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My teens and I text each other everything from memes to meaningful articles. Modeling healthy tech boundaries is key.
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本文探讨了智能手机对青少年亲子关系的影响。作者分享了她如何通过与女儿们建立健康的科技使用边界,以及积极利用科技促进家庭联系和个人成长。文章强调了平衡的重要性,鼓励家长以身作则,引导孩子在数字时代明智地生活。作者认为,与其禁止使用科技,不如通过对话、设定界限和积极参与来帮助孩子培养对科技的健康态度。

📱智能手机增强了家庭成员之间的联系:作者观察到,智能手机帮助她的女儿们与朋友、家人保持更紧密的联系。通过群聊、分享日常琐事和情感支持,智能手机成为了沟通的桥梁,而非隔阂。

👩‍🍳科技激发了孩子的兴趣爱好:作者的女儿们通过手机上的视频学习烹饪,制作奶茶等。科技为她们提供了学习和探索新事物的机会,促进了创造力和实践能力的培养。

🗣️家长与孩子共同探索科技世界:作者积极参与到女儿们使用科技的过程中,分享有趣的帖子和文章,与她们一起讨论科技带来的影响。这种开放的沟通方式有助于建立信任,并让孩子学会正确使用科技。

🛡️建立健康的科技使用边界:作者和她的丈夫为孩子们设定了使用手机的规则,如推迟使用社交媒体的时间。他们也以身作则,通过明确使用手机的目的,帮助孩子们理解如何平衡科技与生活。

🌱积极引导,而非一味禁止:作者认为,与其禁止孩子使用科技,不如帮助他们培养对科技的健康态度。通过提问、设定界限和积极参与,家长可以帮助孩子在数字世界中明智地生活。

The author models healthy boundaries with technology for her three teenage daughters (not pictured).

I've read the headlines, skimmed the studies, and fought the impulse to yank every device from my kids' hands and toss them into a screen-free cabin in the woods. Like most modern parents, I worry about screens.

But I've also seen the good that can come from technology. I believe it's possible to raise emotionally intelligent, creative, and grounded kids — not by banning screens, but by modeling how to use them with intention.

Unexpectedly, smartphones made my kids feel less isolated

We've gotten all three of our daughters' phones in eighth grade, and when we got our youngest daughter her first phone, I braced for her to become more withdrawn from friends and family. Middle school had been a little lonely — her closest friends lived in our neighborhood but went to different schools, and the lunchroom social shuffle wasn't always kind. I worried a phone would only isolate her more. But the opposite happened. Group texts became lifelines: inside jokes, spontaneous hangouts, encouragement on rough days. Her phone became a bridge, not a wall.

That bridge also reaches all the way to college, where her older sister just wrapped up her freshman year. They text nearly every day — silly memes, heart emojis, cute photos of our dog snoring on the couch. Their relationship hasn't faded with distance; it's shifted and, in some ways, grown stronger through the digital thread that connects them.

Phones in our family aren't just for staying in touch. My oldest daughter has begun to find her voice around social justice issues through Instagram — sharing resources, following organizers, and supporting friends through these outlets.

My middle and youngest daughters, both budding foodies, dive into recipe videos on TikTok and YouTube — my youngest doesn't have these apps yet, but follows her sister's lead. The other night, they made homemade boba tea — yes, including from-scratch tapioca pearls — from a video my middle daughter saved. It took forever, but they laughed the whole way through. And the tea? Surprisingly good.

I'm talking to them about technology and modeling healthy boundaries

I'm not just a bystander in all this. I'm in it with them. I send my daughters memes, reels, and articles — funny, profound, or just weird in the best way. Sometimes it's a way to check in. Sometimes it's how we process the world together. I've had better conversations with my teens sparked by a 20-second video than from the age-old "How was school?"

Of course, we set boundaries. We delay social media until high school — my youngest can get those apps next year if she requests them. We talk about the difference between passive scrolling and active engagement. We ask questions like: What does this video do for you? Do you ever see things that make you uncomfortable? And we try to practice what we preach.

My husband and I both use our phones for work, and we're learning to narrate that: "I'm writing an article," or "I'm researching something," instead of just disappearing into our screens. That said, I'm guilty of scrolling, too — and my kids have no problem calling me out on it.

Recently, I joined stop-motion artist Colette Peri's "Touch Grass" phone boundaries challenge, and it's made me more mindful of my own habits. Setting screen limits for myself — like no scrolling in bed, and taking phone-free walks — has been good for me and, I hope, good modeling for them. I'm building up to a phone-free day, too. Not quite there yet. Our kids don't need us to be perfect; they need us to be honest.

Technology is part of our family's life, like books, board games, and backpacks. I'm not here to police my kids into tech shame, though I definitely fall into that trap sometimes. I want to raise kids who can navigate this world with curiosity, empathy, and agency. Phones and social media aren't going anywhere. So instead of pretending it's all doom, I'm leaning in — asking better questions, setting boundaries, and yes, sending a few cat memes along the way.

Because if parenting has taught me anything, it's this: We don't get to choose the world our kids grow up in — but we do get to help them live wisely and well within it.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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智能手机 亲子关系 科技使用 家庭沟通
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