Pushkin. Do you remember when you got your first cell phone.
I do.
It was the late nineties and I was a grad student back in Boston. All my friends were starting to get mobile phones, so I wanted one too. I remember sitting outside in Harvard Square and finally unboxing my new Nokia, and it felt really cool, futuristic. Even I could call my mom while walking to work, and I could text my friends. That new Nokia made it easy to travel and to find people while you were out in the world.
Granted it didn't have email, or maps, or music, or a camera or even a calculator, I think, but it was still a game changer even today. I remember that first ring tone very fondly. But if I were to show one of my Yale students that Noki today, they'd probably be very confused. It's easy to forget just how much and how quickly mobile phones have transformed and how
they've transformed us. Today's young people can't comprehend what life was like without infinite access to information and more streaming content than anyone could possibly consume. So for this final episode in our series on Happier Parenting, we're going to turn to how this massive technological shift has affected our children and what caregivers can do to offer guidance and
support amidst this avalanche of information overload. And for this episode, I knew there was one expert I had to speak with.
In twenty ten, kids mostly have flip phones, we call them millennials, But by twenty fifteen kids have smartphones with social media. They can be on for ten fifteen hours a day, and we call them gen z.
Social psychologist Jonathan Heite is a world renowned expert in how technology and especially social media is impacting children. In twenty twenty four, he published a number one New York Times Best say, The Anxious Generation, how the great rewiring of childhood is causing an epidemic of mental illness. His thesis, the rapid evolution in how kids interact with technology has contributed to the alarming rise in mental illness among young people.
Teen mental health was actually pretty stable from the late nineties through twenty ten, even twenty eleven. It's really no sign up or down. You know, it moves around, but there's no trend, And then all of a sudden twenty twelve, twenty thirteen, it's as though someone flipped on a light switch. Somewhere, and girls all around the Western world, especially in the English speaking countries, began cutting themselves. They were more anxious.
So it wasn't just self report, it wasn't just oh, you know, I'm so open and honest because we can talk about it now on social media. It was also hospitalizations for self harm, and it was suicide. And it wasn't just America. Very similar patterns in Canada, Australia, UK, New Zealand, Scandinavia, Europe overall, although not in every country
in Europe. So something big was happening. And then Gene Twankie was the first to stick her neck out and she wrote an article The Atlantic gave it the title have Smartphones destroyed a generation? And she had like three years of solid data showing things going up, and I thought at the time, just three years, like this could turn around next year. And she was so roundly attacked by other psychologists who said, it's just correlation, it's just
a trend, and nothing's happening. So she really took a lot of flack, but she was right. She was absolutely right, and it's gotten worse and worse and worse since then. This is not caused by Covid. Everything I say in the Anxious Generation, everything Gene was talking about, it was all there. By twenty nineteen, Covid made it a little worse. But we're kind of just returning to the trend line.
What were some of the other cultural changes that were happening and how childhood played out around that time.
So my story in the book is that this is a tragedy in two acts. In Act one, we lose the play based childhood. Kids who grew up in the eighties still played outside, they still went out on supervised they rode their bicycles. So in the nineties is when we lose the play based childhood. That's the first act of the tragedy. And in Act two, twenty ten to twenty fifth, we get the phone based childhood. So in my previous book, The Coddling of the American Mind, we
went deep into play and the importance of play. And we're mammals, and anybody who knows any mammals knows that they play when they're young. If you've ever had a puppy or a kitten, they want to play, play, play, play, play, I mean, and they have to. It's a biological imperative. Their genes don't tell the brain how to grow. It just kind of starts things rolling and then the neurons have to wire up. But with feedback from the environment. That's why kids will do something over and over and
over again, and so it's crucial that they play. They have a lot of independent play, and we took that away. We took that away in the nineties, completely insane.
And this is a change that was not necessarily caused by the tech companies per se. This was a change that was caused by parents. When did adults start over parenting and what happened?
So I have done this demonstration all over the country and around Europe. I simply asked the audience at what age were you let out? At what age could you go out on your bicycle, walk to a friend's house, go to a store, no adult with you, and certainly all over a mind America. The answer was six to eight, around first grade, second grade. Certainly by third grade everyone was out. Now. I grew up during the Great crime Wave.
