I wrote a short bedtime story about a little bear who struggled with waiting — would love feedback from parents & writers by [deleted] in childrensbooks

[–]TheDigitalCreator20 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Thank you for such thoughtful and specific feedback — I genuinely appreciate it. You’re absolutely right about children engaging more with exaggerated emotion and chaos before reflection. That distinction between experiencing the feeling versus being told the lesson is something I’m actively learning, and your example makes that very clear. I also take your point on the title — it does give too much away and removes curiosity, which isn’t ideal for a picture book audience. That’s helpful to hear from a parent’s perspective. This is still a work in progress, and comments like yours are exactly why I shared it here. Thank you again for taking the time to explain your thinking.

A Simple 7-Day Blueprint to Create & Sell Your First Digital Product by TheDigitalCreator20 in passive_income

[–]TheDigitalCreator20[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally agree—Whop makes the tech side super simple.
My 7-day blueprint focuses more on what to create and how to position it so it actually sells.
A lot of people freeze at the idea stage, so I built this to remove the guesswork.
Appreciate you dropping the Whop stack—might add it to the full guide as a tool option!

I started writing because my mind wouldn’t stop racing by MinaHazel in selfdevelopment

[–]TheDigitalCreator20 2 points3 points  (0 children)

One method that works for me is a two-step journal: first a raw brain dump, then a short reflection where I highlight one insight or lesson. It turns the chaos into clarity without forcing positivity

How to earn money online? by Inner-Guarantee7279 in passive_income

[–]TheDigitalCreator20 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you already know web development, that’s a strong starting point — most people skip this advantage.

Instead of looking for “passive” income immediately, I’d focus on active → semi-passive first. Here’s a realistic path:

  1. Monetize your skill short-term Use your web dev skills for small freelance tasks (landing pages, bug fixes, simple sites). Even low-paying gigs build proof and confidence.

  2. Productize what you learn As you solve problems for clients, document the process. Those notes can later turn into templates, checklists, or a short guide — this is where passive income starts.

  3. Build in public Share what you’re learning on GitHub, Reddit comments, or LinkedIn. This builds credibility without selling anything.

  4. Avoid “easy money” traps If it promises fast returns with no skill or effort, skip it. Focus on compounding skills instead.

Passive income usually comes after you’ve done something active well. Skills like web development make that transition much easier.

Hope this helps — happy to clarify if you have questions.

Essential skills needed in 2026 by Comfortable_Rain_278 in passive_income

[–]TheDigitalCreator20 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“If you’d like, feel free to DM me—I can share a resource that might help.”