Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier
16.6K posts

Nicole Hostier retweetledi

Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi

This will NOT be one of the kids, which "learned" swimming in a different way" this will be a kid (and later person) which will get a panic attack when he/she sees water - and here are my TOP 10 REASONs for that:
1. Because the child thinks they’re about to die.
This isn’t “teaching survival” - it’s inducing pure terror. A toddler has no concept of “training.” Their tiny brain interprets this as “I’m drowning. No one is saving me.”
2. It’s not training - it’s trauma.
What’s being wired into the child’s brain isn’t floating. It’s panic, abandonment, and learned helplessness. This is how you create phobias, not swimmers.
3. Water becomes a lifelong trigger.
That sweet family beach trip one day? Ruined. Many of these kids will grow up associating water with fear, betrayal, and suffocation. Splash, and their heart rate spikes.
4. It normalizes abuse under the disguise of “tough love.”
Let’s call it what it is: a physically and emotionally violent act. You wouldn’t toss your child into traffic to teach road safety - so why is water any different?
5. There’s no consent.
The child isn’t being taught - they’re being subjected. A toddler cannot agree to this. They don’t get to say “No.” It’s a non-consensual, fear-based experience.
6. “Surviving” ≠ “learning.”
Just because the child manages to float after 30 seconds of terror doesn’t mean they “learned” to swim. They survived. Barely. At what cost?
7. It endangers lives instead of protecting them.
A false sense of safety is created. Parents think, “My kid can float, we’re good.” No. These kids can still drown - often silently. This doesn’t replace supervision or proper lessons.
8. It teaches the wrong lesson: No one will help you.
The child looks around, desperate, as adults watch with cameras and smiles. What’s learned? “I’m on my own. Even when I cry, no one saves me.” That’s heartbreaking.
9. It ignores actual child development science.
Modern child psychology, neurology, and pedagogy all agree: learning happens best through safety, trust, and repetition - not trauma. This method spits in the face of everything we know.
10. It gambles with a life for a viral moment.
Too often, these stunts are filmed, shared, and praised for likes. But you know what doesn't go viral? The kids who actually slip under and don’t come back up.
So, it’s disgusting - and people who do that should have their children taken away and placed with someone who actually cares about them.
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Nicole Hostier retweetledi
Nicole Hostier retweetledi
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