michaelxmell:

uhhhh no offense but think about what you say to kids because likeโ€ฆ when I was a kid all I heard was my friends saying โ€œno one wants to hear you sing shut upโ€ until fifth grade I was singing under my breath โ€œwe will rock youโ€ by KISS because I had one of those toothtunes toothbrushes that played it and my teacher stopped me and was likeโ€ฆ do that again. And I thought I was in trouble because no one wanted to hear me sing so I didnโ€™t at first but she kinda coaxed me into it and once I sang it she was like โ€œthatโ€™s good! Thatโ€™s actually really good, sorry, Iโ€™m a little surprised! Wow!โ€ And it literally changed my whole life I immediately ran off to try and join the talent show (I was too late) and I did honor choir and joined choir in 6th grade and here I am now, doing a bachelors in music education with an emphasis in voice, and looking at doing my masters in musical theater performance. I owe literally everything to the fact that my 5th grade math/homeroom teacher stopped me and made me sing a little for her and took that time to tell me that I was good at it. That was a 2 minute interaction that I doubt she even remembers but it literally changed my entire life.

tl;dr: the things you say can have the most profound effect on a kids life. Think about what youโ€™re saying the next time you tell a kid something. You never know if that 30 second interaction is going to affect their life forever, so why not make it a good one, huh?