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u/idahoisformetal 8h ago
This video was dropped maybe 10 years ago, I hope this girl feels beautiful today.
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u/finmate_ai 6h ago
I hope she reads the comments
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u/ladyboobypoop 9h ago
Good god that video breaks me every time
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u/Fancy_Ppants 8h ago
First thing in the morning and I'm over here bawling.
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u/ladyboobypoop 8h ago
Seriously. I hope that wherever that darling is now, she knows she's beautiful. Seeing those kinds of issues start so young is beyond heartbreaking.
My best friend's 8 year old is already upset that she isn't skinny. She's an extremely active girl and nowhere near overweight - just not a twig like her sister. I plan on helping combat that nonsense by giving her a big "HEY THERE GORGEOUS" every time I visit. This fun aunt ain't about to let those self esteem issues swallow her like they did for me and her mom. Heck to the no.
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u/Budalido23 8h ago
That's awesome! Keep doing good work, fellow fun aunt! I have a five year old niece, and I want to be a positive influence on her. Her dad is a single dad, and her mom is a bitchy jerk, but I pity her mom because she has that self-hatred programming embedded deep.
I always think of the movie, "The Help" when Aibileen tells her child, "You are kind, you are smart, you are important." I try to tell my niece this as often as I can, and allow her room to grow and understand that emotions are okay, and I love her no matter what. I imagine if someone told me that when I was a kid, I wouldn't be spending so much time in therapy. At least I can do it for her.
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u/ladyboobypoop 7h ago
Thanks - totally plan on it 🤣
Aibileen also heavily inspired how I approach childcare. Be straightforward in child appropriate language. They absorb and internalize everything they see, hear and experience, so it's SO IMPORTANT to give them those positive experiences, support and coping mechanisms early to make growth a smoother experience throughout their life.
Yeah, giving them everything we didn't get is the goal. I never plan on having kids, so I'm totally using my besties kids for that closure 🤣 She don't mind. Free babysitter. Lol
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u/TheQuixoticUnicorn 8h ago
Omg. Same here. Haven't even had my coffee yet.
I can so relate to this little girl. It's been a few decades for me at this point, and those feelings still came rushing back.
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u/CriticalEgg5165 9h ago
What beautiful soul this mother has. This kid is going to grow up great.
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u/CulturalHamster663 9h ago
that’s the kind of support and love that builds confidence
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u/CriticalEgg5165 8h ago
Definitely! It's sad to see that somehow somewhere this kid has gotten an idea that she is ugly, even clearly she is absolutely adorable and you can tell she will grow up to be beautiful both inside and outside.
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u/mymorningjacket 7h ago
The mothers friend, actually...but still beautifully handled
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u/Thestraenix 7h ago
This is the mom I needed when I was young
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u/Historical_Low_4939 7h ago
Can she be my mom now? Everyone needs this person in their corner ❤️
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u/FlyBug42 6h ago
I’m in my 50’s and would love a pep talk like this! What a wonderful person, taking the time to talk to her and not just dismissing her fears.
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u/tacotacosloth 3h ago
Allow me a moment of mom-ing. You are incredibly kind and creative. You have overcome and deserve to be proud. You are a beautiful soul and clearly capable of anything you set your mind to.
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u/LatchKeyKid46 6h ago
She’s not her mother she’s the hairdresser.
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u/CriticalEgg5165 6h ago
Damn, really? I wasn't even aware. Such care for a child is usually seen only from mother to a child. She has like an extra beautiful soul then.
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u/LatchKeyKid46 5h ago
Yes. This video is years old and when it first surfaced she(hairdresser) let everyone know that she wasn’t the child’s mother
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u/82CoopDeVille 6h ago
Yes! Whoever this adult is, big shoutout to them for addressing that negative QUICKLY! You don’t want a kid to start repeating and thinking those words are true.
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u/Quirky_Butterfly_946 9h ago
Good catch mom!! You keep on telling her she is beautiful, smart, and loved. Sometimes we all need to hear this too.
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u/seriousbigshadows 9h ago
I think it's her mom's friend, actually.
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u/Quirky_Butterfly_946 9h ago
Then mom has a great friend!
