Date: 12/10/2014 22:13:09
From: ms spock
ID: 608766
Subject: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

http://qz.com/277464/the-times-of-day-when-your-kids-need-you-to-disconnect/

The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

Catherine Steiner-Adair October 11, 2014

Picture of a child It’s not enough to have his picture on the home screen. (Reuters/Carlos Barria)

It’s the parenting paradox of the moment: never before has it been so easy to stay connected to our families through technology—at the same time, we find ourselves too distracted by our smartphones to interact with them in person.

The everyday choices we make about using our cell phones or working on screens when our kids are present can significantly affect every aspect of their health and development.

For my book The Big Disconnect, I’ve interviewed more than 1,000 kids from kindergarten-age through high school who described having to vie for attention with their parent’s cell phone. They felt their parents were “missing in action,” routinely engaged in conversations, texting, emailing, watching shows, or using apps.

The ripple effect on relationships is equally worrisome. When we drop everything to tend to our phones we’re sending the following message: “It’s okay for me to just check out on you—you are not that important. Our conversation, our presence together, our relationship, none of it is a priority.” We’re also teaching our kids to do the same thing.

Transition times—like getting home from school, or before bed—are especially important: that’s when your child needs your physical, sensory, face-to-face, textured, nuanced interaction the most. Your smartphone pulls you out of that vital connection. We can reboot our tech habits to minimize the mini-moments of disconnect. These simple steps can make a big difference:

1. Mornings are prime time

Plan ahead so that from the time your child wakes up until she is out the door or otherwise occupied, it’s screen-free time for you. This is one of the transition moments when kids need to feel you’re calm and fully present to them. They pick up on the edgy “don’t bother me now” tone of voice if they interrupt you writing an email, compared to the friendlier response they’re more likely to get if you’re making breakfast or packing their lunches. You may decide to get up a little earlier to check your email and tend to your first-thing online tasks before you wake up your children.

2. Driving is no time for phones or screens

You have so little time together with your kids, let this be uninterrupted time to chat or just to share some rare quiet moments, uninterrupted by someone’s conversation filling the space. This can be creative, calming, and synthesizing time for children. Kids forced to listen to adults’ calls often feel stressed by what they hear—and what they don’t hear but imagine.

3. Perk up for pickup

Stash your smartphone when you pick kids up. Children like and need to be greeted by someone who is happy to see them. Nothing says “everything else is more important than you,” than having a parent or caregiver pull up for pickup but hardly look up from a call or texting. Make eye contact with your children. Connect with them. You can’t be fully present if you’re texting or talking to someone else, and you’re less likely to have conversations that give you the emotional weather report of their day. It’s important to hear about their day, and they fare better when they can share it with you.

4. When your children come home from school…

…stay unplugged. Have a snack and talk, hang out a bit. Create the time and space for a calming, refreshing transition.

5. When you come home, be home

Finish your calls or texting before you walk in the door. Prepare for your own transition home by letting colleagues know you won’t be available at certain times. Don’t walk in the door with the expectation that you’ll say a two-second “hi!” and then disappear to “just check” what’s happening at work.

6. Meals matter

No screens or phones at the table is one of the simplest starts for putting kids and family first, and showing your children that when you say they are important, you mean it. Have a box or basket where everyone can drop their devices (silenced) for the duration of the meal.

7. Make bedtime quiet, cozy, unplugged

Nothing spoils the magic of a bedtime book more than a parent checking a text or even just the buzz of the phone in their pocket. Parents need tech-free breathers, too. And no screens in the bedroom for anyone!

8. Use tech to disconnect

Put up an away message indicating when you’ll be back in touch at all these times, and whenever possible while attending after school games, on vacation, or any time that’s family time.

“I know my dad works really hard, and I really appreciate all that he does for us, but sometimes I just want to say, Really Dad, do you have to text on the ski lift? Is there any time that family comes first?” (Jessie 15)

We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/10/2014 22:15:02
From: roughbarked
ID: 608767
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

My kids had little trouble with me yet I was always there when they did want me.

They still love me for it.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/10/2014 22:15:53
From: ms spock
ID: 608771
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

I thought it would be of interest to some here.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/10/2014 22:17:03
From: roughbarked
ID: 608772
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

ms spock said:


I thought it would be of interest to some here.

It surely is.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/10/2014 23:11:39
From: diddly-squat
ID: 608782
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

it’s obvious that this article is written by a non-working parent and it’s ‘advice’ like this that shits more than just about anything else…

The simple fact is that it’s important to connect with your children and give them your full attention at key points through out the day; nothing groundbreaking there.

In my experience it’s less about the parents being removed from technology and more about making sure the kids have periods of technology free time.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/10/2014 23:14:42
From: roughbarked
ID: 608783
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

diddly-squat said:


it’s obvious that this article is written by a non-working parent and it’s ‘advice’ like this that shits more than just about anything else…

The simple fact is that it’s important to connect with your children and give them your full attention at key points through out the day; nothing groundbreaking there.

In my experience it’s less about the parents being removed from technology and more about making sure the kids have periods of technology free time.

all true.

Reply Quote

Date: 12/10/2014 23:28:35
From: wookiemeister
ID: 608784
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

my message bank is always open to my children’s requests for dinner

Reply Quote

Date: 12/10/2014 23:29:23
From: wookiemeister
ID: 608785
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

have they ever considered that people are just tired and need down time?

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Date: 13/10/2014 00:23:50
From: CrazyNeutrino
ID: 608791
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

wookiemeister said:


have they ever considered that people are just tired and need down time?

maybe that needs to be explained to them

Reply Quote

Date: 13/10/2014 00:27:24
From: roughbarked
ID: 608793
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

CrazyNeutrino said:


wookiemeister said:

have they ever considered that people are just tired and need down time?

maybe that needs to be explained to them

They’ll be too tired to listen, no doubt.

Reply Quote

Date: 14/10/2014 05:18:01
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 609202
Subject: re: The times of day when your kids need you to disconnect

> It’s the parenting paradox of the moment: never before has it been so easy to stay connected to our families through technology—at the same time, we find ourselves too distracted by our smartphones to interact with them in person.

Not one of my troubles. We struggle more with the opposite – kids interact with us in person but won’t phone home.

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