbs to the boiling water, unable to save itself.

The truth is, the frog didn’t perish because of the water’s heat alone. It died because it failed to act early, failed to make the decision to jump out when it still could.

This phenomenon is known as the “Boiling Frog Syndrome.”

This powerful story mirrors many of our lives. We often endure injustice, neglect, or hardship step by step, telling ourselves, “I’ll tolerate this for now. I’ll deal with it later.” We accept small pains, dismiss warning signs, and adapt to worsening conditions, hoping things will improve.

But what starts as manageable discomfort can grow into overwhelming suffering. By the time we realize the severity of our situation, our strength to fight back, to change our circumstances, has often been drained. We lose the courage to stand up, to speak out, and to protect ourselves.

The lesson here is clear: Never allow yourself to reach a point where you lack the strength to break free from toxic situations.

When you sense discomfort or injustice creeping in, take action immediately. Set clear boundaries, raise your voice, and defend your dignity before it’s too late. Your mental and emotional resilience is your greatest ally—nurture it, protect it, and never let it be drained by slow, creeping harm.

Remember, life will often test your limits, but you hold the power to decide when to leap out of the boiling water. Don’t wait until your energy is gone. Act now, protect your peace, and choose survival on your own terms.

Because no one deserves to become the “boiled frog” — someone who wanted to survive but was too late to save themselves.

© R e m e m b e r

Paulit-ulit ko to sinasabi kasi laking tulong ng  Things that I do first kapag may   ang anak ko. Learned a lot from exp...
26/08/2025

Paulit-ulit ko to sinasabi kasi laking tulong ng

Things that I do first kapag may ang anak ko. Learned a lot from experience. First-aid muna sa bahay kapag mild symptoms.

↙️Paliguan ng warm water at warm water din paghugas sa wetpu niya kasi possible magkarashes o magkaroon ng redness dahil sa paulit-ulit na pagpoop kaya wag ako puro wipes.

↙️The “I L U” or I love you tummy massage. Hinihilot ko gamit ang Kamay ni Nanay massage oil. Umaga, tanghali, gabi.

↙️Electrolyte drinks or Oral Rehydration Solutions. Kontra dehydration. Hindi po enough ang tubig tubig lang kahit pa umiinom ng tubig ang anak.

Vivalyte gusto ng anak ko. Dahil nakakakain na siya ng solid, di ko na muna pinapainom ng gatas kasi baka isa yun sa dahilan kung bakit masakit ang tyan.

↙️Banana. Di ko pinapakain ng maaasim like pineapple or orange kapag may diarrhea. Plain crackers like SkyFlakes pinapakain ko and more on plain rice. Pwede lugaw with asin and sabaw-sabaw.

➡️ERCEFLORA ✨✨✨ lagi magstock neto kasi kung tayo may Loperamide, sila naman Erceflora. Unang sintomas, painumin ko agad Erceflora. Pang ALL AGES above 6 months old.

Ayun lang. Nashare ko lang kasi nandito na naman tayo hays pero ligtas ang may alam. ☺️🧿 Good morning ☀️

© Eureka Villon

I don’t practice “gentle parenting.”Not because I don’t love my kids.Not because I don’t care about their feelings.Not b...
26/08/2025

I don’t practice “gentle parenting.”

Not because I don’t love my kids.
Not because I don’t care about their feelings.
Not because I want to be harsh.

But because I believe children need structure just as much as they need support.

I will absolutely listen to my child.
I will absolutely validate their emotions.
I will absolutely stay calm when I can.

But I will also correct them.
I will also set boundaries that aren’t up for negotiation.
I will also let them experience the sting of consequences.

Because the world won’t always cushion their falls.
Their boss won’t “gentle parent” them.
Bills, deadlines, and responsibility won’t stop to validate their feelings first.

My kids need to know that respect and obedience matter, even when they don’t feel like it.

So yes.. sometimes I raise my voice.
Sometimes I take things away.
Sometimes I let them cry because no means no.

That doesn’t make me cruel.
That makes me their parent.

Gentle parenting says, “Lead with empathy.”
And that’s a good thing.
But I believe love also means firmness, correction, and discipline.

Because one day, my kids won’t remember every rule or punishment.
But they will remember that their mom was strong enough to hold the line.

I don’t practice gentle parenting.
I practice loving parenting with boundaries.

And in this house, love doesn’t always sound gentle.. sometimes it sounds firm. ❤️

© Chris & Che Media

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