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Mothers Against Media Addiction with Julie Scelfo and Julie Frumin
Episode 18110th July 2025 • Become A Calm Mama • Darlynn Childress
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Today, I am so excited to introduce two special guests, Julie Scelfo and Julie Fruman, from Mothers Against Media Addiction (or MAMA). I believe so much in MAMA’s vision and mission for healthier tech and healthier families. I can’t wait for you to meet them. 

You’ll Learn:

  • How a simple shift helped my guest’s son love reading.
  • Why the era of anxious parenting is making it even harder for parents to say no to screens.
  • Short and long term risks of media overuse.
  • 3 ways to help your kids develop healthier relationships with screens
  • Why community is the key to battling media addiction

This episode is full of simple, practical ways you can help your family have a healthier, more balanced relationship with screens and media.

So sit back and listen to us talk about the hope for an environment where media does not infiltrate everything and our kids can grow up without overexposure to media and screens.

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Meet the MAMAs

Julie Scelfo is the founder and executive director of MAMA, and she has created a chapter-based grassroots movement of parents who are fighting back against media addiction. Her goal is to create a world in which real life experiences and interactions remain at the heart of a healthy childhood. She is an award-winning journalist, a former New York Times staff writer, a media ecologist, and a parent. 

She says, “MAMA grew out of my own frustration as a parent trying to keep my kids safe online and realizing that the problem was beyond anything I alone could manage as a parent. At one point, I signed them up for software that was going to let me know anytime they were exposed to something dangerous. And I started getting over 100 emails a day. And I realized there's no way that I could manage all of that alone.”

Now, MAMA has a 3-part mission to educate parents, get smartphones out of schools, and advocate for basic safeguards on technology products. 

 

Julie Fruman is the leader of the local chapter of MAMA in my community. For more than a decade, Julie has provided mental health support to individuals, couples and families. She holds a Masters degree in clinical psychology from Pepperdine University and is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in private practice. 

She hosts frequent workshops for parents, teens and tweens, encouraging safe, intentional, balanced technology use through the Conejo Valley Chapter of MAMA.

She says, “When MAMA first launched, I heard about it and I knew immediately I wanted to get involved. I loved the idea of having other parents around me and not doing this work solo. I like being with other parents who want the same things for our children and for the community, too. I wanted to do this hand in hand and not by myself.”

 

Effects of Media Addiction & Overuse

If you’re like a lot of moms I talk to, you just feel a little “off” when it comes to screens and tech. You know something doesn’t feel quite right, but you’re not sure why or what exactly to do about it. 

Scelfo says, “We as a society right now are completely addicted to media and screens. Think of all the places we have screens. They are in our restaurants, they are in our cars, our elevators, our gas pumps. There's almost no place that you can go anymore and just enjoy the natural setting without being bombarded with information.”

And this constant exposure comes with some downsides.

 

Acute Risks

We know what dangers look like in the “real world”, but we can’t always see what’s happening online. Social algorithms often promote content that includes disordered eating, unhealthy body image, violence, hate speech, or racism. And there are also fears around our kids being vulnerable to pornography, grooming, pedophiles, and sextorsion. 

They get dysfunctional, violent, and dangerous content mixed in with birthday party photos, cat videos, and updates about their favorite sports teams. It’s confusing and hard for kids to deal with.

 

Information & Intensity Overload

Not only were our brains not made to handle this constant influx of information, the media (whether news or entertainment) also amplifies conflict. 

Scelfo explains, “We know that social media algorithms are designed for one thing and one thing only, and that's to maximize engagement. And they do that by showing us whatever is most likely to create an emotional reaction, especially a negative emotional reaction…As a result, we have been living in this state of fight or flight where we're all upset and agitated all the time. And that's not healthy.”

We also know that video games and other apps are designed to reward responding as quickly as possible - the opposite of being patient, calm, and thinking before responding.

 

Mental Health & Loneliness

When it comes to our children, Scelfo states that today’s youth are spending about 9 hours a day on screens, and the American Academy of Pediatrics has declared that we’re in a state of emergency for youth mental health. 

A lot of content online is polarizing - it’s teaching kids that we’re all so different and everyone is out to get them. And these messages start to override what they’re learning from you and your community. 

Plus, kids are missing out on critical real world experiences. Scelfo says, “We want our kids to develop real world relationships and friendships, learn how to look people in the eye, and learn how to recognize emotional cues.”

 

Bad Habits & Missed Opportunity

As adults, we are also susceptible to the addictive nature of tech and social media. The difference between us and our kids is that we got to grow up without it, so we learned some basic skills that many kids are now missing out on. 

Scelfo explains that we’re now seeing more cases of failure to launch, an inability to cope with the regular world, and not knowing how to interact with strangers.

When I spend too much time on screens, I notice myself longing to connect directly with people, to be outside, or to do something more creative or interesting. But I know that it’s because I have experiences doing these things that I now crave. If our kids don’t have these kinds of off-screen experiences, they won’t crave them in the same way. 

It’s an opportunity cost. The time you’re spending on a screen is time that you are NOT spending doing something else. And Scelfo says this includes the opportunity to learn how to entertain themselves, be creative, and tolerate frustration or boredom. 

 

In Scelfo's words, “Enough is enough. Media and technology can be really helpful and fun, but it doesn’t belong in all situations…Technology is really good for acceleration and crunching large amounts of data quickly. It’s not good for teaching you how to human.”

 

Obstacles to Screen Limits

Real Life

Sometimes, you need a moment to attend to another child, make dinner, or take a shower. The reality is that we’re living in a society where we are no longer living intergenerationally and there is an economic inequality that makes it hard for many families to afford childcare. Sometimes you just need a little help or a break.

💡Tip: It’s okay if you need to put on a show for your kid sometimes so you can take a break. Scelfo suggests it is worthwhile, though, to seek out appropriate content, especially videos that move a bit more slowly so there is less overstimulation. And use the TV rather than a hand-held device.

 

Frustration and Big Feelings

What we often don’t talk about when it comes to screen limits is the frustration that comes along with it. If your family has been overusing screens and you decide to make a change, your kids probably haven’t built up a tolerance to stress, so they’re going to have a bigger emotional reaction.

The longer they've been using those devices, the more reliant they are on them for emotional regulation. When the screen isn’t available, you need to be able to step in and fill that co-regulator role (which means you need to be calm and regulated yourself). 

💡Tip: Find community and skills to support you. It’s too much for us to manage all of that distress (our kids’ and our own) alone. Being in a community like MAMA or the Calm Mama Club gives you a place to share what’s going on, feel supported and encouraged, and learn tools to regulate your own emotions and feel more calm moving forward.

 

Feeling Like the Odd Mom Out

It is so hard when you're the only parent who doesn't allow your child to have social media, or you take away phones during playdates or sleepovers. You might worry about being judged, and kids will complain that they’re bored.

But you know what happens 30 seconds later? They figure it out. Scelfo says, “I think that it really is up to us to set appropriate boundaries and then allow the kids to figure it out. It's not only limiting their screen time, but it's giving them more opportunities for free play.”

💡Tip: It’s community again! When you find a community of likeminded moms and make agreements to handle screens in a similar way, it takes so much stress off of you. 

 

Lack of Regulation

Scelfo shares that she often feels like the grim reaper sharing this kind of information with parents, but she believes they have a right to know. There are so many areas of life that we count on systems to make sure safeguards are there for us and our kids. She gives examples of baby formula on the grocery store shelf, stoplights on the roads, and vehicle inspections. 

