PARENTS:Negative VS Positive attituudes

ATTENTION TO PARENTS,Goodboy, was not born, bad.

Goodboy was not born bad.

He was born lonely—into a home where love was replaced by daily fights, harsh words, and silent wounds. Growing up in a battlefield, his young heart slowly learned anger instead of affection, violence instead of understanding. Negativity became his normal.

One day, during a simple game, defeat ignited the rage he had carried for years. In a moment of uncontrollable aggression, he struck his opponent with an iron rod. A life ended instantly. Goodboy was sentenced to 14 years in prison.

When his punishment was over, freedom stood before him. But instead of embracing the open world, he turned back to the jailer and asked to be locked inside again. The chains, the darkness, the loneliness—these felt safer than change. Prison was familiar. Freedom was frightening.

This is the tragedy of a negative attitude: it cages the mind long before the body.

Moral:

Human nature resists change, even positive change. Negativity becomes a comfort zone.

Parenting is a sacred responsibility—because broken homes create broken souls.

Life has no replay, no substitute.

Be alert. Be responsible.

Never turn a Goodboy into a Badboy.

— A story by dailydrdose

STORY ANALYSIS 

This short story powerfully highlights how early environment and parental behavior shape a child’s attitude, emotional stability, and future choices. Goodboy was not born violent; he was conditioned by continuous conflict, negativity, and emotional insecurity at home. When love, guidance, and emotional safety are absent, a child may internalize anger as a survival mechanism.

The story also explains a crucial psychological truth: human beings often resist change, even when change leads to improvement. Long exposure to negativity can make suffering feel familiar and “safe,” while freedom and responsibility feel frightening. This is why Goodboy preferred prison over freedom—his mind was imprisoned long before his body.

For Digital Pathshala learners, the key takeaway is that attitude is learned, not inherited. Parenting, education, and social environment must work together to build emotional intelligence, conflict resolution skills, and positive coping mechanisms.

In the digital age, where children absorb behaviors rapidly, responsible parenting, mindful teaching, and value-based education are essential.

A nurturing environment creates responsible citizens; a toxic one creates broken lives.

Core Moral:

If we fail to shape minds with care, society pays the price later.

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