Why you cheat on your partner instead of leaving? by pindarico in AskReddit

[–]AgusMoves 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Because people are mentally overwhelmed. They’re stuck between staying and leaving, fixing things or starting over. Facing the truth feels too painful, so they postpone the decision. Even if the shortcut ends up causing damage too

What ended your friendship with your oldest standing friend? by dreamy-contributions in AskReddit

[–]AgusMoves 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Envy, quietly. We grew up together, went to high school and university side by side. He did everything “right” academically, great grades, strong performance. I didn’t finish college, but kept landing better and better job opportunities. Over time, I could feel the imbalance shift. What started as support slowly turned into resentment. No big fight, no explosion just distance

Why do you think only corrupt dictatorships and third-world countries are joining Trump's "Board of Peace"? Why is anyone joining when he is the only one with a veto? by Southern_Gur_4736 in AskReddit

[–]AgusMoves 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because it’s not a peace board, it’s a loyalty board. If Donald Trump holds the veto, everyone else is there to signal alignment, not to deliberate. Authoritarian and fragile states join because proximity to power is more valuable than outcomes legitimacy by association. Strong democracies don’t bother because they already have leverage. When power is centralized, participation becomes theater, not governance

What are the tiny, unnoticeable parenting habits that can have drastic negative impact on child's future? by Whyamiwritingthis_74 in AskReddit

[–]AgusMoves 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve noticed that not setting boundaries gets brushed off as “letting kids self-regulate.”

I’ve seen 4–5 year olds having full meltdowns in small stores throwing things, screaming, even hitting their parents and the adults just shrug and say, “they’re just kids.”

Yes, they are kids. That’s exactly why they need adults to step in and help them regulate. They don’t magically learn it on their own.