Nothing like this exists for tech and social media, even after our last Surgeon General recommended warning labels and many people working in the tech world won’t give their kids a smartphone or social media until they’re 18. 

💡Tip: Delay, delay, delay. Scelfo says, “It's not fair to give a 10 year old a product that was not designed for them and expect them to be able to manage it. There's nothing you can teach a teenager that's going to overrule their biology, which makes them inclined to take risks.”

 

What Moms Can Do

Julie Fruman shared her 3-pronged approach that she teaches to parents in her MAMA chapter. 

Delay

There are so many areas of life where we delay - sex, alcohol, credit cards, driving a car, etc. These are things that we’ve normalized are not good for kids. But we haven’t yet normalized that tech use and smartphones were created for adults. 

Fruman references a study by Sapien Labs that interviewed 28,000 young adults between the ages of 18 and 24. What they found was that delaying giving a kid their first smartphone led to higher levels of resilience and life satisfaction and lower levels of distress in adulthood. 

Delay applies to devices like iPads - basically anything where the child has an individual screen that they are controlling (as opposed to a family TV with a parent handling the remote, for example).

 

Teach

Talk to your kids about safe use practices, how to communicate online, privacy settings, etc.

 

Model

Model the behavior that you want to see. This doesn’t mean that you have to fully abstain from using your smartphone. This is really about setting the tone for your home and family. What are the times and spaces in which you are together as a family, and other people (via your devices) aren’t allowed in?

Fruman says that it can be really hard to disentangle from our devices, and it doesn’t have to be perfect. Setting boundaries can look like making sure devices are turned off at dinner or after a certain time of day. Or not turning your phone on until after your morning coffee. These are small things that adults can do to teach our kids that phones have a place - they just aren’t the lens we should see the whole world through.

 

MAMA Wins

It’s not all bad news! Scelfo shares that more parents and grandparents are getting on board with MAMA’s mission. Part of the reason? It’s a completely bipartisan issue about keeping our kids healthy.

She says they’re seeing lawmakers on both sides of the aisle come together and more schools enact bell-to-bell phone bans, making a statement that school has to be a place that’s preserved for learning and socialization. 

States including Nebraska, Maryland, and California have also passed the Kids Code, which requires social media platforms to be safe by design. This can include stricter privacy settings and other simple safeguards.

But the fight is far from over. With the growth of AI and Chatbots, our families are facing new challenges every day. 

Julie Scelfo says the takeaway for parents is, “The number one and best way to break the cycle is to say, ‘Enough. I'm not gonna be on devices all the time. I'm not gonna let my kids be on devices all the time. And I'm gonna insist that these products are safe. Otherwise, I'm not giving them to my kids.’”

Being an intentional parent comes with some anxiety. MAMA is putting anxiety into action and reminding you that you’re not alone. 

 

Connect with MAMA:

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Transcripts

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Welcome back to Become a Calm mama. I'm your host. I'm Darlin Childress

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and I am so excited to introduce to you Julie

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Scelfo and Julie Fruman, who are

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going to talk to us today about the organization called

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mama, which stands for Mothers Against Media

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Addiction. Julie Scelfo is the founder and executive

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director of mama and she has

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created a chapter based grassroots movement

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of parents who are fighting back against media addiction.

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And her goal is to create a world in which real life experiences

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and interactions remain at the heart of a healthy

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childhood. Her organization is so incredible and I'm so

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inspired by what she is doing and what she's created. And Julie

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Fruman is the leader of the local chapter of

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MAMA in my community. And I had the opportunity to meet Julie

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a few weeks ago and I just really believe so much

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in her vision and mission for healthier tech and

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healthier families and the work that she's doing

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locally and connected to this organization of

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mama. So today on the podcast, I invite you to sit

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back and listen to us talk about the hope

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that we all have that there is a way to save our

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children from growing up in an environment where

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they are media infiltrated and

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overexposed to media and screens and screen

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time. And we give you a lot of practical

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reasons why you want to make some shifts in your family and then also some

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encouragement and hope and really simple ways that you can shift

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your own family dynamic into a healthier,

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more balanced relationship to tech

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and screens and media in your family. So I hope you really

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enjoy this interview with Julie and Julie of MAMA and

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you can learn more about MAMA at their website, We Are

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MAMA. M A. M A. We Are MAMA.org

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so here we go. Hi, Daralyn.

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Hang on, I can't hear you yet. There we go.

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I forgot that I need to use my mic. That's okay. Okay, here's

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Julie. Let me let her in. Okay. Good morning. Hi, Julie. Good

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morning. It's so nice to see you both. Hi, I'm

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Darlin. Nice to meet you, Darlin. And I love the

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paintings behind you. Very cool. Yeah. Yes.

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Well, I'm really excited to have you both. The moms that listen to the podcast,

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very invested in being parents that are intentional

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and that creates some anxiety for them. And what I love

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that MAMA is doing is it puts that anxiety into some action.

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And the takeaway I hope everyone has is really being able to

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feel not alone and more empowered. So I'm

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really happy to have you both here. Thanks for being here. Thank you

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for having us. Both. I'm excited to do this. Yeah, I'm delighted to be here.

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It's extra special for me to get time with Julie, so this

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is super fun. And is the audio okay? I have a mic

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and happy to adjust anything you need. I think it all sounds really good.

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Okay, great. Yeah. So we'll start with Julie Scelfo. Is that how you

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say your name? Scelfo? Yeah. Yeah. If you want to introduce yourself and

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then we'll go to Julie Fruman. We both have. We have two Julie's

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on, and that can be confusing, but just

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introduce yourself really quickly and then we'll go into MAMA in a second. So, Julie

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Skelfel, please introduce yourself. Hi, I'm Julie

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Scelfo. I'm a longtime journalist. I used to be a staff writer at the New

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York Times, and I'm the founder and executive director of mama.

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I'm a mother of three. I have three boys who are all teenagers right

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now, and I live in New York. Great. Well,

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thanks for being here. Julie Fruman, introduce yourself and how you're connected

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to mama. So my name is Julie Fruman. I'm a

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licensed marriage and family therapist in private practice. I live

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locally in Westlake Village. For a lot of the moms that listen your podcast, I

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know you have a nationwide audience, but I also do

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some work with the Four Seasons at the center for Health and well

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Being, where I talk a lot about balance and burnout

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and phones and media definitely come into those conversations.

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When MAMA first launched, I heard about it and I

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knew immediately I wanted to get involved. I

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loved the idea of having other parents around

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me and not doing this work solo. I,

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I just, I know that's a, it's a better, it's a better way for the

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message. And it's a better way for me personally, too. I like being

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with other parents who want the

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same things for our children and for the community, too. I wanted to,

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to do this hand in hand and not by myself.

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Yeah, it's such an important point of that. Parenting is often

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in silos at this point in our history. And we can feel

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like we're all just, you know, alone in these little

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bedrooms trying to get little kids off their phone and to bed and

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outside to play. And we all feel very alone in that.