I mean there was a lot of crime in the seventies and eighties, but we all went out and played gen X and the older millennials, they were all out age six to eight. But then you look at gen z. If you were born in nineteen ninety five and you grew up mostly in the early two thousands, everyone says ten to twelve, it's three or four years later. So why did this happen? There were some horrible abductions that
were widely publicized. I'm sitting here in Greenwich Village, New York, about four blocks south of me, is where Aton Pates was abducted six years old, wanted to walk to the bus stop by himself. Never came back. This was nineteen seventy nine, I think. But it wasn't that one that did it, because there wasn't cable TV very much then.
It was really the abduction of Adam Walsh and Florida, another six year old abducted from in front of a store his father created I think America's most wanted and he put out the idea that you must never take your eyes off your child or he will be abducted. It's because of him we get the milk cartons. You know, I grew up with kids staring back at you on the milk cart missing. Now almost all the missing kids were abducted by the non custodial parent or some other
family member. There is hardly any kidnapping or abduction in this country, but we freaked out about it, and we began locking our kids up, or at least not letting them out to have independent It used to be you could kind of count on all the adults your kids out riding his bicycle. You know, I knew, like if I wiped out on my bicycle was actually hurt. You know, my friend could just like go knock on a door and they call my mom and she'd come pick me up.
But I don't think people think that. How they think they have to be there all the time for their kid. So for a lot of reasons, we stopp trusting our neighbors, especially in the nineties. But we said, no, no, it's too dangerous to go outside. You'll be abducted. You know. Sit here, Oh look, we have a new computer. Oh look, it connects to the internet. And the kids loved it, and the parents loved it because the kids are safe sitting in their room on a computer all day, talking
with strangers, perfectly safe. So that's what we did, and mental health didn't change. Actually, the millennials who grew up that way are fine. So we thought this was all okay. What we didn't realize was that the early Internet, where you sit at your parents' computer for a couple hours a day, I mean, you can't take the computer to class, you can't take it into the bathroom. A couple hours a day you're online. It was decentralized. There was no Facebook,
there was no one company controlling things. That actually was pretty marvelous and fun. And the millennials look back on that fondly. We didn't realize that in the two thousands things really changed. So early Facebook and my Space and friends or those were not bad. They were ways to connect with people.
That was all it was.
And honestly, you couldn't be on friends dirt that long as a child of the nineties, I know, like you could hop on it for a second, but it wasn't going to be pinging in your pocket and stealing your attention.
And so on. That's right.
So to be doing that quasi social thing for a couple hours a day is fine. You know, a little bit of television is fine. The transition happens when you get the iPhone. That's two thousand and seven. But at first it's just a digital Swiss army knife. There's no push notification, there's no app store, there's no social media, and kids don't have it until twenty ten. Eleven is
when kids start getting it. In twenty ten, you get the first friend facing camera, and you get the creation of Instagram, and now you get increasingly kids have high speed Internet. Because you remember when you had to pay for your text like what a couple cents every text? So you wouldn't send thousands of texts a day, You couldn't spend sixteen hours a day on. But between twenty ten and twenty fifteen, I call it the great rewiring
of childhood. Half of our kids, beginning in the late twenty tens, half of American teenagers say that they are online almost constantly. If you're waiting for the elevator, the phone comes out. If you're in the elevator, the phone comes out. If you're online anywhere, the phone comes out. If you're sitting at lunch there's a loll in the conversation, the phone comes out. If you're sitting on the toilet, the phone comes out. The phone is always with you.
It takes up every spare moment because the amount they have to process, the amount of stuff coming in the videos they have to watch to keep up. It fills up every moment.
And you've talked in your book about these four specific harms that this phone based childhood came with. Let's kind of walk through them. The first is one that you talk about in terms of the social deprivation that comes from me in a phone based childhood. In some ways this is ironic, right, because our phones are supposed to be connecting us. You could imagine our phones kind of increase connection. But what do the data really show here?
