Bigga
Well-Known Member
This is a very important point. Some of the things my kids got upset about just made me laugh they were that insignificant. These little things escalate and aggregate and sometimes become major issues, and parents (myself included) often don't (or can't) see the full picture because the child hasn't got the capability to articulate what they're feeling. The damage is already done by that time.
Social media seems to hold back a child's development because, I think, what they see and hear about isn't given time to be processed in their minds before the next piece of shit turns up. And sadly, as can be seen, it leads to heartbreaking consequences.
I must admit, my thoughts have turned to this subject as my son gets older.
He asked me 2 nights ago about if he can have a phones as all his friends have one. He's nine.
I told him 'no' for the simple reason that he doesn't need one yet and I'm trying protect him from the nonsense of social media.
"But I want to talk to my friends", he said.
"That's fair enough", I replied"But you'll see your friends in 2 weeks and you'll have lots to catch up on, then!"
He asked what if he wants to text me, at some point & I said you shouldn't be texting me at school or he'd be with his mother and to use her phone!
He's curious about social media and we'll probably end up in rows over it, but I pointed out his mother that she engages in the FB type of media, so she'll have to warn him of the potential pit falls. I think I want to teach him about all the potential negatives and how it can be dealt with, so he's armed, than enter a world without knowledge and be powerless. He'll have a phone at about eleven, I think.
It's a small thing, but extremely dangerous, social media and I'm genuinely anxious for his first real engagement in the internet world.