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And what a beautiful thing about MAMA is that idea that

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I can be with other like minded parents. So, Julie Skelfo,

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introduce us to MAMA and what it is and kind of. Its

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mission, of course. So MAMA stands for Mothers Against

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Media Addiction, and we are a Grassroots movement of

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parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles and other allies

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fighting back against media addiction and creating a world where real

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life experiences and interactions remain at the heart of a

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healthy childhood. MAMA grew out of my own frustration as a

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parent trying to keep my kids safe online and realizing

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that the problem was beyond anything I alone could manage

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as a parent. At one point, I signed them up for software that was going

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to let me know anytime they were exposed to something dangerous. And I started getting

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over 100 emails a day. And I realized there's no

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way that I could manage all of that alone. And

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as I did research as a journalist, what I discovered was really

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frightening, which was that our government had not kept up

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regulations, even though we've been regulating mass

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communications since the 1930s. So mama has a three

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part mission. We first focus on parent education

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so parents can understand how all these things work. The second part of

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our mission is getting smartphones out of school so school can continue

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to be a place where kids learn and make friendships.

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And third, we, we advocate for ensuring technology

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products have basic safeguards, just like other consumer products.

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Kind of like the way we expect our cars to all come with seat belts.

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We want our social media to have basic

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safeguards to protect kids. Right. Or even possibly the hardware itself.

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Exactly. Yeah. That's like my dream. So

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Julie Fruman, tell us how local chapters work in the

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mission of mama. You know, you think about educating parents, getting

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smartphones out of school, bell to bell, and then doing this

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grassroots advocacy work. What is the local chapter?

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How does that work? How does the connection between the MOTHER organization

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haha, go with the local chapters? How do you see that working?

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Well, I mean, I really just know intimately about my own experience. Although

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I have this greater community of other

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chapter leaders, I know more intimately

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what, what I do. And I think, you know, Julie Scelfo would also second

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that her leadership to all of us is

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really allowing all of us to do what makes sense for

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us personally. For. So for each chapter leader, we get to

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figure that out as to what our, you know, what's our comfort level, what are

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our desires? And we also, we know our community. So

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what, what do we see the needs are and we

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get to work from there. So, um, as a therapist, I had started,

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you know, feeling really frustrated with trying to work

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in a, in a world in which the world is almost set up not for

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human flourishing at this, at this moment, when it comes to

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how we're, you know, just the, the nuts and bolts of how we're spending our

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time, especially for young People, I started to notice

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this disconnect between healthy living and unhealthy living. And this,

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this. This crux of the media, the media piece and just screens in

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general really caused me a lot of frustration as a

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clinician. And so I had started

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feeling like I needed to do something a couple of years ago

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to start to just have conversations around my kids,

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friends, parents, to try and get them on board,

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to slow down a little bit. That was my original goal. And so I

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had been doing some of this work, you know, like dipping my toe

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in the water. And then when I was jumped on board

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with mama, I felt like a bit more clarity and

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with. With these, you know, these three goals. Okay, good. I'm already. I'm already

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doing some of this parent ed now I really need to focus on

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the other two. So getting phones out of schools and then learning about

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legislation and how I can support proper safeguards. The

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phones in schools thing came up naturally at every gathering

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that I hosted or attended. When I was talking about

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device use, the first or second question was always, well, what about

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the school? What is going on in the schools? And I

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had not initially thought that I would need to talk about that.

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I was talking about, how are we as parents doing things in our own homes?

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And I realized very quickly that can't be ignored. It's just, you know,

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it's so incredibly frustrating for parents, especially parents who have

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guidelines and strict, you know, stricter rules at home, to see their kids on

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YouTube at school, for example, when they don't allow it at home.

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So that kind of grew naturally for me in my

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chapter. And so we've been working with the local school

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districts to get phones out of schools first. So that's sort of the

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first step, and we've had some success there. So that was really exciting.

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And now the next thing is really looking at Chromebook, use

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iPad, use YouTube access on devices. So it's sort

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of grown from there. Where parents in, in my chapter have said, this is the

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next step, and they're helping guide me, which is. Which is lovely

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because I get to take that feedback and we can.

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We can make decisions as we sense what's going on and what the needs

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are. Yeah, I think you hear Julie Fruman's one of our star

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chapter leaders. People have come to MAMA with a wide range

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of experiences and familiarity with the issues

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at play. As a licensed therapist, she already really understood

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how exposure to media was affecting children's ability to

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regulate themselves, giving them access to content that

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maybe isn't developmentally appropriate. We have parents who come

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to us who maybe are not familiar at all, that, you know, they don't even

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realize that social media is showing stuff with their children. Their kids

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might be struggling. And then we also have chapter leaders who are very

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involved in advocacy. So Mama tries to meet folks where they're at,

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recognize that each community might have a different

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appetite for advocacy and a different set of concerns that's

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most pressing, but give them the tools and the confidence to go

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out and meet the moment and work with teachers, work with school

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boards. Multiple chapter leaders have given testimony in their communities

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about the needs to get phones out of school. So it's something that's sort of

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living and growing and breathing all the time. Yeah. And so

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powerful to have an umbrella organization that can legitimize

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sometimes the advocacy work where

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it's not just one crazy mom who shows up at a school board

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meeting and acts extreme. It's like, no, this is a movement.

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It's not just a movement. It's an important principle

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we need to be putting into place, and that is really, really

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powerful. But let's talk for a minute about what is the concern?

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Like, why should we even care? Because I think what you said,

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Julie, is that sometimes parents come with a lot of information.

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Like, Julie Fruman has a lot of background as a therapist and working

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as a clinician. But some of us just feel off. Like, we just

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feel like it's not quite right and we're not sure why. What's the

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problem? So where are parents at? And, like, what are some of the

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concerns that we have around media addiction? How do you define

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it? What are we worried about? Great question. I mean, that's. We call it

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media addiction because we as a society right now

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are just completely addicted to media and screens.

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Think of all the places we have screens. They are in our

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restaurants, they are in our cars, our elevators, our gas

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pumps. So there's almost no place that you can go anymore and just

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enjoy the natural setting without being bombarded with information.

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And doctors know our brains and bodies were not meant to.

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To get a 247 fire hose of information

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coming at us. When I was growing up, my parents read the

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newspaper in the morning and they watched the news at night for 30 minutes.

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And, you know, the world is a scary place. There's a lot going on.

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There are fires, there are floods. It's always been that way. At the

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same time, there has actually never in the history of the world been a

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safer time to be alive. We have medicine, we have 911, we have

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fire departments. And yet, because narratives of

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conflict are what makes things capture our attention the

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most, journalism is always amplifying conflict.

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Entertainment platforms are always amplifying content

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that is about conflict. And we know that social media algorithms are

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designed for one thing and one thing only, and that's to maximize

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engagement. And they do that by showing us whatever is most

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likely to create an emotional reaction, especially a negative

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emotional reaction. That makes sense. People stay on. And so as a result,

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as a society, we have just been

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living in this state of really fight or flight where we're

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all upset and agitated all the time. And that's not healthy. And

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so, you know, I love what you're doing with Calm Mama, because once

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you're regulated, once you're calm, you can handle anything. And

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yes, emergencies do happen. I've got three boys. I have been through

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broken bones. I've gone through, through split foreheads. And that stuff was

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scary, but also wasn't catastrophic. And once I learned

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that I could manage these things, once we all learned that

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life is going to have ups and downs, but you can navigate calmly

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through it, it just lends itself to a much more peaceful world. And

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so we call it media addiction, because I think our society is addicted

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to screens. We're putting them in places where we shouldn't have them.

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Today's youth are spending about nine hours a day,

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day on screens, which is not healthy or safe for their minds or

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their bodies. It's not good for their posture, it's not good for their breathing.

