You're tired. You're stretched thin, and some days you just want to drink tea that's still hot.
I've tried the cartoons. The YouTube Kids. Even the "educational" apps.
Most of what's out there isn't just noisy - it's damaging.
I started to notice the changes.
After screen time, my kids weren't calmer. They were wired, cranky, short-tempered.
Their attention span was shrinking. Their curiosity was dull.
And it broke my heart.
These apps and videos aren't just keeping them busy.
They're training them -
- To expect fast rewards,
- To lose interest quickly,
- To want more and more and more… but never feel satisfied.
And I thought:
"This can't be what childhood is meant to look like."
Then I found something different.
A video bundle - 2,150 short videos -
Nothing flashy. No talking animals. No ads or jump cuts.
Just hands making toys. Building things. Solving tiny, real-world problems.
Folding. Cutting. Gluing. Creating.
It felt like quiet magic.
My kids watched someone build a cardboard house.
Then they ran to the kitchen and tried to build their own.
They weren't just watching.
They were thinking. Planning. Trying. Failing and trying again.
This wasn't screen time.
It was a spark.
Imagine giving your child 15 minutes of screen time…
and they come back more focused than before.
Imagine a calm afternoon,
no shouting characters,
no overstimulation,
just soft visuals and the gentle rhythm of creativity.
Imagine screen time that doesn't leave you feeling guilty.
That makes your child curious, calm, and ready to make something real.
That's what this bundle does.
It doesn't steal their attention - it gives it back to them.
This isn't a course. It's not another parenting hack.
It's just a better option,
for the moments when you need a breather,
but still want to give your child something good.
It's ₦9,999. That's it.
Instant download. No logins. No weird apps.
Just real, hands-on content your child can watch, copy, and grow from.
Because the screen isn't the enemy.
The wrong content is.
And we still have the power to choose what goes in front of their eyes.
A mom who's choosing calm over chaos, one video at a time