There's the American Time Youth Survey, so we track what people do at minute by minute and for all ages down to I think fifteen, And what the data clearly show is that when you look at the fifteen to twenty four age group, but when they aggregate, how much time do you spend with friends each day outside of school and work? So this is not school or work, just hanging out with friends getting together. How much time?
And it used to be more than two hours a day for the young people, and then like thirty forty minutes for everybody who's older. All the older groups, they have jobs, they have families, they're not hanging out with their friends, and it's dropping a little bit in the early two thousands, and that's you know, the Internet, and
you begin to get multiplayer video games. But it plunges after about twenty twelve because once everyone gets their iPhone, now everything moves online and now you can just as well go home and lie on your side for three hours and do this scrolling and this wiping, the texting and things like that. So a plummet's down almost to where the adults are by twenty nineteen. Of course they're
connecting with hundreds of people. But if you're connecting with hundreds of people, then you have no real time for close friends. That's when we see the breakout of loneliness boys and girls. They become so lonely once they get on their phones.
And why is this sort of in real life social connection, or at least in real time social connection, so much more important than the connection is happening online, especially for growing kids.
Yeah, well, here I would return to our status's evolved organisms. You know, if you go back to child development and infancy, one of the most important things that infants are doing socially is eye contact and then synchrony, and that takes a long time. And it's really pleasurable for the kid and for the parent. So there's all this programming for face to face synchronous communication, and so you know, a
zoom call is we're doing right now. This is you know, at least as good as an old telephone call when you and I were young. It's better in some ways. The synchronous art is okay, there are the uses for that, but the asynchronous stuff has very little value. Like someone posts something and then you like it or you comment on it. It doesn't bring you together. It encourages everyone
to display. It turns kids into brand managers. And if you're constantly trying to manage your brand, you're not connecting, You're not really bonding with other kids. I just saw a video in which teenager was saying, you know, I sit down to watch a TV program and before I know it, I'm doing things on my phone. Like the multitasking. It just takes away from everything. There's an amazing phrase from Sherry Turkle at MIT. She says, because of our phones,
because of our technology, we are forever elsewhere. We're never fully present with the people that we're with. But we evolved for these intense small group communities. So this is a gigantic experiment we've performed on kids in theory back
in two thousand and seven. In theory it might have worked, but now it's clear it backfired catastrophically, and we have a generation around the world that has poor social skills, difficulty making eye contact, higher levels of anxiety, poor sexual development, cognitive development test scores are going down around the world. People call me alarmist, but if there is really something going wrong, then it's right to raise the alarm.
I love the Shelley Trickle quote. And that gets to maybe a second harm that we know comes from a phone based childhood, which is this idea of attention fragmentation. How do phones mess with our attention? And why is it so bad when it's happening at the kind of ages we're seeing it.
One of the most sort of subtle and advanced cognitive abilities that humans have. It's called executive function, and toddlers don't have much of it. But we learn how to stay focused on a task. We think, Okay, I have a goal. What do I need to do to execute the goal? Your brain has to have sustained attention on that over time as you are pursuing the goal. And if you can do that, then you will be successful
in life. You will be able to pursue goals. But what if you have a goal and then you start pursuing it, but oh, look at that, Well what's that? Oh this is fun? Oh let's do that, and you never get to your goal. This is what's happening. I was just listened to a podcast. So Scott Galloway and Richard Reeves are two people who've been writing about boys. I think the problem for boys here with attention fragmentation is even more serious. For girls girls anxiety depression, they
have huge increase. That's sort of the focused social media anxiety depression. But I think attention fragmentation at behavioral addiction is really more central for the boys. Boys are more attracted to video games, which gives you quick dopamine. But when you get lots of quick dopamine, that means that your brain, which has adapted to the high levels now
is craving it and everything is boring. And so if you're a boy and you've been on video games since you were four or five, those neurons seeking.
Each other out.
They didn't wire up properly and it's very hard for you to make a goal and then pursue it over the course of ten minutes or an hour. So the cognitive fragmentation, even though I didn't focus on in the book, I'm now seeing, my God, this is possibly worse than the mental health. I mean, if you have a whole generation that can't pay attention for sustained periods. And again they're exceptions, but I think we can say half of
the generation, half say they're online almost constantly. So if half of humanity can't pay attention, this boats really badly for the future of innovation, work, marriage, everything that we expect people to be able to do.