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And we also know that we are in the middle of an unprecedented youth mental

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health crisis that's been wreaking havoc on kids and families. The

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American Academy of Pediatrics declared that we're in a state of emergency for

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youth mental health. And that's part of why I started Mama. It was because

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enough is enough. I think profit is great.

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I think media and technology can be really helpful

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and fun. We're certainly not anti media or tech. We just think

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it's not always the most important thing and doesn't belong in all

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situations. Yeah. I was at an event that

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Julie Fruman hosted, and one of my takeaways was listening to

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these emergency physicians talk about how

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they can fix a broken bone, they can fix your body,

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but they can't necessarily fix your heart,

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your mental health. And that they're seeing so much more

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emergencies around suicidal ideation

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or attempts or panic attacks or severe

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depression. I'm seeing in my practice a lot of failure to launch, especially with young

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boys, young men, and the girls just

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really not Thriving and it's hard to

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watch that. And of course there's, there's lots of factors that aren't just

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media related, but in many ways it can come back to media because

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the parents are possibly highly distracted as well

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and not necessarily as present. They're highly

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dysregulated and maybe not able to access all of the

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tools to connect. And we are all a little bored

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by real life because it's not as shiny.

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I remember turning my phone to grayscale

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and I do it every once in a while and noticing how the colors

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on my phone did not represent the colors in the world at all.

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And it's just really meant to be that way where

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the devices and like you said, Julie, all the

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emotional energy that the media is feeding us all of the

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time, that kind of is sensational and kind of

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stimulating. So we crave that stimulation and it

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gets us out of being just present. So it's all

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connected. And I wanted to ask about.

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We have this almost a crisis with adults. There's

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immediate addiction or just an

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overuse. And I think

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about previous generations having a nervous system

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wired without devices and how hard it is to

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manage our own media use. And I wondered if you could speak a

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little bit about what either of you, what it means when

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children are overexposed to media and

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device. What are we seeing long term? What are the effects on their

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adult mental health and like their adult nervous system and.

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Well, there's a study actually from Sapien labs that

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interviewed 28,000 young people, so 18 to 24

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young adults. And it shows that really delaying

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when they get their first, their, their own first.

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It did talk about smartphones, but I think we could like put a little pin

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and iPads as well to go back to that in a minute. It's all the

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same to me. It's a, it's an individual device that you hold in your hand

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whether it's, if it's connected to the Internet and you hold it in

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your hand. To me it's the same as the phone. What the heck difference are

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we kids aren't making phone calls? What are we talking about? I'm with you

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there. So this, this study, I want to be specific, is about the smartphone, but

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I'm with you. So it's 28,000 young adults, 18 to for

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and it tracked their mental health positive outcomes. So their mhq, which

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is basically just a scale asking questions about resilience and

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grit and overall life satisfaction. And

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then the second scale is showing levels of distress. And

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so every year and so the graph looks like years on the

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bottom. So every year that you delay, those positive mental

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health attributes are higher, and the struggling is less

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with every year of delay. And so when I first started doing these talks,

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I, you know, you were talking a minute about adults, but I thought, what do

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I want to say to people? How do I want to frame this? My first

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talks were very like, red alarm, red flag. And I left.

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I left parents with like, no takeaways as to what they could actually do. I

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just tried. I was like, be afraid. You know, it wasn't the

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most effective message at first. I just was like, ah, this is bad. I'm realizing

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this is bad. And we need to. We need to think about that. And over

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time, I realized, okay, I really. If I'm going to have people

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listen to me, I need to say, here are the harms, here's the potential

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harms, here's what we can do about it and sort of hold their hand through.

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So I learned my lesson over time, but the thing I came up with

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is three pronged. So delay, number one, delay, just

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slow down. And then teach is prong two.

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That's probably the biggest one where we have a lot to discuss and talk

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about with our children through each developmental stage. And then third is

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model and modeling the behavior that we want to see it.

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It doesn't have to be that we are abstinent as adults.

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We are, you know, hopefully our brains are fully formed.

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We've already, we have a, you know, a career or a path or a partner

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or a home or, you know, in combination, we've. We've achieved some of those

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milestones to get to the place where we are. And oftentimes our phones are

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connected to those things. So our partner, our work,

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taking care of the home. So our, Our relationship

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to technology is inherently different.

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And we still need to model what kind of home we are. You know, like

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Julie Scelfo said, she remembers her own childhood

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of, you know, newspaper in the morning, 30 minutes of news at night. I remember

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taking the phone off the hook at dinner, like, very vividly.

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That was something that we did as a family. And so that set the

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tone in a way for me. And so to think that, oh, there are

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spaces that. And places in which we are together as a family

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where other people aren't allowed in. And so that

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that matters. We don't want to expect perfection. We are

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so tied to these devices that it is really hard to disentangle. I think there's

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work to be done there that we can achieve really small, tangible

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things, step by step. At the same time, we can do

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something really simple like make sure devices are off at dinner, make sure

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devices are off after a certain time of day, or that we leave them off

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until after our morning coffee. Like little small things that adults do too,

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that teach our children that they have the phones, have a

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place, that they're not just the lens that we see the world through.

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Yeah, Beautiful. Julie. You both are the parenting experts. I

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am not a parenting expert and there is no parenting mistake that I didn't

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make three times. A thousand and many years

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ago, my youngest son was struggling a little bit with reading.

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His teacher mentioned that he was just not taking to books.

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And my husband and I talked about it that night and we realized both of

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us read for a living. He's an attorney, I was a journalist.

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But they only saw us reading on our phones because we weren't really

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reading paper magazines as much or books. And we realized this was a

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problem because they don't know that we're reading work versus looking at a TikTok

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or, you know, a video. So we made an agreement that

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we were going to start to have family reading hour on Sundays. And for

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one hour a week on Sundays, we would all get under the blankets in front

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of a fire, read a book. It didn't have to be a book, it had

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to be printed material. Could be a catalog, it could be a graphic

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novel, but not anything digital. And of course they

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complained, but then I brought snacks and then after a couple weeks they

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loved it. And it only lasted like a year, but that was it. Like that

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was literally all it took for my son to become interested in reading.

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He's thriving right now, finishing his first year of high school.

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So, you know, the impact of what we model for our kids is just so

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significant. And I think you're exactly right that we as adults are

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media addicted too. So all of Julie Fruman's suggestions are things

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that we've tried to internalize in our home.

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@wearemama.org we have a checklist

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that parents can use. Sort of like how to have rules in your home.

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We advocate for parents never ever allowing their child to

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take a WI FI enabled device into their rooms at

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night. They'll tell you that they turn it off and go to sleep. That's not

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true. We know from Instagram's own data that

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12 and 13 year old children are still awake at midnight, 1am,

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2am on school night. Scrolling. And it's not their fault. Right, because

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it's designed to be Addictive, So even it's difficult for adults to get

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off. So, yeah, and back to your question about the long term

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effects. I mean, I think what we already are beginning to understand,

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although it's almost impossible to fully measure it because it's

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so pervasive, is that all the time spent on screens

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during early childhood is actually displacing

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the critical real world experiences that every

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single other person in human history for millennia

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has used to acquire the building blocks they need

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to become socially proficient, to become

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emotionally proficient, and to have the early tools for academic

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success. So that's why we think media addiction is a

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problem. We want our kids to develop real world relationships

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and friendships, learn how to look people in the eye, learn how to recognize

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emotional cues. There was one study that came out a few years ago that

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showed when they took kids off of screens and they put them in

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a, in the woods, in a camp, a supervised camp with no screens,

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it took almost seven days for them to begin to recognize

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facial cues normally, like as most kids

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should when they're not on screens all the time. So there's serious, serious

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consequences of media use that sometimes you don't realize until

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it's already affected a child in a permanent way.

