How to Help Your Children Dodge Digital Distractions

By Jonathan McKee (Contributed by Focus on the Family Malaysia)

“Why does my son waste his life playing Fortnite? If I don’t monitor him, he’ll play for 12 hours straight!”

“How can I get my daughter to realise there’s more to life than her Instagram feed?”

These are two of the most common complaints I hear from mums and dads. Life has always been full of distractions, but today’s distractions have two major differences: more accessibility and less accountability.

Want to play a video game? You don’t even need a game system or a smartphone. That old iPod Touch you forgot about can download most apps just the same. But in a world where the average age a child gets their first smartphone is at 10.3 years old, most young people just use their phone. Fortnite is a free download. And other hit games like Apex Legends will soon be as well.

Want to chat with someone on social media? It’s not like a decade ago when you had to be on a computer connected to the internet. Now young people’s favourite social media apps (Snapchat, Instagram, YouTube, Tik Tok) go everywhere with them. Name any social media app — it’s in their pocket and available 24/7. Unlimited accessibility. And because these devices follow our children into the privacy of school, their bedroom, the bathroom, and everywhere else, most young people have zero accountability.

It has become increasingly difficult to pry our children’s eyes from their screens. Their favourite pastimes are only a click away, and for most young people, these fun digital activities are disconnecting them more and more from us — and from others. How can we connect with our children while teaching them discernment and maybe even a little self-control?

Delay screen ownership

Yes, this is increasingly difficult when our tweens come home and assure us that all their friends have a smartphone. And they’re right: according to a Nielsen study, 45 percent of 10- to 12-year-olds have their own smartphone. Most experts advise waiting until your children are in high school to give them a phone.

Does that mean iPads are safe? The answer is no. An iPad is just an iPhone without cell service. All those same video games and social media distractions are available on any device that can download apps. If it can download apps, then wait.

Limit screen time

If your children already have access to screens, then limit the time they spend on them. Most experts advocate for keeping internet-connected devices out of bedrooms. Your 12-year-old doesn’t need access to games, social media — or porn — at 11:30 p.m. If your son has his game system in his bedroom, move it to another room. If your daughter charges her phone in her bedroom at night, kindly let her know that now Mum and Dad will provide a free phone-charging service every night and provide her with a fully charged device in the morning.

Limiting screen time is much easier today than it was even a year ago because now Apple and Android both released new ways to help parents schedule these limits. Apple even calls this feature “Screen Time,” accessed through the settings on the phone. With Apple’s Screen Time feature you can schedule what they call “downtime” when apps won’t be accessible.

If your tweens resist their screen limits, you have the opportunity to give them a peek into the future when they will have more freedom to make these choices on their own. Let them know specifically that your desire is to teach them to “self-limit,” and that they will earn greater freedoms as they get older. This is best done when modelled. Show your children what self-limits look like in your life. It’s difficult to connect with your children — or have them connect with you — when you don’t limit your own screen time.

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Seek face-to-face interactions

Believe it or not, most of today’s young people are frustrated with how much screens distract, especially in social groups, when everyone is looking down at their phones instead of interacting face-to-face. So give your children opportunities to experience these moments. Sometimes the best way to help children avoid the distraction of screens is to become proactive about offering other activities.

Take specific note of when your children are laughing and smiling without their screens. Do they enjoy it when the family goes out for pizza? Start making fun meals like this a weekly occurrence. Enforce simple boundaries like “no tech at the table.” Do your children open up to you on car rides or maybe even when you are putting them to bed and their phone is already put away on the charger? Maximise these times. Seek out these settings where they open up naturally.

Join them

Video games and social media are not evil. It’s only the obsession or abuse of these digital pastimes that becomes dangerous. Chances are you might even enjoy one or the other.

So join your children occasionally as they enjoy these activities. Instead of always checking the timer when your son is glued to his video game, ask him, “May I play?” Some of the best conversations I have had with my son was during two-player mode on Xbox. Most of our children will respond well to our desire to enter their world simply to enjoy their company.

In the same way, if your daughter is scrolling endlessly through a social-media feed and giggling, simply ask her, “Show me.” Not because you are a parole officer looking for malfeasance, but because you want to know what makes her laugh and maybe even laugh with her.

And after a given time joining them, get up and suggest something else fun you can do together. Chances are if you played an hour of video games with your son, he might be more likely to run to the hardware store with you and help you repair the backyard gate, or to the grocery store and help you fix dinner. By joining them and then moving on to other daily activities, you demonstrate what self-limits look like. It’s OK to play, but someone needs to make dinner as well.

Today’s distractions are far more portable than the distractions we grew up with — more accessible and with less accountability.

© 2019 Jonathan McKee. All rights reserved. Used with permission. Published at focusonthefamily.com. This article was published with permission from Focus on the Family Malaysia.

 If you liked this article and would like to go deeper, we have some helpful resources at family.org.my.

About Focus on the Family Malaysia

Focus on the Family Malaysia (FOFM) is a not-for-profit organisation established in 1997 and dedicated to helping families thrive. With the vision of enriched families and communities nationwide, FoFM are committed to nurturing, supporting, and protecting time-honoured values and the institution of the family. For more information about the organisation and the work that they do, please visit family.org.my 

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