It kind of connects with the social deprivation in a really interesting way, right, because obviously social connection has some friction. There are some boring downtimes with people in real life.
And you have to work it through, you have to stick with it.
It can be annoying to push through the awkwardness of in person interactions, especially when you've got a fire hose of information and excitement waiting for you in your pocket. So how do you get a kid to put down this mesmerizing tool and notice what's going on in the real world? After the break, we'll dive into other ways a phone based childhood may be reshaping our kids development, and here are some effective strategies for making it better.
The Happiness Lab will be right back. Psychologies. Jonathan Heights's book The Anxious Generation argues that the rise of smartphones, social media, and overparenting has triggered a cataclysmic shift in how young people experience childhood and a corresponding surge in mental illness. Before the break, we covered two of the four ways a phone based childhood has negatively affected our kids. Is deprived them socially and fragmented their attention. So what's
harm Number three? More screen time means less shut eye.
So sleep. There was a drop in the nineties minute levels off. I don't know if that was the early Internet. I don't know what that was, but it levels off in the two thousands, then it drops again after like twenty twelve or so. Certainly this correlational research showing that people are heavy users have more sleep problems, especially when they use social media or browsing the internet. Those are
the two that are especially correlated with poor sleep. If you're doing that just before bedtime, I'm in a big debate with some other researchers to say it's just correlational, there's no evidence of causality. But you know, if you have a technology that is causing on average, let's say something like half an hour less slip, certainly for heavy users, and teenagers already aren't getting of sleep, So if we make it worse by half an hour, you know that's
another ram cycle. You're going to have kids being more irritable, it'll be harder for them to focus, more anxious, and then that you get a vicious cycle, because then that pushes you into more anxiety and depression. Now you're doing badly in your classes, and you were having conflicts with your friends, and you mul this over at night, you can't sleep, so to stop your racing thoughts, you watch TikTok.
So you get this vicious cycle. And there's just no dispute among the scientific community that adolescence needs sleep for brain development. And if you're depriving a whole planet full of teenagers of sleep, this has to have a variety of physical, cognitive, and emotional consequences.
Which I think gets to the fourth phone based harm, which is that kids wind up showing these addictive behaviors when it comes to their phone. I think you had a story about your own daughter with Candy Crush, if you want to share.
Yeah, Oh my god, it was. This was I guess twenty seventeens before I was working on on this and my family we took a winter break trip to this lovely farm, Liberty Hill Farm in Vermont, and my daughter was in the next room at breakfast time and she called out to me, and this is an exact quote, Daddy, can you take the iPad away from me? I'm trying to take my eyes off it, but I can't. And she's about six years old. There these games are designed
explicitly to retain their users. It's a very competitive environment. Most of these apps, once for kids, have an advertising base model, and so the more you keep them on, the better for the company. And you know, again, I'm in this debate with the skeptics who say, well, it's not true addiction, we shouldn't call it addiction. Well, gambling is an addiction as long as you have compulsive use, often against your better judgment. It sometimes causes you to lie.
And if slot machine gambling can be addictive, well, so much of the iPhone was literally modeled after slot machines. Literally, I mean like the thing where you know, you pull down kind of bounces, that was really modeled after the slot machine. I mean, we have age limits all over our sisciety for four reasons. If something is about graphic sex or violence, if it's addictive, or if there's physical or psychological harm. Those four reasons we put age limits
on unless it's online. And then we say whatever, companies, go for it. You can do whatever you want to a child as long as the child's old enough to lie. If the child's old enough to say she's thirteen or eighteen, doesn't matter, and we can't sue them. They can show whatever they want to our kids.
Tough luck.
But you know what, wait, can I turn this around. I'm always looking for criticisms. I want to know what I missed because there are some psychologists whore skeptical. First, tell me what you think of the general argument that it was the technology that phones the social media.
