However, we are now back at school and work and like many, I want to start the new year in the style in which I wish to continue, and that means less screen time for the kids...Is anyone else sick of hearing 'ALL my friends are allowed to do ...xyz.'? My mother would have said, "If your friends go and stick their head in a gas oven, will you do the same?" I always thought this was a strange analogy and have never quite understood the logic, but I get the general sentiment, however I think it has become a more difficult argument.
In the 'Old Days' we didn't really have any idea what our friends got up to once they were at home. We only had their word for it and that wasn't really very reliable, as we know teens can be selective with the truth at the best of times. But now we have social media...people can see what everyone else is up to all the time. Worse than that, they get to see only the best bits of what people get up to so there is a tendency to get a very distorted view. (No one posts the really shit, boring bits of their life, or very few...). This makes my teen think that she is getting a very raw deal and talking to other mothers of teens, they are all thinking the same. So what is to be done? Well first of all I know the teen is on her phone a lot, even her own friends say that, so that suggests compared to them she is a high user. So anything that I can do to reduce it, I will do, regardless of what the teen thinks her friends are up to. This includes:
- Not having her phone in her room as night (the biggest bone of contention) Why would you want it in there? You are asleep, I would NEVER have my phone in my room overnight, although apparently EVERYONE does
- Having some time away from it completely, as in in a different room
- And lastly having a complete tech ban during meals and when visiting the olds etc.
The BBC, published the findings of a recent survey on this topic, another sign that I am not the only one struggling. There suggestions are:
The suggestions include:
- planning family activities that do not include technology
- creating a weekly schedule based on the idea of one hour of technology use equalling one hour on other activities
- recreating favourite childhood games
- parents turning off their devices at the same time as children have screen-free time
It is one of the privileges of youth that you think that you know everything and the whole world revolves around you. We have all been through it and recognise it as part of growing up. It is not until you get into the real world that you see this isn't the case and that your Mum was right all along. So I have decided that my teen needs to get herself into the real world, get a job where she has to do what she says, when she says she it going to and see for herself that everyone is treated differently according to their attitude, skills and merits etc. And most importantly, where you will not be allowed to be on your phone.
Life isn't fair and you can never put yourself in another persons shoes, but it would still be good to find out what other Mums are doing with this issue?
Love
TYB x
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