@axmedcabdiraxmaan05: #surah: Al: Nisaa#foryou #fyp #siifaafi_oo_gaarsii_walaalo_kale

@Ahmed Abdirahmaan
@Ahmed Abdirahmaan
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Monday 08 June 2026 18:07:36 GMT
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AHMED DOLLARS 11 :
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AHMED MARIAMA :
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MONIR AHMAD 🇧🇩🇸🇦 :
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1. He said it started when he watched his class during exams. Some kids tapped their knees rhythmically, some twisted pencils, but a few simply placed one palm over the other on the desk — still, but present. Those children never panicked. Curious, he filmed the sessions and later realized this “rested hands” gesture wasn’t coincidence — it was self-regulation. “Their bodies were teaching them safety without words,” he said.   2. When he shared his notes with a developmental psychologist, she explained it through proprioception — the brain’s map of where the body is in space. When a child touches their own hands, it sends a looped signal of security back to the brainstem. “It’s the same system activated when an infant holds their foot,” she said. That tiny feedback lowers adrenaline and grounds attention. Calm doesn’t start in the mind — it starts in the palms.   3. The teacher tested it intentionally. He asked the anxious students to rest one hand over the other before answering a question. Within two weeks, their fidgeting dropped by 40%. Grades improved slightly, but what shocked him was the change in tone — fewer sighs, slower speech, softer eyes. “It’s not focus, it’s orientation,” he said. “Their bodies finally knew they were safe.”   4. He then tried it with parents during conferences. When adults folded hands calmly before speaking, conflict decreased. “It’s the same gesture monks use while listening,” the psychologist noted. “It keeps the nervous system in cooperation mode, not defense.” One mother cried after realizing her son had been doing this unconsciously during arguments at home — trying to ground himself while she shouted.   5. The teacher now starts every class by saying, “Hands remember peace.” The gesture spread across the school. Even teachers began using it before meetings. Calm, he realized, is not a skill you teach — it’s a position you return to. The body knew the code all along; adults just forgot how to listen. When was the last time your body told your mind to slow down? Follow for more child psychology insights.
1. He said it started when he watched his class during exams. Some kids tapped their knees rhythmically, some twisted pencils, but a few simply placed one palm over the other on the desk — still, but present. Those children never panicked. Curious, he filmed the sessions and later realized this “rested hands” gesture wasn’t coincidence — it was self-regulation. “Their bodies were teaching them safety without words,” he said. 2. When he shared his notes with a developmental psychologist, she explained it through proprioception — the brain’s map of where the body is in space. When a child touches their own hands, it sends a looped signal of security back to the brainstem. “It’s the same system activated when an infant holds their foot,” she said. That tiny feedback lowers adrenaline and grounds attention. Calm doesn’t start in the mind — it starts in the palms. 3. The teacher tested it intentionally. He asked the anxious students to rest one hand over the other before answering a question. Within two weeks, their fidgeting dropped by 40%. Grades improved slightly, but what shocked him was the change in tone — fewer sighs, slower speech, softer eyes. “It’s not focus, it’s orientation,” he said. “Their bodies finally knew they were safe.” 4. He then tried it with parents during conferences. When adults folded hands calmly before speaking, conflict decreased. “It’s the same gesture monks use while listening,” the psychologist noted. “It keeps the nervous system in cooperation mode, not defense.” One mother cried after realizing her son had been doing this unconsciously during arguments at home — trying to ground himself while she shouted. 5. The teacher now starts every class by saying, “Hands remember peace.” The gesture spread across the school. Even teachers began using it before meetings. Calm, he realized, is not a skill you teach — it’s a position you return to. The body knew the code all along; adults just forgot how to listen. When was the last time your body told your mind to slow down? Follow for more child psychology insights.

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