Oh my gosh. I mean, I think you cannot explain the hockey stick curve as you've called it without turning to that. But the question is, like, are there other factors going on as well? But I think the timing of it just looks like it absolutely has to be social media. I talk a lot about social media in
my course, right Instagram, TikTok. Think what's fascinating about TikTok in particular, we talked a little bit before about addiction, is that this is the first social media tool where I've seen students articulate the fact that they feel addicted. I mean, your daughter had this, maybe for candy crush. The games might look different, right, but I'd never heard college students talk about how Facebook felt so addictive, even Instagram Snapchat a little. But with TikTok, they talk about
this all the time. Oh my god, So to my students, that's right. So let me make a major point here. We all agree social media is not monolithic. There are different kinds of social media, different effects Instagram. The main harm that I see is that Instagram causes chronic social comparison, especially for girls, especially about face and bought. The correlational studies clearly show girls and Instagram depression anxiety. That's a
much tighter correlation than anything else. I would urge everybody don't let your daughters, or don't let anybody go on Instagram until they're an adult. Snapchat, I don't think causes depression anxiety. Snapchat connects you to strangers who are trying to extort you, sell you drugs, and even sell you guns. Many horrible, horrible things happen to kids on there. Snapchat, we know from memos that have come out as the States are suing them. Snapchat gets ten thousand reports of
sextortion from American kids each month. Wow, every month, ten thousand, and that's just the ones that are reported to them. How the great majority are not reported to them. So you invent an app that has disappearing pictures students feel safe for young people feel safe for sending a nude of themselves. It turns out it's not a beautiful young woman wanting to flirt with you. It's a sextortion ring
lookated somewhere in West Africa. And now if you don't pay them right away, they will send your photo out to everyone in your contacts, and a lot of boys kill themselves. That's not mistaken correlation for causation. Their parents are not wrong that Snapchat is what killed their kid. So again, you got Instagram, depression anxiety and girls Snapchat dangerous activities, interacting with strangers that ruins your life, even if it's fun most of the time. And then we
got TikTok. And what I'm coming to see is that TikTok is so bad for you attention and so addictive. I think nobody should use it. Certainly, no one under eighteen should use it. Yeah, but it doesn't just waste your time. It changes your brain because now you need that quick stimulation. So now let's get to some solutions. If you're a parent who's worried about the phone based childhood, what can you do to fix things?
So the first thing is to realize that you're not alone. If you feel like you're alone, then it's going to be very hard to solve this because you'll think, what do I do. You know, everyone else is giving their kid the phone. My daughter comes home, you know, from fifth grade, and she says, Mom, everyone else has a smartphone. I'm the only one who doesn't have one. I'm being
left out. And so that's why we keep giving our kids phones and social media at a younger and younger age, because it's a collective action problem and we are not able to solve it. So it goes down younger and younger ages. And so the solution to a collective action problem is collective action. We got trapped into this by the companies, but if we act together, we can get out of it. With four simple norms here they are no smartphone till age fourteen or high school really in America.
Give them a flip phone or a phone watch. They can call in text if you're sending them out into the world, but don't give them the entire Internet and all the strangers and all the apps and all the addiction. Don't do that until high school minimum. Second, no social media until sixteen. They know exactly how to get your kid's brain before the prefrontal cortex is developed, so don't let them have your kid until at least sixteen. The third is phone free schools, and this is just a must.
If your child is able to have their phone on them, in their pocket or even their backpack, but especially pocket during the day, it's very likely your child is not being educated as well as they should. And this, I think is one of the reasons that test scores were going up for forty years until twenty twelve, and they've been going down, not just in America but around the world test scores going down. Kids can't pay attention to class so much else is going on in their pocket.
And then the final norm is far more independence, free play, and responsibility in the real world. We have to get back to the understanding that our children are young mammals who need to develop by engaging with the environment without supervision. Now you know two, three, four years old, Yeah, you need to supervise them because they'll do all kinds of stupid things. But around the world, one thing I learn from cultural psychology seven or eight is called the age
of social sense. That's the age in which many societies give their kids like here, take the sheep down to the river, let them drink and bring them back. You can begin being responsible. So I think we need a sort of a norm by age eight your kids should have some kind of independence, maybe not wandering around town alone, but like out playing with some friends without a parent watching them. Because when the parents are watching what a
kids learn. They learn how to appeal to the adult to punish the other kid, which is a skill for authoritarianism. Whereas if kids have no rule maker above them, they have to work out the conflicts they have to negotiate. They have to adjudicate, they have to forgive, and those are skills of democracy. So we have to give kids back a childhood worth having. Those four norms. Parents can roll back the vone based childhood.
