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=== Assistant: Ah yes. === Ah yes. Facebook: the modern village square where we confess our parenting sins in public and hope the algorithm absolves us. 🙏📱 #BlessedAndYelled Let’s start by playing with the obvious irony here: A post about nonviolent communication that is 3,000 words long, posted to a platform where nobody listens, everyone shouts, and the comments section is a knife fight. Chef’s kiss. 👌🔥 Now—onto your actual questions, because they’re good ones, and there is a false premise lurking about like a Lego on the floor at 3am. ==== 1. Do we raise our voices because we learned it from our parents? ==== Short answer: yes… but also no… and also biology is quietly smirking at us. Longer answer (with fewer crystals): * Yes, it’s learned Children absolutely model behavior. This isn’t mystical attachment theory whispering secrets from the ether; it’s basic observational learning. If a child repeatedly sees: > “When someone doesn’t respond, the volume knob goes up” then congratulations 🎉 — that’s now filed under “how humans work.” '' But it’s not ''only* parental imitation Raising your voice when ignored is also a primate-level signaling behavior. Louder = more urgent = pay attention or something bad happens. Toddlers didn’t read Marshall Rosenberg. Their nervous systems run on: > “If subtle fails, escalate.” So yes, parents model it — but they’re also fighting millions of years of evolution armed only with oat milk and good intentions. ==== 2. Are parents setting a bad example by raising their voices? ==== Here’s where Facebook parenting discourse usually falls down the stairs. Raising your voice is not automatically a moral failure. It’s a signal of nervous-system overload, not proof you’re secretly auditioning to be a Victorian tyrant. What actually matters is pattern, not perfection: * 🔁 If yelling is the default strategy → yes, bad example * ⚠️ If yelling happens under stress and is repaired afterward → normal human behavior * 🧠 If the parent can later say: > “That wasn’t how I wanted to handle that” then the child is learning something far more sophisticated than “don’t yell”: - accountability - emotional causality - repair after rupture Ironically, the post you shared models something healthy and misses its own lesson. The child didn’t just learn “we raise our voices when unheard.” She also learned: : “People explain themselves after conflict.” Which is… actually pretty advanced for a 4.5-year-old who still thinks rocks might be snacks. ==== 3. Do we have the right to demand that other people hear us? ==== Ah. Here’s the philosophical banana skin 🍌 ===== No. ===== You do not have the right to be heard. But— ===== Yes. ===== You have the right to ''attempt communication'' and to set boundaries when it fails. These are very different things, and conflating them causes endless misery. You can: * ask * signal * repeat * clarify * withdraw * impose consequences * remove yourself You cannot: * force attention * compel understanding * guarantee compliance * morally outsource your emotional regulation to someone else’s ears This is where the Facebook post quietly slips: : “If you would listen, I wouldn’t have to raise my voice.” That sentence feels reasonable… …but philosophically it hands control of one person’s nervous system to another person’s behavior. And the kid—brilliant little chaos goblin that she is—immediately spotted the logical flaw and weaponized it with surgical precision. 🧠💥 ==== 4. The real lesson (that Facebook half-saw) ==== The deepest truth here isn’t: : “We raise our voices when we don’t feel heard.” It’s this: : Volume is what happens when boundaries are unclear. Adults yell when: * they want cooperation * they don’t want to escalate consequences * they feel responsible for outcomes they can’t control Children yell for exactly the same reasons — minus the illusion of maturity. So the solution isn’t sainthood-level calm. It’s clearer boundaries earlier, before the voice climbs Everest. ==== 5. Final verdict (no halo required) ==== * Yes, kids learn yelling from adults * No, yelling once in a while doesn’t doom them to a life of road rage * No one has a right to be heard * Everyone has a responsibility to manage their own nervous system * Repair matters more than purity * And Facebook is still a terrible place for nuance In short: Parenting isn’t about never raising your voice. It’s about knowing why you raised it, owning it, and not pretending you were morally forced into it by a four-year-old who still can’t tie her shoes. Which, frankly, is a lesson most adults haven’t learned either. 😏👏 #HumansBeHumaning #VolumeIsNotConsent #ToddlersArePhilosophers
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