In every home, children watch, listen, and absorb far more than we often realize. Their eyes follow the subtle tensions, their ears pick up the raised voices, and their hearts register the silence that follows. When parents fall into continuous conflict, the home — which should be a sanctuary — becomes a battlefield. The arguments, the blame, the long stretches of cold distance: all of these leave behind scars that are rarely visible but deeply felt. This is what psychologists today call generational trauma. But even without academic terms, every society knows this truth: when parents remain in conflict, it is the children who silently pay the price.

I have often met young people who carry these invisible burdens. They tell stories not of physical abuse or neglect, but of the atmosphere o

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