It would be easier if some hero could jump into a Dolorean, travel back to the late nineties and stop social media from devolving into a polarized miss and maybe prevent tech designers from adding those front facing cameras. Sadly, that's not going to happen, but that doesn't mean that society is simply forced to accept the great rewiring. There's still a lot parents can do to make things better.
To recap here are Jonathan's four suggestions. Delay smartphones until at least age fourteen, hold off on social media until sixteen, advocate for phone free schools, and give kids more freedom and independence in the real world. But these solutions require widespread, coordinated action, which means you might be asking what can I do as a parent right now to support my
child in the face of such potentially harmful technology. After the break, we'll speak to an expert who's thought carefully about essential conversations you can have with your kids to help them navigate the modern digital landscape. We'll hear how parents can support kids' technology use while protecting their mental health and fostering a sense of safety. The Happiness Lab
will be right back. If you've ever wondered whether it's developmentally appropriate for your toddler to watch Coco Melon, or say, for your team to play Call of Duty, you might be familiar with the work of our next.
Expert, someone names Jill Murphy. And I am the Chief Content Officer at Common Sense Media, which really just means I oversee all of our ratings and reviews.
Common Sense Media is an awesome nonprofit advocacy organization known for their reviews of children's entertainment and TV shows. These days, the organization also offers research backed guides for digital parenting. These new guides have become essential resources for parents navigating day to day technology questions for kids of all ages.
When you think about younger children, so maybe you're distracted by something, you hand over the phone and with the lunch videos, and I think that right there, that handover moment is at first introduction to you know, I just need to distract my kids so I can get this other thing done. But what it's become is a distraction in their life, and we are just all distracted all the time.
Jill believes the most important thing parents can do to protect their kids is to have honest conversations about technology, and Jill says it's best to start those conversations earlier than you think, even with a baby or toddler who's curious about what you're looking at on your screen.
Narrate what you're doing. Actually let your kid know what you're doing within this tiny screen so they have a sense of what's going on because they have no idea.
As children get older, Jill recommends creating a family media agreement. Common Sense offers templates for these contracts on their website, but the key is to simply start a dialogue. Whether it's written down or not, it's.
Really a conversation. When you hear the title, it sounds a little idealistic, but I think what they can be used for is really anything. Whether it's a kid is ready to start going on YouTube, but I want to say some boundaries and guidelines. It just guides you through a conversation around how you can start laying out what is and isn't okay. And then with older kids it might be they're getting a phone, what's okay for them
to do? What isn't okay for them to do. It's a little bit of a negotiation, a little bit of a contract where they may say, and this is for my own life, I want to have social media. Is it okay if I go on maybe just for thirty minutes? And then we say you can have this app, but we're not going to get you on this app yet. And so it's just a discussion around where your rules are and holds everybody to a set of shared principles. The challenge with that is it needs to be revisited often.
And I can speak from experience where we did it when my older daughter got a thund My kids are fifteen and twelve. Two girls live.
In the dream in the night now, all at the same time we did it when my older daughter got a phone, and it was probably a good year before we really revisited it.
Is something that we need to encourage families to revisit quite regularly, almost like your quarterly goals, like what is it and what needs to be adjusted? And then the run chanelle of why is something getting adjusted? You know, the underlying factor here is their development, What are they ready for We use their age as a guide, but it's not always a one size fits all.
And so what wound up in your family media agreement? Like what were some of the things that you have to negotiate with your kids to that?
Definitely social media. My older daughter got a phone when she is going into middle school. Biggest regret of my life, and my husband is always kind of like, shouldn't you have known better? Sure, I should have known better. For lots of reasons, we let her get a phone that we were not letting her get on social media, so that was the stop gap. It's just too much access. And then that was really the big like aha moment for me. I'd say about six to eight months in.