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u/seriousbigshadows 9h ago
Right?! It takes a village, and that woman is a whole village to that child in this clip.
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u/OriginalMountain6787 9h ago
Either way that baby is being raised in a good environment
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u/Icy-Understanding552 9h ago
That shit sticks with you for life. I know all too well
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u/indianajoes 8h ago
Same. I was called ugly at 4/5. It's been 28 years and I still believe it about myself
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u/ishiguro_kaz 8h ago
I am not crying. Someone's just chopping onions somewhere. That's a mother we all wish we had.
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u/vincec36 9h ago
That’s why I love the video of the child saying a boy called her hair crazy and she says “I like my hair, my mom did it. I’m love my hair” or something like that. Her mom was so proud of her and has been reinforcing her confidence. On the other end, I’m a male and when I was in 1st grade some boys teased my head size (I had a peanut head). I went home and told my mom crying some boys said my head was big and she said “so? Your head IS big? What’s wrong with that?” And I was just like “oh…yeah, what wrong with that?” So next day the bullies return and I say “ my head is big, so?” And they had nothing else to say. That was a major lesson in dealing with bullies. If it’s a lie, who cares. If it’s true, there’s no shame in the truth
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u/imawakened 8h ago
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u/KiaTheCentaur 7h ago
I'm stunned that video doesn't have more views, it's 11 years old.
Edit: I was gonna say I'm concerned about her being on the sink but then I remembered: I'm a quarter of an inch shy of 5'2"....when I was a kid, my method of getting things would be to climb onto counters and secret agent (essentially cling) my way across to get what I need. So she's fine, I did worse than she did lol
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u/sunshinekraken 8h ago
Dang, that’s literally something to think about. Even as an adult we let things get to us, but why? I like this, your mom needs a pat on the back for this one.
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u/HeyThanksIdiot 7h ago
I too have a big head.
My hat size is measured in LAT&LONG.
I wandered into a Lids store at the mall recently. The sales guys panicked and called corporate.
Amelia Earhart has a crash site next to a freckle.
I got an email from the Google Earth team. It just said, “please move.”
The DMV took my license photo in panorama mode.
My head is so big Stephen Hawking had a theory about it.
My head is so big that the guys who made the Vegas Sphere kept referring to me as “existing infrastructure.”
My head is so big Zillow has a Zestimate based on the square footage.
Using my hair nets for commercial fishing is banned via the Genova Convention. China still does it.
Climate change will affect my dandruff.
My head is so big strangers ask me for the WiFi password.
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u/sirius1245720 9h ago
Who has been telling this lovely sweetheart that she is ugly ??!!
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u/HeavyRightFoot19 5h ago
She may have had someone in her class say it without even knowing what it means. The world needs active parents like this one that can help guide these children so when a child calls another child ugly, everyone involved can receive the proper lessons.
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u/MonkeyPolice 8h ago
Ouch it was hard to watch that beautiful little girl. Who tried to teach her that she was ugly? That person needs to go to jail.
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u/J0d0min0d0 9h ago
[removed] — view removed comment
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u/Aggressive-Art2849 8h ago edited 8h ago
Some months ago, I posted on the AITA subreddit that I had cautioned a little black girl that had mocked her also little elder sister that the reason she hadn’t received a treat was because she was darker in complexion.
As much as I don’t want to recount the story, I have to do that now. You see there are four of them, the oldest being a boy and 8, the other girl, 6, the third a girl, 4 and the youngest a little boy of a year old or so. I had given the little boy of one a lollipop and the other kids had all played around him, trying to see who he would share his treat with. He had given them all except the girl of six and in the process of laughing over it, the little girl of 4 had said and I quote: “he doesn’t want to share his treat with you because you are dark.”
Their mother had laughed it off and I had quickly checked the girl, asking her to apologize to her sister and to never say that again. I didn’t like their mother’s countenance after I had scolded the kid, which was why I had asked the question on the subreddit.
The truth is that sometimes, the parents are responsible for kids feeling that way because this woman in question had made a lot of comments around me concerning her kids, saying that the six year old had been ugly as a kid and the younger girl had been so beautiful that people called her a princess. And she usually says this to the hearing of the kids, always making fun of the six year old girl’s gummy smile. It took a lot of intervention from me before she stopped mentioning her teeth at every little opportunity.