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Yeah. And that's where I think I feel like I have like an

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ick or like a gross out factor. If I'm on my device too long. I

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can kind of feel this longing to be in relationship, to be outside,

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to do something a little more creative or

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interesting. And I know that's because I have

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an historical experience of those times

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and I crave that. And I do think if we don't

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give our kids enough historical experiences, non

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media based, they will not necessarily crave it the same

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way. And it's one of those things I think

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about, of how much the opportunity cost of being on a device

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and what you're not doing. And you know,

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I appreciate, Julie, how you said, you know, you were an alarmist

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and on this podcast, because we talk a lot about being calm,

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it's very important to me that we don't scare everybody.

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But at the same time, I do want to be really honest about the fact

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that. But if you put an iPad in your 3 year

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old's hand for, I mean, I don't want to say at all because I

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know parents are busy, they're frustrated, they're like, I can't get a shower in. It's

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like, just recognize that that is time they're not spending with you, which

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is fine, or they're not spending playing or they're not spending outside or looking out

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the window or being bored. If that's

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just don't over rely on it. That's what I would say. It's like

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as much as you can. I wanted to talk about

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tips, but there's in this podcast, there's thousands, thousands of

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minutes spent on this topic. So we're going to link all these

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past episodes in the show, notes for everyone of how to manage

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screens. But it's just really thinking about creating a boundary

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for yourself, what works for your family, about how much time. And then

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using instead of an individual device, just using the television.

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It's so much more valuable than an individual

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device. If you need to have a babysitter, having a

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kid, have the distance from the television,

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it's one show. You turn it on, it ends. It's not a scroll,

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it's not an autoplay, those kinds of things. That

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shower example is good though, because I think what

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I hope your listeners know is if your child is growing up in a

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nurturing environment, is exposed to a lot of books, has healthy

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food, gets a lot of love, a lot of outdoor time, and

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they watch one video that is age appropriate

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for 30 minutes while you're in the shower. It doesn't matter. It's

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fine. What's not fine is if you hand them the

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screen while you're in the shower, while you're cooking dinner, while they're bored in the

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car, while you're waiting in line, while they're going down the sidewalk, while they're at

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the park. Well, you know, all of that, that's dis,

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displacing all of these. I mean, I love that you said opportunity cost,

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but the opportunity to learn how to entertain

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themselves, to become creative, to tolerate frustration.

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And as hard as it is to tolerate frustration when you're nine months old

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or a year and a half or three or five, just wait till you're an

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adult. So you need to have those early childhood experiences

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to give you the building blocks for future growth. Yeah,

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yeah. Boundary boundaries are important for

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resilience. Right. Having a limit is something that

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creates stress tolerance. And we often think, as in

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parent education. I do a lot of work around being okay

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with our kids stress and being okay with their

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distress because we want to help them co

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regulate with us while they're in that frustration. And

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the week after your episode airs, I'm having Molly Defrank on, who wrote a book

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called Digital Detox. And we talked about it last

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summer on the podcast and I did a whole episode on Digital Detox

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but what we often don't talk about is the

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frustration. If you do start to put boundaries on your kids and you

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recognize, oh, they're having some struggle with the, you know,

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we're overusing media, we're overusing devices

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and you want to put some limits. Well, your kids haven't maybe built up

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that stress tolerance and they're going to have even

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bigger emotion, more overwhelm. The

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longer they've been using those devices, the more

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reliant they are on self regulation. That's their co regulation.

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And so we have to really kind of create a capacity to step

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in and that can be challenging. That's why being in a community like

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Mama or you know, being in my community is important because

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otherwise we're not able to manage all of

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that distress for ourselves and our kids.

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So also too, when it comes to handheld devices

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versus a big screen, it's

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especially with littler, with littler kids, we're talking about iPads.

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As a parent, you hold the remote to the television.

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You know, there's something about that that you get to say, hey, okay, it's

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time and you hold it versus there's so much

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struggle in people's homes right now fighting over these devices

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literally physically, like trying to pull them out of their children's hands.

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It's like the opposite of, you know, the idea of like we all want to

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be a calm mama and then we, you know, end up doing these things. We're

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like, what is happening here? It is really difficult if a

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child has their own, their own device. And so like

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delaying that first iPad. You know, a lot of, I mean

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there's a study from I think Common Sense Media and Julie, maybe you can correct

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me here, I think it's 40% of 2 year olds have their own iPad.

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So I just think that is 40% of homes who are then

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daily fighting about this. For sure. Yeah. I mean

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the, the thing is, I don't want to shame anybody because when I

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had three kids, you know, with my first child I was like, he is never

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watching tv. I never put the TV on the first time

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when he was like two or three, I let him watch a video of Sweet

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Honey and the Rock singing. Like it was all really age appropriate.

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And then I had that second kid and I needed to change the diaper and

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I had a three year old who I couldn't sit still and I put on

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the video. So I don't want to shame parents for looking for

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help. We're living in a time where there is huge

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economic inequality it's very hard to get childcare.

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Families no longer live intergenerational, which makes it so

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lonely and hard as a parent, and you need a break sometimes. So I understand

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that. But it's also, I think, really worthwhile

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to spend a few minutes, seek out content that you

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think is appropriate. For example, one of the things I really don't like,

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even about children's cartoons, is that they're constantly changing the

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image, and it's so fast, and it's really

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overstimulating. And I found these incredible construction

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videos. I think they're called Mighty Machines. They came from. From Canada, and It

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would be 30 minutes about these amazing machines. And my boys loved

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them. And it was just the. The video was calm,

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but it was really smart, and it explored all of these machines. And

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I feel great that they saw these and it led them to have questions, which

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led us to go to the library and get more books. So I think that

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if you invest the time and you find something that's safe

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and appropriate and healthy for your kids, that can be a solution.

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I also think that part of the reason we have Mama chapters,

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as Julie mentioned, is so that you can come together and be in community.

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It is so hard when you're the only parent who doesn't allow your child to

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have social media, but when you make agreements in your community, and you know

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that other parents are also taking the phones away during play dates, they're

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also taking the phones away during sleepovers. You know, my kids were

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mortified when they had friends over, and I would feed them all pizza, and then

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I would. Would walk around with the basket, and I would say, okay, the phones

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are going away now. And they would say, mom, how could you do that? There's

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nothing to do. And I was like, yep, there's nothing to do. You're all going

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to be bored. And they would laugh, and they would be bored for 30

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seconds, and then somebody would get a ball, somebody would take out art supplies,

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Somebody would go in the yard and start a soccer game. So I think that

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it really is up to us to sort of set appropriate boundaries and

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then allow the kids to figure it out. I mean, that's something that Jonathan Haidt

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has written about in the Ankle Generation. It's not only limiting their

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screen time, but it's giving them more opportunities for free play. Not

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that we're micromanaging everything, putting them in all the classes, which,

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again, I put my kids in all the classes. I thought it would be so

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good for them. And then I realized I was actually Creating more pressure

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and not giving them time to just be bored and relax and, you know,

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take out the, the plastic sticks and

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the glue and make something, you know, right. Or I had

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boys and they would take their, you know, Hot

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Wheels track and just build these contraptions and try to

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run the cars down the stairs. And they, my boys

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played and we definitely delayed. They weren't all

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allowed to play any video games till 10 and

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12. I felt like 11 or 12 was around the right age, but then

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my kids are so close in age, I was like, well, with one does it,

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the other is gonna do it. So that was really

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frustrating because it was the Minecraft era when that first

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launched. And most, even though we were at a slow tech school,

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the kids were still playing Minecraft. And it was really

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frustrating for my son. He felt socially isolated. He felt

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like he wasn't connected. He wasn't able to play

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with the kids, that we didn't let him watch VG13 movies and things

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like that. So they wouldn't be able to talk about the Marvel movies.