It's a computer, She's just online and she has access to literally anything, even if it's a news story around school shooting, Like do I want her really seeing that right now without conversation from els? Does she need notifications coming up in her day around what's going run in the world. And parental controls was something that happened a little bit later. I've always been a little like around parental controls because it's it's a little bit of a
false promise. And there's a ton of videos online about how to get around literally any any of the parental controls that are out there, there is a hack to get around them. More recently, we had started using a parental control to just completely shut down the phone and to just go to a dumb phone at certain times of the day except for texting, Like she could text on her phone, she could call on her phone, but otherwise everything was turned off. So it's like during the
school day at night. And when I first started doing it, my daughter was like what the heck, Like, why would you do that? But after a couple of weeks of doing this consistently, she started asking me to turn it off at night. She was like, can you just turn
this off? Don't forget to turn it off, Like she knows that it's not something that she can easily do on her own, which is obviously the goal that I mean, they'll struggle with that, and it just allows her to focus in another place, in this case, on her sleep. But even during the school day or like her homework time, she knows like, Okay, it's going to go off between three and six. So I just feel like it's really
helped her take back some of her time. There's something about it that's provided her a little bit of like okay, good, like a little relief from feeling like she has to be on. And I think that because we've discussed it so much, I love that she's kind of taken this approach of like, Okay, I need it off, but I might not have the self control at fifteen to do it and stick with it.
And you've talked about some of these essential conversations, some of these elements that you might want to get in there, and I know one of the big ones is this idea of a digital footprint. What are the conversations that you need to have about a child's digital footprint.
I think kids are very quick to be like less concerned about that sort of thing until probably high school and they're thinking about college or jobs, really having them understand the trail that they're leaving behind, that it's all findable, the way that other kids are getting screenshot and screen grab conversations and use that information or share it, whether
it's in a gossipy way or a dangerous way. And then in addition to that, of course images that they're sharing, personal information that they may be sharing, who they're actually sharing it with and when they or not they know that person. And the trick with that is when is it okay to have that conversation. I think that that Twain set is very quick to say, no, it's a kid, I'm talking to this kid. They friended me on my
blocks or they friended me on discord. They're less inclined to be skeptical that who they're talking to may actually be somebody that is not what they say say. They are so starting to lay all that groundwork, I think early and often without a fearful approach, but just as an awareness, just like don't cross the street until the button says walk, and even when it does say walk, look to your left to make sure no one's taking a right turn, and make sure you have eye contact
with the drivers. And you know, there's a lot of elements to consider before you go ahead and cross the street. And I think we need to be thinking about that multi pronged approach in conversation.
We're doing this kind of boundary setting with our kids anyway and other domains where they need to be safe across the street. We kind of need to get to them how to cross the digital street as yeah, yeah, One of the things common says has noted that you need to get across the digital street are conversations about reality versus perception. And I think this specifically comes up when it comes to social media.
What do you mean by that, Well, I mean there's this idea of perfection, right, and then it's talked a lot about now with Instagram in particular, but what people are putting out versus what's really going on, and that comes down to, you know, embedded products in a video that I kid not watch something and think that, oh, just this girl that I watch and I love her, and she's buying this product and she loves it, and I want to have that product too, and explaining to
her what product placement is like and that she's paid for this video and that isn't actually just her saying that, and that's not necessarily her real life. She's not necessarily getting ready in the morning and looking like that and going somewhere. And then there's just this front that kids are putting out there, teens are putting out there, and we know that adults are putting out there as well.
Perfect house, perfect, whole video, perfect dorm room, perfect, whatever it might be, and just projecting an image that doesn't really portray real life, and it sets up a false aspiration. And I think as adults, we also know once you're
in that vacuum, it's really hard to break out. And I'm a fully developed adult, and so when our kids kids aren't even developed in a place where they can make that distinction between reality and fiction, we're just putting them in front of so much information at one time. How do they parse it and how does it help shape their reality.
I know there's a lot of parents out there wondering what they need to be paying attention to to figure out if their teen or their child might be struggled with technology. What things do you suggest that parents look out for.