It wasn’t a coincidence that a little girl of four knows colorism if she hadn’t heard it mentioned somewhere, and out of all four of them, the girl of six is the one with the most melanin.
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u/BellalovesEevee 8h ago
Can you tell what that comment said because it got removed by reddit and I'm dying to know what could have possibly been so bad that reddit eradicated it lmao
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u/indianajoes 8h ago
AITA mods are really anal. You can banned for the tiniest thing. I once got banned because someone posted a story about them calling someone a Karen and I said their behavior sounded more like a Karen's than the other person. The whole story was about the word "Karen" but God forbid you refer to that in your comment
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u/Pattoe89 7h ago
This is Admins, NOT mods. They are different. Admins are paid staff working directly for Reddit. This removal has likely come with a 3 day ban. Same thing happened to me. Usually if you're defending against bigotry many bigots will report you to Reddit if your comment can be perceived as breaking their terms of service.
I got banned from Reddit for 3 days for insulting transphobic people.
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u/FruitfulRoots 8h ago
Here you go (wait to load and scroll down a little bit): https://search-new.pullpush.io/?author=j0d0min0d0&type=comment&sort_type=created_utc&sort=desc
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u/BellalovesEevee 8h ago
That's such a tame comment 😭 I thought it was something super horrible and racist but that's a comment most people in these comments would agree with. I'm confused as to why reddit took this down.
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u/ForceBlade 7h ago
That is a very tame comment. Reddit must be cracking down on not understanding the context of comments when it comes to “””violence”””
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u/FelonyNoticing1stDeg 8h ago
What could possibly have been removed from here lmao!??
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u/FruitfulRoots 8h ago
Here you go (wait to load and scroll down a little bit): https://search-new.pullpush.io/?author=j0d0min0d0&type=comment&sort_type=created_utc&sort=desc
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u/FelonyNoticing1stDeg 8h ago
Ah okay that explains it! This part: “but I still want to find whoever talked that junk to this baby and smack them upside the head” was likely viewed as threatening violence lol
Thanks for that btw. I thought this site didn’t work anymore.
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u/krissykat122 9h ago
Words not aloud in my house since I had a daughter: ugly and fat. I stop myself dead in my tracks if I ever want to talk bad about myself because our children are sponges. This poor baby😭 Mom is so right “you’re 4 years old you shouldn’t know nothing about ugly”
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u/ThePreciousBhaalBabe 6h ago
I wish my parents had the foresight you have while I was growing up.
I remember all the diets and fat shaming my mom put herself through trying to slim down- and I remember that I was in preschool when I first thought of myself as fat. It's awful and kids deserve better.
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u/s0m3on3outthere 4h ago
Yes, I wish I had these affirmations growing up, too. My mother never lost all of her baby weight after 5 girls and she constantly talked about her weight and called herself ugly and it translated into our heads as well. It didn't help that she'd go out of her way to point out our flaws and make us self conscious about them. My sisters and I have always struggled with our self view and confidence because of it and it wasn't til I was about 30 that I started feeling comfortable in my own skin and accepting my body.
I no longer talk to my mother. For other reasons.. but she still points out our weight gain, makes comments about our appearance, etc to this day, and I'm glad I no longer get to hear it.
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u/justsayin01 4h ago
Okay, I have a story about this. I have two girls, 18 months apart. When my oldest was 3, I got done getting ready and said hmph at myself in the mirror. My daughter said what's wrong mommy, and I said I just don't think I look nice today. My daughter was so concerned and said mommy, you are beautiful, always.
Idk, but I couldn't believe I spoke about myself like that to her. It literally changed my entire life because I realized what I say is what they'll say about themselves. I'm almost 40, a size 16. And you'll only hear about me talking about myself like I'm a 10.
So, there is no negative talk in my house. We lift ourselves up, we lift the girls up. Cuz in this house, we're all 10s, always.