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And there is some social cost

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when you do it if, especially if you're not in an environment where people are

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like minded. And it's interesting when I talk, I. My sons are 19

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and 21 and we talk about their results

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of having a slow tech family. And

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they did say there was some. They were behind

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a little bit because they had phones later

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and they went to middle school and there was a lot of

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kids who already had a lot of chat experience and they were

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in conversations and had had social interactions that my

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sons were not part of. But they also said it caught

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up super fast. Like it was a slow,

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a short delay, not anything significant. I mean, you have to

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remember all of these folks in Silicon Valley

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who created all of these products, they didn't grow up with these screens, they didn't

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grow up with phones, they didn't grow up always being connected. And it

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was Steve Jobs himself who told the New York Times that he wouldn't let his

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kids use the iPad. He wanted them to be creative, he wanted them to

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have time online. And he understood that once you start using this,

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it takes other real life experiences and it renders them almost

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more boring. And so, you know, with my own kids,

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with three boys, it was so hard to civilize them. When they were young, you

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know, they would be doing something and someone would say, will you pass that to

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me? And they would throw it and it would broke the Lego. And before you

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knew it, they were at each other's throats. And if I let them play video

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games, I noticed that as soon as they

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finished, they were so quick. And the opposite of

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calm. Right. I had spent all this time trying to make them calm. And the

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video games are actually designed to reward responding as quickly as

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possible. And responding as quickly as possible is the opposite of being calm.

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It's the opposite of being patient, of pausing before

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responding, of thinking. And so that's what technology is

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good for. It's really good for acceleration. It's good

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for crunching large amounts of data quickly. It's not

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good for teaching you how to human. And so even though

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there was a cost to them too, my kids insisted they

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were the last kids in New York City without a phone. To which I said,

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yes, you are the last child in New York City without a phone. But they

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still, they somehow survived that. They somehow survived not being allowed

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all the social media. And just like your kids, once they had it, it was

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very quick and easy to learn. And I also think that

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by not having it, they avoided some problems that unfortunately too

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many kids have had. And, you know, happy to talk about that if

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you want, because there are negative effects of use and overuse.

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Yeah, let's talk about. I was going to say one thing just anecdotally, that

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my sons feel very

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disappointed when they hang out socially with their friends

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because they're all so quick to go on their devices

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and just scrolling on these reels, you know, just

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video, very short videos. And

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you know, they use Snapchat and stuff to connect and find each other and those

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kinds of things. They use that. But then. And that works. But when

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they're sitting around and there's a lull, just a small lull

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in the conversation, their peers are

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so quick to go to their phones. And even my son,

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he is in college, is finishing his second year and

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he is home this summer and he was talking to me about even in his

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college apartment with his friends that most of

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the year they spent a lot of time in a living room together on their

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devices. And he came home and he said, you know,

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he's looking at his phone, he's like, I don't want to do this anymore. I

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just want to have a conversation. And because I'm

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open to having a conversation, we're having all these amazing conversations. But it's

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unfortunate that he's not necessarily being able to do that with his

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peers. And it's just sad. So,

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yeah, let's talk about the negative effects of

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overuse. But I think sometimes to me it just seems like

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Loneliness. I have seen that my 20 something clients have regret

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for how much they spent. Well, I think we could

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organize the negative effects in a couple of categories.

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There are acute effects. So for

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example, you know, parents know what the dangers look like in

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the real world. You know, if your child doesn't have a helmet on, you know

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that's not good. Or if, you know they're having too many brownies, they're not

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gonna feel very good after afterwards. But you don't always see what's happening

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online. And in the online space there are a

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number of dangerous things happening. We know that social media

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algorithms promote content that

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includes eating disordered content, unhealthy beauty

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standards. They share violence, they share

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hate speech, they share racism. They also

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share. According to

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internal documents that have come out, Instagram

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says that it recommended 22 million

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children's accounts to peop to to other accounts

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that they had identified as belonging to groomers or pedophiles.

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So, you know, there are some really serious harms happening there. They

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also include things like sextortion. I don't know if you're familiar with that crime,

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but it's when a stranger approaches a young person

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online, it's usually a boy, and they pretend to be a girl the

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same age, engage them in chat, ask for a

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nude image, and then once they get it, they say, by the way, I'm not

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a girl and you're going to pay me $500. I'm going to send this to

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everyone you know. And unfortunately, when that happens, children panic.

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And the FBI has identified, I think, 22 cases of

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children who died by suicide after they were sex stored.

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Also there is drug dealing that goes online.

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Fentanyl pills are sold online. So

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everything from grooming, brainwashing, pornography, those are some

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of the more extreme things. The other negative

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effects fall into a category of what

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I would say we could think of as sort of the

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normalizing of dysfunction. So,

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you know, when you are looking at content of people talking

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about being depressed, of being suicidal, of

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self harming, of having an eating disorder, and it's showing up in

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your feed right next to birthday party photos, cat videos,

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our kids have begun to think about this stuff as normal and it's not

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normal. I did an interview last year that was kind of

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fun on the Oprah show. And she had a couple

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teenagers in the audience and she asked this one young man, you know, what do

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you not like about social media? And this boy was 15 years old and

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he got up and he said, you know, sometimes I just want to see what's

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happening with my friends or my favorite teams. But this one guy always sends me

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these terrible videos. And one time I watched a car crash,

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another time I saw dead bodies. He said, once I watched an

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execution and it just took my breath away

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because that's one child. And all of these things are happening at

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scale. So our kids are just being exposed to a

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volume of inappropriate content

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that is displacing their ideas that

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they get from you as a parent, that they get from your community. And

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that's kind of teaching them what the world is like. And that's part of why

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we're seeing a rise in hate groups, a rise in,

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what do we call it, the manosphere. And all of these kind of

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crazy over the top macho ideas that are certainly

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nothing that my husband thinks is what being a man is about or what we

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want our boys to see. And also the last

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thing is the habits that these addictive designs train your

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brain to have are really no different than the way other addictive

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products work. So the reason people sit at slot machines are for hours

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is because the click, click, click and the spinning and the bell,

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it tells your brain like something great is about to happen and hasn't

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quite happened yet, but it's going to happen. And so you don't want to leave,

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you want to sit there and keep going and keep going. And that's how social

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media is designed. It has an endless scroll and whatever video you see,

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you're like, oh, well, that's not that great, but you think the next one is.

