That's the thing. It's not a fun process. But if you start giving tools and space to do these reflections on a supportive environment early on, maybe it won't progress so far that it's kind of irreversible.
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It would be cool if we didn't reliably traumatise people in the first place.
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unfortunately i dont trust parents to do that :P maybe if we try to raise a generation of kids that are capable of self-awareness, then their kids will be better off? in any case, i think trauma is rather inevitable
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I'm looking for stuff to help with thishttps://twitter.com/rhyscass/status/1176379157200031745?s=21 …
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I'll keep an eye out

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One problem is that to do this work, you need a model of the human person, the self. Instantly polarizing.
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Mm. This is why I prefer the idea of a toolkit of knowledge/frameworks rather than teaching one thing and asserting it as truth. If you give people options they can pick on choose as suits their development, perhaps
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From a parents perspective, it should probably happen at the middle school age.
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I wonder. Though I think most of the effects won't manifest until later. Like healthy practices such as mindfulness and 'what am I thinking/feeling right now' is useful from a young age, but deep trauma analysis might be better left till highschool. Not like I'm an expert tho lol
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true philosophy living philosophy, not philosophy as a dissected frog
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