
3.3M
RIParents often believe that very young children “don’t understand much,” but the truth is quite the opposite. Even at 2–3 years old, a child’s brain is like a sponge, constantly observing, absorbing, and learning from everything they see and hear. They may not be able to express it in words, but their brain is actively storing these experiences.
At this age, the brain is still developing and cannot clearly differentiate between real and imaginary. When a child watches a violent movie like Dhrundhar 2, the brain processes those intense scenes as something real. This can activate their fear system (amygdala), making them feel unsafe, anxious, or disturbed without understanding why. Over time, repeated exposure can affect their emotional development.
Long and intense content, like a 4-hour violent film, is especially overwhelming for such a young brain. It can lead to restlessness, disturbed sleep, aggression, or even withdrawal. Children may start imitating what they see because their learning happens through observation, not logic.
As parents, being mindful of what your child watches is not just a small choice it shapes how their brain grows. Protecting them from such exposure is not about restriction, but about giving their mind the safe, healthy environment it needs to develop emotionally and psychologically in the right way.
#reels #psychology #movie #dhurandhar
@rituuuuuuuuuuu