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And even we as adults are not immune to this. So we too

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are media addictive and we too can have some of the harms, at least

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for us. We hopefully, most of us here have grown up in an age where

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we didn't have this, so we were able to get all those basic skills. But

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what we're seeing now, you know, as you mentioned at the top of the show,

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there are this failure to launch, this, this inability to cope with the

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regular world, this inability to manage going to the grocery store and

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talking to strangers because your whole time childhood, if you were looking

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down at the screen and never interacting with a stranger, and if your idea of

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what a stranger is comes from YouTube videos where it's all kind of over the

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top and ridiculous, it really doesn't prepare you for real life.

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Yeah, yeah, it's, it's hard to

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hear, you know, and that's not even about their ability to learn

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critically. Think

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is sad. And I think going back to Julie

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Fruman's Recommendation of delay, teach and model is

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so helpful because otherwise we can go ah

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right, like just freak out. And I

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just did today, like a deep dive this morning on the Manosphere and

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the red pill matrix and all this stuff that's out there

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because I just want to be informed for myself of what's happening. But

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you can see how it's very

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polarizing and normalizing, that polarization

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and that we're all so different and that everyone

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is out to get you or that you know, that conflict on the

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Internet is so heightened because that is what gets

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clicks and yeah, just normalizing that is,

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it's discouraging. But I think going back to that

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delaying model, teaching and modeling and I

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was thinking about alcohol use how

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I don't think it's strange at all that I don't let my Twitter

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12 year old drink alcohol. Like I, I'm not

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saying he, he, I don't have a 12 year old but like that they should

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never drink alcohol. I just don't think it's appropriate for a 12 year old to

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drink alcohol or I don't have an 8 year old driving a car for really

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good reasons. And when we think about the,

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all the things we delay, we delay sex, we delay

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drugs, we, I mean you know, drugs being alcohol and,

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and responsibility and having a credit card and like so many

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adult type things. It's very normal to delay those.

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What we have done I think is normalized

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the tech use as not for adults. And

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thinking about what you said Julie Scalpel about Steve Jobs,

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when they made the iPad, it was not for children,

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it was for work and for you know, adults.

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And we've just normalized that this is something that we give kids and

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I. And it still isn't. It still isn't. And, and you know,

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sometimes I feel like the grim reaper. I show up and I tell everybody all

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this bad stuff. But, but I think parents deserve to know. I mean

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even when you look at the app store, there are apps that have been rated

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4 + and who is doing those ratings? It isn't

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transparent. And it's not a family therapist, it's not a

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pediatrician, it's not even a school teacher. It's someone who works for the company.

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So you know, as a parent, I

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believe that I deserve to know if a product's available to my children and

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being marketed to children that it's safe. It's my job to feed my kids

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healthy meals. But no one expects each of us as individuals

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to make sure the baby formula on the shelf is safe. We count on

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our systems to make sure the safeguards are there. Our

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food supply is checked. Nobody wants that to go away. We have to

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have our license renewed. We have to

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have our car inspected once a

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year. But nobody expects each of us to put out stoplights and stop

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signs to make sure the roads are safe. And so that is why our

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last surgeon general called for warning labels on social

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media. That is why he said he would not even consider giving his own

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daughters a smartphone or social media till they were in high school and maybe not

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until after that. And we meet folks from the tech world all the time who

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say no way until they're after 18. So delaying

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is the first thing. Again, I think teaching and modeling is

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absolutely right and I think what you said is also right. The

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teaching comes in at different

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stages and there's different things to teach them about. It's not

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fair to give a 10 year old a product that was not designed for them

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and expect them to be able to manage it. There's nothing you can teach a

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teenager that's going to overrule their

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biology, which makes them inclined to take risks, which makes them

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inclined. Kids are going to be silly, so they're going to

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do things they shouldn't do. And if you give them access to the Internet and

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social media where they could photograph and share those things online,

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inevitably more people are going to get hurt than need to get hurt.

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So that's why waiting is so useful. Yeah. And maybe even

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framing tech as an adult tool

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for all of us to think about. Well, this was made for adults. This is

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designed for adults. Even though there's Paw Patrol on

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YouTube or whatever it is, it's like the, the device

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itself was not made for children,

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and maybe the content is made for children, but it was meant

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to be distributed on a different type of platform,

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like on a television. And when we think about

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the. If we could think about it that way, we may be able to come

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to more intuitive decision making that doesn't. That feels more

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aligned instead of, I'm doing it wrong, something's

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not right, something's wrong with me, my family's messed up. It's like, well, how can

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we really kind of frame this conversation so that there is

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a little bit more intuition and then maybe there's a little bit more movement

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towards best practices that feel right to everyone. Not like,

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what do I need to do? I need to listen to seven podcasts to find

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out what my kids should be watching or using. It's like, well, what. Let's just

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think about it. For a hot minute. Yeah. Julie, you were gonna say something?

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Yeah, I. And I also want to. Want to name that

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while the digital world is not made for children,

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the real world is. And

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it. It almost goes against our intuition as

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parents, because we've been brought up in the land of anxious

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parenting, and a lot of us do see too much

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media, so we've been exposed to stories, and

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it has caused a lot of parents to think that it's unsafe for our

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children to go outside and do what they're really supposed to do. And so that

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takes some. That takes a little bit. That's a hurdle that I've had to

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jump. I even had a friend of mine who works in

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marketing, and when I first started doing these talks, she was. Was like, I think

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this is going to mess up your message if you talk about this, because you're

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going to lose everyone. You cannot talk about people letting their children

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go out into the world. And I was like, well, but. But you have

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to, because otherwise, what are they going to do? And we're not going to have

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kids who launch and kids who are healthy, who have healthy bodies

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and healthy, you know, even eyes, like, our eyes are meant

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to develop our eyeballs, like, in relation to exposure and experience.

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And we don't get that if everything that we see is close up. So

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we need to be outdoors seeing different. You know, we need to be outdoors for

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mental health. We need to be outdoors because we need to be with our friends.

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And, you know, there's just, like, so many reasons why this is

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really part of the conversation. And I just want to say that sometimes it goes

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against our, you know, our gut feeling if we go, oh, you know, I'm not

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sure if they're ready. And so we come together as a community. And

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so when I started, you know, hosting these mama

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gatherings, this has to be part of what we talk about is, what are. What

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can we do? How can we, you know, tiptoe ever closer

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toward having communities that let children be goofy

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and let them take risks, knowing that that

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type of a risk, like falling, you know, off of a fence that you maybe

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shouldn't have climbed, is something we can heal versus

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constant exposure to violence and manosphere.

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Seeing pornography before you've had your first kiss, I mean, it's. It's

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heartbreaking, isn't it? It is. It is. I had to really

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overcome a lot of anxiety raising my boys because I grew

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up with one sister, and I was a ball, and I read books all the

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time. And then I had these three wild young things. Who just

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were kamikaze. They would run straight into the ocean before they could swim. There was

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no wall they wouldn't try and climb or launch off their scooter.