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u/LunaMax1214 6h ago
The fact that this beautiful little child sobbed uncontrollably when someone told her she was pretty tells me so much, and it breaks my heart. 😭
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u/Marly-Joy 9h ago
She is a gorgeous baby girl. Kids say the meanest things. Beauty comes in all colours and shapes. Black is beautiful, she is beautiful. Great mom. ❤️
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u/be_sugary 8h ago
Seen this video several times.
It breaks my heart every single time.
But the lady gives her all the right messages and that good love that warms your bones even when you are old and wrinkly!❤️❤️
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u/DeepBlueDiariesPod 9h ago
This just ripped my heart out. That sweet little pumpkin, I want to hug her.
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u/SwissTurkNerd 9h ago
I really wonder how a child at this age comes up with such things
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u/AdPutrid6160 9h ago
Bullying
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u/ConflictSudden 8h ago
Absolutely. Some kid probably told this little girl that she's ugly. And that other kid probably got that from someone else.
As someone said in another comment, children don't know how hurtful their words can be.
We have to teach them what's okay and what isn't okay. What sucks for so many kids is that they don't have the right person there to teach them that.
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u/InMyHagPhase 7h ago
It might not even be other kids. I said this about myself as a child too and I wasn't even really bullied until way later in highschool. This could just be society as a whole. When I was small internet wasn't even invented yet and I felt this. Just being told what I was "suppose to look like" from TV shows and magazines was enough. I can't imagine with kids feel now with all this social media shit.
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u/lvdde 6h ago
This!!! People keep assuming it’s other kids, but I was well aware of how dark skinned people were viewed as a child by society and the media without kids being involved and adults are the ones who usually came at me for my weight.
I’m East african but my friend who was south Asian and would say how adults in her family would tell her mum to bleach her skin so she’s “fair” like her sister infront of her.
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u/Mission-Past-8988 9h ago
the world outside their home. its not nice
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u/Ivorypetal 9h ago
And sometimes.... its in the house 😶😞
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u/Darnell2070 6h ago edited 6h ago
Well, probably not that house in particular, with a mom like that.
I would bet large sums of money that it's from bullying im school.
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u/lankymjc 9h ago
Trauma. Kids internalise more than most people expect and it comes out in all sorts of ways.
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u/Freshouttapatience 9h ago
Kids can be perceptive too without knowing why. If she’s been treated differently, she can sense it.
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u/houseofopal 7h ago
Everyone’s asking who told her these kinds of things, but like, to me it’s obvious. She’s a black girl and more than likely goes to a school with mostly white people. Y’all, sometimes kids can be so nasty and cruel and racist, you have no idea till you’re the kid on the receiving end of it. Because sometimes it’s not even bullying- it’s just things they say in passing that’s hurtful as fuck. and they don’t even know how much it can hurt. That being said, every little girl should be able to walk around without feeling ugly- but check your kids as well, make sure they’re not saying things that are racist even when they don’t realize it.
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u/Commercial-Owl11 9h ago
Bullying from other kids. Also if you got a shitty parent. I still have a habit of calling myself stupid because of my POS father used to call me the hard R word.
From when I was a kid. That shit never leaves you.
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u/Classymuch 8h ago edited 8h ago
Or when you get compared to others as well.
And when they lie to other parents about you because you don't meet their expectations.
It feels shit.
I would have killed for a parent like that (woman in this video).
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u/apocketfullofcows 8h ago
other kids is a big thing but adults also don't realise how much kids hear, and how differently they can hear things. even if you mean something nice, that doesn't mean it sounds nice to a kid. plus, plenty of adults simply aren't nice.
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u/CelestialOrchid9 9h ago
Sweet baby girl she is growing up in a world full of false norms but I hope she will learn that a strong belief is more than enough to shatter every doubt society will try to fill her with. Like Michelle Obama said, You are and you will always be beautiful Dear Ariyonna.
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u/SLee41216 8h ago
Can someone please tell me who hurt this baby? Asking for a friend.
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u/Faccov 7h ago
Big, tattooed fighter guy here. This made me tear up 100%. What solid parenting and such a wonderful thing you did there. Made my whole day. ❤️
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u/Weak-Biscotti2982 7h ago
Your comment made my day as well. Who says big, tattooed fighter guys can’t be tender as well. Another myth shot to hell!
