According to the website, TruuConfessions is the “anonymous best friend” who can offer women and moms encouragement, kind words and even a laugh or two. It is, in essence, a microblogging platform that lets users anonymously or identifiably post gripes, joys and other anecdotes when it simply isn’t possible or appropriate to say it directly to a loved one. “Go ahead and confess yourself. We won’t tell!” says TruuConfessions. It also is fee; no payday loans are needed to pay for the service with money now.

TruuConfessions is organized by section

  • Moms: Talk about kids and issues related to parenting. Maybe even scream about it.
  • Wives: Whether a wife wants to dish, complain or read the riot act over hubby, this is the place.
  • Brides: Discuss the wedding and wedding prep – or affairs, if that applies, and you need to practice your confession.
  • Single/dating: Advice and lots of resources without all the pay walls.
  • Body/diet: All the tips, and room to vent frustrations, that you’ll need.
  • Office: Got a beef with the boss, a glass ceiling or anything else work-related that’s eating you?

TruuConfessions is anonymous only AFTER you delete your browsing history

This is an great point that Long Island Press brings up in its recent blurb on TruuConfessions: Users may be anonymous to other users on TruuConfessions, but browsing history makes confessions retrievable for anyone with a tiny amount of browser savvy. Whether users are confessing at home, work or on another public computer, deleting browser history afterward is advisable.

Guest articles on TruuConfessions

TruuConfessions features articles from a variety of guest contributors. One example is “TruuConfessions and Answers: 3 Reasons You Should NOT Spank Your Kids.” The author presents some common-sense reasons why children respond better to other disciplinary methods. This is in tune with what experts like Drs. Lise Eliot and Margot Sunderland have to say about child brain chemistry and forms of discipline. In fact, Sunderland’s book “The Science of Parenting” talks extensively about the stress hormone cortisol, which can actually damage developing brains. Children don’t regulate emotions the way adults do, and spanking children just stress the brain and contribute to cortisol build up. The answer, as the TruuConfessions guest blogger suggests, is to be firm but loving, rather than violent.

Sources for the Article

http://www.truuconfessions.com/

http://www.longislandpress.com/2010/04/20/truuconfessions-com-go-ahead-confess-yourself/

Dr. Margot Sunderland http://cn.dk.com/nf/Author/AuthorPage/0,,1000068670,00.html

Dr. Lise Eliot http://www.liseeliot.com/

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