Before age 7, the brain runs in a state of radical openness. It doesn't filter. It absorbs and records everything — as truth.
Their sense of worth. Their relationship with failure. Their belief in themselves.
All of it is being assembled right now. Mostly without anyone realising it.
The programming happens either way.
Liora makes it intentional.


Children are neurologically wide open. Belief formation isn't just possible — it's automatic.
What enters during this window doesn't just shape behaviour.
It becomes identity.
During sleep the brain returns to its most receptive state.
What your child hears at this threshold reaches deeper than anything said in a distracted moment during the day.
Children don't build self-concept through single conversations.
They build it through what gets repeated— quietly, consistently, over time.

Think about the voice in your own head — the one that says I'm not enough or I don't deserve this.
That voice wasn't chosen. It was installed. In the earliest years.
Through small moments nobody thought to be intentional about.
Now imagine your child growing up with a different default.
I am capable.
I am worthy.
I belong here.
Not because they were told once.
Because it was woven in — from the start.