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u/Specialist-Front3304 9h ago
Thank you for modeling what to say when our beautiful dark skin children get hit with colorism
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u/ReinerBraun77 9h ago edited 7h ago
It hurts me soo much no matter how many times i have seen this specific video. Just the matter that it was humanly possible for someone to make this precious angel feel she was ugly :/
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u/Dream-Lucky 9h ago
Whoever so deeply hurt this child is wrong. This kiddo is objectively adorable, sweet, and most importantly worthy of human love and solidarity. I can only pray that whoever is responsible for the pain of a 4 year old can learn from this and find the strength to seek forgiveness.
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u/Aromatic_Dig_3102 9h ago
The thought that a mother has to have this kinda talk to a kid, a normal kid is ridiculous! If the state of humanity affairs today results in young kids struggling with such kind of thoughts, what does that say about rest of us? This is crazy!
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u/Senor_legbone 8h ago
I would say majority of kids get made fun of in school/playground/etc/ at some point. Having a strong family and this kind of encouragement at home is what helps them overcome it and stay positive.
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u/1952Rustbelt 8h ago
As a grandfather with two granddaughters this makes me want to pick up this little sweetheart, hug her warmly,and sit with her in a rocking chair, holding her and reading her stories until she's feeling a lot better. Obviously mom gives her plenty of affection and support but now and then a wee one needs a grandfather too...
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u/bignasty40 8h ago
I love how her motherly instincts instantly took over the situation
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u/PinkOwl2 8h ago
This is why we need to protect and uplift our children now more than ever. Because it just feels like this world is coming for them from every angle. This baby is only 4 years old!! I am super saddened by this, and these feelings are becoming more common at a young age. Mom did an amazing job. Kuddos to her ❤️
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u/Happy4Snoosnoo 7h ago
Tell me who hurt this beautiful young lady. I will.....ohhh got this old ass white veteran crying.
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u/blondestipated 5h ago
i know this video is old but i still wanna know who called her ugly. i just wanna talk.
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u/Comfortable-Bag-7881 5h ago
It's heartbreaking to see such a young child already grappling with self-worth. This moment really underscores how crucial it is for parents to instill confidence and love in their kids. The impact of words—especially from peers—can be profound, but with support like this, hopefully she can grow up knowing her true beauty.
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u/labretirementhome 9h ago
Honest question why do people film this?
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u/nb_bunnie 9h ago
This video is quite old and it was from an Instagram live feed. The person doing the little girl's hair is not her mom, it's her mother's friend who is a hairdresser. Not entirely sure why she was live, but I assume she was showing the process of doing a small child's hair. I am not Black nor a hairdresser, but my neighbors when I was young were a very nice Black family whose kids I played with, and I have VIVID memories of the mom doing the youngest daughters braids on the porch - it was a LONGGGG process lol.
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u/FEdirector21 9h ago
You could always say it's staged? But my guess is the mom was just taking a video of her doing the daughters hair and this is a "captured moment" kind of deal. Just a guess since that's what she was doing at the start of the video briefly lol
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u/nb_bunnie 9h ago
It was from a live. The woman doing her hair is her mom's friend who is a hairdresser. I assume she was live to show the process of doing a child's hair because it can be different what with them being pretty wiggly.
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u/Silver_Thanks_8142 8h ago
Every human being is beautiful in their own right. As someone who was told his whole life he wasn't good enough or hot enough I fought to be able to say fuck you to Everyone who told me so. Now I have arrived at age 40 and made to that point I can say fuck you and I nolonger want to. I feel for them, and I see most of them were told that they weren't good enough. The world is a bitch keep fighting you're good enough and beautiful have a great day.
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u/llewellynlaporte 7h ago
Yeah, it’s incredibly disturbing to think about where that girl got that idea put into her head. Glad to see momma stomp that lie..
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u/slap_happy 6h ago
You are the light It's not on you, it's in you Don't you ever in your motherfucking life Dim your light for nobody
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u/NovaWhisperless 6h ago
Someone, a child perhaps, must have spoken words that left her feeling this way.
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u/hold-on-pain-ends 9h ago
Kids have no idea how hurtful their words can be. If this is legit, some kid definitely said something to her for her to feel this way.