There's a quiet magic in 'The Rabbit Listened' that resonates deeply with parents, and I think it’s because the book mirrors what we all wish we could do perfectly—just be there for our kids. The story follows Taylor, a child who experiences disappointment, and the animals who offer well-meaning but often misguided advice. The rabbit, though? It doesn’t swoop in with solutions or pep talks. It sits. It listens. That’s the heart of it. Parenting isn’t about fixing every scraped knee or shattered block tower; sometimes, it’s about letting emotions breathe without interruption.
What struck me most was how the book validates a child’s right to feel. So many stories push quick resolutions or moral lessons, but 'The Rabbit Listened' honors the messy, nonlinear process of healing. Parents adore it because it’s a gentle reminder that our presence matters more than our words. The illustrations, soft and warm, add to this vibe—they’re like a visual hug. It’s become a bedtime staple in our house, not because it’s flashy, but because it feels like a quiet conversation about what love really looks like.
I gifted 'The Rabbit Listened' to my sister when her toddler was going through a phase of big, inexplicable tantrums. She texted me later saying, 'This book gets it.' That’s the genius of it—it doesn’t preach. Kids aren’t puzzles to solve, and parents aren’t manuals. The rabbit’s patience taps into that universal parenting guilt: Am I doing enough? Spoiler: Just listening is enough. The book’s simplicity is its strength, making it a go-to for families navigating big feelings.
2025-12-09 13:57:16
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“If you ever call that bastard my child again, I will yank it out of your belly!”
My heart shatters like a knife plunged deep. I stay still, my body shaking.
“Now sign these papers and get out of my life!” he barks, throwing the papers at me. “If I ever see you close to me or my territory, I will have you beheaded in the most painful way imaginable!”
****
Isla Monroe had given up everything: her dreams, her wishes, even her best friend; just to please her cold, distant husband. She endured the silence, the neglect, the loneliness, hoping that one day he would change… that he would finally look at her as something more than just the trophy wife.
The day she learned she was pregnant, Isla was accused of an affair with the gardener. The staff turned on her, her family cast her out, and Marcus believed them without question.
Saving her unborn babies was more important than proving her innocence, so Isla left quietly.
“From now onwards, I will be your mother and your father. I will never let those who discarded us come close to you.”
She fled the city. Five years later, Marcus runs into two identical little children who look just like him. They have his red lips and deep blue eyes. He is instantly drawn to them.
“Little one, who is your mother?”
The children point to Isla, the wife he discarded, now powerful and determined to keep him from her children.
“Get away from my children!” she hisses, urging the nannies to take them away. “Didn’t I tell you not to speak to strangers, my babies?”
Marcus is shocked. But what will he do when he finds out she is married to his blood, his rival?
Drama with a twist.
Mom was a top student at a prestigious school and had always been determined to be the best at everything.
She demanded that I learn to walk by seven months, speak fluently by eighteen months, and master all addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division by the age of three.
I did all of it. Yet Mom still felt it wasn’t enough.
However, when my younger brother, Liam, didn’t speak until he was five, Mom clapped and cheered when he finally did, celebrating his “late-blooming brilliance”.
I didn’t think anything of it.
Until one day, I was wearing headphones, memorizing Spanish words, and accidentally let the sound leak out, scaring Liam. He clutched his chest and cried, saying his heart hurt.
Mom’s eyes turned red as she stormed over and slapped me. Then she grabbed my ear, twisting it a full 360 degrees with all her strength.
The pain in my ear was so intense that I lost all feeling, and the fear made me nauseous to the point of vomiting.
Still, Mom forced the headphones back on, cranked the volume to the maximum, and locked me in the storage room to reflect.
“How could I give birth to such a terrible child? You’re just jealous of Liam. No matter how much I do for you, you’ll never appreciate it!
“Love listening to words, huh? Then listen all you want.”
But seven days later, when she opened the door, she completely lost it.
On the day I received my prenatal test results, I heard a voice from inside my belly—my unborn child speaking to me.
'Mom, Dad will divorce you as soon as you give birth to me. His true love can't have children. That's why he married you. You're just a tool to give birth. Once I'm born, he'll divorce you, take me away, and go live happily ever after with her.'
I believed every word.
Without hesitation, I chose divorce.
For nine months, I focused on carrying the pregnancy, planning to raise the child on my own. But on the day I went into labor, something went terribly wrong.
The doctor said the baby was premature, and the position was dangerously abnormal.
"The baby keeps flipping around inside you," she said. "It's like it's deliberately putting you through hell."
Eight hours of emergency treatment accomplished nothing.
In the end, it was a difficult labor—both mother and child died.
As my consciousness faded, I heard that voice again. 'Haha. Dad never cheated at all. I lied to you.'
Why would a child lie?
I couldn't understand it, not even at the moment of death.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back on the very day I first received the prenatal test report.
My mom is terrified of being laughed at by others the most.
Whenever the holidays are here, she will keep repeating one sentence to me—"Don't go around embarrassing me."
When my relatives gather around and chat with each other, I accidentally knock a fruit platter over. Mom drags me over and slaps me on the spot.
At the holiday feast, I grab extra pieces of steak for myself. Mom responds by kicking my chair over.
When it's time for the holiday gifts to be distributed, my aunt, Gabriella Hall, has miscalculated the number of children present among the family. So, she has prepared one less gift for the occasion.
Mom doesn't hesitate to kick me out of the apartment, leaving me shivering in the cold corridor in just my indoor clothes.
The icy winds chill me to the bone. I keep slamming my palms on the front door while screaming and crying my apologies at Mom, and yet she remains unmoved and silent.
Instead, she turns to face Aunt Gabriella with an apologetic smile on her face.
"I'm really sorry. I didn't raise my daughter well. It's only fair that you ridicule me."
What Mom doesn't know is that I get triggered whenever I hear the word "ridicule" thanks to her so-called parenting lessons. Whenever I hear that word, I want nothing more than to hurt myself uncontrollably.
So when I hear the word "ridicule" coming out of Mom's mouth through the front door, I turn on my heel quietly and begin making my way toward the bridge next to the neighborhood that's plunged into darkness.
The moment I jump from the bridge, the only thought I have is, "Mom, no one will ridicule you because of me this time."
Reading 'The Rabbit Listened' felt like a warm hug after a rough day. The story follows Taylor, a kid who builds something amazing only to see it crash down—literally. Everyone around offers advice, from the chicken who wants to talk it out to the bear who suggests roaring in anger. But it’s the rabbit, who simply sits and listens without judgment, that truly helps Taylor heal. The message hit me hard: sometimes, people don’t need solutions or pep talks; they just need someone to be present with their pain. It’s a quiet reminder that empathy isn’t about fixing things but about holding space for others’ emotions.
What I love most is how the book mirrors real life. We’ve all been Taylor, overwhelmed by frustration or sadness, and we’ve also been the well-meaning animals, scrambling to 'help' in ways that miss the mark. The rabbit’s approach is so deceptively simple yet profound—it teaches kids (and adults!) that healing often starts with feeling heard. The illustrations’ soft colors and gentle expressions amplify this vibe, making it a book I’ve gifted to friends going through tough times. It’s rare to find a children’s story that resonates equally with grown-ups, but this one nails it.