There is this slow drip of content and what kids are being exposed to, and again, how that's kind of shaping their reality and their self identity and self worth. And if they feel that they can't measure up to what they're watching or compete with it or compared to it. And if you are predisposed, which I think is an important element for parents to consider, is depression in my family, is anxiety in my family? Have we dealt with other mental illness in the family? That's an important factor to
take into consideration. My daughter is anxious, Do I really want her to be put into a scenario where that might be like heightened in some way? Do I want to put her in a situation where it's heightened but she's got the tools and knows how to calm herself. Some of it's preparation, but I think some of it is about you really have to have this knowledge of your kid and what they how they interact and feel and function in the world.
And it seems like some of it is also including your children in these conversations. One of the things that comes since media recommends even in the case some of these mental health concerns, is not for parents to be like, well, I'm worried about anxiety provoking informations all just ban phones or like put parental controls in. It really is about empowering your kids to notice when they're going through that stuff and to have conversations about what they can do to do better.
Right, And I think we're having those conversations at ages that we probably wouldn't expect to have them. And I think a lot of parents are still feeling like I don't need to worry about that until they're in high school, no take an action. So what you're going to say to your six or seven year old compared to what you're going to say to your sixteen or seventeen year old, it's going to be very different. But the subject of mental health can be talked about at any age, at
any point. And you know, for your younger kids, it's if you see that they might be acting out after they have played a game, you know they have a stronger reaction of playing that kind of game than they do to just a board game. Those are the kinds of things that you want to just keep an eye on and not just wait and watch, but maybe after once or twice, say what is it about this game? Or can I play this game with you? Or can
I watch you play this game? You don't always have to jump in with all the answers, which I have to remind myself all the time. It's about kind of observing and letting them process and letting them articulate that to you what's going on, and then kind of layering in, like I see that you're angry about this game, what is it about it? It's really getting you? Maybe that's when you might make decisions to Okay, he's really reacting running strongly to this.
I might need to learnit.
How much time they're spending on a particular game if they can't start to manage it a little bit or balance it. And I think that parenting, we're doing that with lots of stuff. Yeah, they can play that friend. Okay, that friend's starting to be not the best friend. Maybe we should pull that. Maybe we'll make a play yet with this other friend. She's only eating fast food. We need to balance that out with maybe some vegetables. We're doing it all the time. It's the same when it
comes to digital media. It's just we don't have the insight. It takes more work because again, they're behind this screen. So that is one element that I think when we decide to get phones and tablets, putting them in a common area, making sure that we can see over their shoulder what they're doing on the screen. We all have to be a little bit more mindful when we hand those devices over, whether it's theirs to own or just to borrow ours for the moment, about what's going on
before during afterwards. There's a lot of considerations to think about when we're making these decisions about what our kids' mental well being is going to look like, and there's so many outlying factors that we cannot control, but being present and being available for them to come back to and share some of that information is really essential as well.
All this goes to say, if you want your kids to be safe online, you need to talk to them about new media and technology, and you need to start earlier than you think. Consider making an official family media agreement that can help foster the sort of dialogue you need to return to regularly. Pay attention to how your child reacts to different technologies, but don't just assume you know how it's affecting them. Ask questions, listen closely, and
then adjust your approach as needed. None of these strategies will fully roll back the phone based childhood that Jonathan Hite talked about earlier, but if you can help your child think critically about digital technology, you're well on your way to fostering a bit more flourishing and happiness. Finally, give yourself some self compassion as a parent helping to
raise the next generation in these changing technological times. Plus, if you want more strategies, there's still time to check out my free online course The Science of Well Being for parents. To learn more, just head to doctor Laurisanto's dot com slash parents. That's Dr Laisanto's dot com slash parents. That concludes our series on Happier parenting, But dot to worry is The Happiness Lab will be back soon. We'll be shifting gears with a new series exploring creative coping
strategies for handling life's current baels. Think job loss, illnesses, heartbreak tragedies. When times get really hard, we need creative ways to cope, so we'll be looking at the weird and wonderful ways people find relief and the science behind why these strategies work. So be sure to come back soon for the next episode of The Happiness Lab with me Doctor Lauri Santo's