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My husband grew up with really a free range childhood in the woods. He

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has a chainsaw scar. He and his buddy

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once built their own log cabin in the woods without anyone knowing which they got

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into trouble for. But. So he really helped me take a deep

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breath and understand the difference between an

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appropriate risk and a not appropriate risk. And I also, I mean, it took

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a solid 10 years, but at some point I finally

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recognized that they would heal from these and that every injury wasn't

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catastrophic, that it was important that they trust themselves and

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they learn how to test their limits and that they practice, practice,

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practice before they attempted the flip on the, on the

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trampoline. And now they can do a double backflip and all of these kinds

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of, you know, milestones. But what I wish someone had said to me

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was that as hard as it was to deal with that when they were 2

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and 5 and 8, it was so much easier than trying

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to confront these problems as teenagers if they didn't

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have those building blocks, you know, I was

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moved to start Mama after reporting on the youth mental health crisis and

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hearing getting calls and letters and emails from

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neighbors, from strangers about all of the children

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nationwide who are struggling. I mean, this national health emergency,

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mental health emergency for kids and teens is happening, and

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there's not enough providers to take care of them. There are kids who are

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unable to go to school anymore. There are so many kids who their

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norm now is being in a dark room, being on video games. So they don't

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know how to go get a job. They don't know how to go talk to

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people. And that's not good for anybody. So that's why we're all

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working together and fighting back. And, you know, we could also talk about some of

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the wins we're having because it's been a great year for Mama and we're really

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seeing a lot of progress. Yeah, tell us about the wins and then just kind

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of wrap up the best way that people can connect with you and connect with

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the local chapters. I'd love that. Sure. Well, you

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know, the biggest win we've had is recruiting people like Julie Fruman. I

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mean, she's such a gift to her community and to Mama nationwide

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because we are seeing parents, and it's not just moms, it's dads too. It's

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grandparents who are like, enough is enough. We don't have to convince anybody

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about the problem of media addiction. Everybody feels it and everybody wants to

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go back to something healthier. It's also completely a

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bipartisan issue, which I love. It's not about politics.

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Right. It's about kids and keeping kids healthy. So whatever side

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of the political spectrum you identify with, there's a place for

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you at MoMA. We're seeing lawmakers on both sides of the aisle come

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together and that's one of our big successes in the last

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year. We're seeing schools go to Bell to Bell phone bans, which

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is very exciting. Virginia just announced last week. New York was

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last month. More and more states are saying, okay, school has to be a

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place that's preserved for in person learning, for socialization.

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And when you get phones away, Bell to Bell with which means the beginning of

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the day and to the end of the day. Once again, the hallways

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are loud and joyful. The cafeteria is loud.

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When phones were there, kids just are like this, looking down. It's

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quiet and nobody likes how that feels. The other thing that we're

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happening that we're seeing in the states, which is really wonderful, are state

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lawmakers standing up and putting new protections in for

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kids. So just last week, the state of Nebraska joined Maryland,

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California, California, and they passed something called the kids Code. That's short

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for the age appropriate design code. And that's legislation that

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requires social media platforms to be safe by design.

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There are really simple things they can do in the design of these products that

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keep kids safe. One example is putting privacy settings at the most

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private. That way strangers can't contact your child. I mean, so

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obvious, right? And that way your child's not being contacted by strangers,

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someone who could attempt to sextort them or sell them drugs or

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solicit child sexual abuse material. So all of these things

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are really positive. We run something called the Expert

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Insight series where we bring on guests like Julie

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and other folks who can talk about different facets of the issue,

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whether it's the legal part of it, whether it's how to

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implement phone free schools or what parents need to know at home. Just

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last week we interviewed Lenore Skenazi from a wonderful

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group called Let Grow. And on their website you can find tips

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for how to give your child more independence, challenges, how to do it through

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your school and give the kids opportunity for free play.

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And you know, I won't say there aren't challenges.

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With all of the work to do to make social media safer, we're now contending

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with AI and AI chatbots are coming, coming out just like

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social media, where there's no regulation. And so we're already seeing new

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harms to children. Children are falling in love with AI Chatbot, which really

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confuses healthy relationships. There is a

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lawsuit that's been brought against character. AI the mom alleges

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the child fell in love with the chatbot and became

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suicidal, which the chatbot encouraged. And the child did take

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his own life, which is heartbreaking. And

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there's a provision right now that was added to the budget bill which would actually

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prevent states from introducing or enforcing any

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laws to limit AI in any way for the next

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10 years. This is absolutely crazy.

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The 40 attorneys general have come out against this.

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250 state lawmakers from both parties wrote a letter to Congress saying

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this is a bad idea. Even Marjorie Taylor Greene

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last week said, I had no idea this was in the budget bill, and if

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I had seen it, I never would have voted for it. So hopefully it will

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come out, but we're still not sure of that yet. And that's why we invite

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folks to join mama. We have a letter you can send and all of that

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information to sign up is that we are mama dot org.

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Yeah, we are Mama. M a M a Just like call Mama. We are mama

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dot org. Yeah. So good. And then, of course, joining a

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local chapter. And I wonder, Julie, if you could just speak about

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real quick, like, how it was to create one. Like, how'd you

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find that? Because I would imagine that some people are like, oh, I'm

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into it. I want to join a chapter. And then they go, look. And they're

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like, mine is 800 miles away. I don't know how

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prevalent they are yet, but I would imagine they're not in every single community.

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Definitely. And I think this really applies to places like Southern

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California, where Even if it's 40 miles away

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or 30 miles away, that can be an eternity, depending on the time of

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day. And just feasibly, you want to be able to be in community

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with the group. And so ideally, we're going to just have more and more.

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When. When I started, I just found that there was such an

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appetite for people to. To want to

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come together, and I wanted to offer solutions

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like this. This whole concept of, you know, letting our children

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let grow, you know, the Lenore Skinniese, I love her work

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and I tried to get something together with our schools,

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and it's challenging. Our school districts are really big. And so, you know,

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with. Within the framework of mama, I could say, hey, like, this is something

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that we can do. We can. We can have our own play club,

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which is one of the things she recommends. It's just free play and just having

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a structure for that. Let's pick a day of the week

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that. That we can get the kids together. Because I. Part of the reason I

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wanted to do this is because I grew up in community with people, and I

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want that so badly for my own children. I want it for children worldwide.

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And so I think I was. I am super, super motivated to do this.

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And a lot of the chapter leaders, I mean, they all are. When. When

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I. When I get nervous, this is something I visualize in my mind. If I

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get nervous, if I'm going to talk to an administrator or if I'm about to

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have a really difficult conversation or even do, like, a big presentation.

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I picture a lot of these moms who developed relationships with. Including you,

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Julie Scalpo. I picture you standing behind me, and it sort of. It

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like, gives me this feeling of I've got this, you know, like, I need.

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If not me, who. If not now, when. You know, that sort of thing. But

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they are all standing behind me. They all. They all agree with me. And

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we, you know, we want to have more. I just want more people

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in this crew because it's. It is necessary for each community to sort

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of look to somebody and go, hey, what do you think about this idea? You

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know, what do you think? And to have those normal conversations, like on the softball

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field or whatever. It's. I think we're. I think we

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are trending in a. In a good direction, and we just

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want to keep that growing. Yeah, I love that image

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because even your website is we are Mama. And really, that

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idea of I'm here representing not

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myself, but a whole group and a whole

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bunch of parents who are invested in grandparents and aunts and

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uncles and lawmakers and just we. Right. There's enough people.

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You're not alone. And the work that you're doing is vital.

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So I just really want to say thank you both for being on the podcast

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and all the work that you're doing in this space. Thank you

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for having us and thank you for the work you're doing. I mean, it's all

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interconnected, right? Because what's happening with the. Internally is the

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energy that we're bringing to our communities, and there's been a

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lack of calm in the last couple years. And what I hope your

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listeners take away from this is that by design,

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someone made the algorithms that way, and they're

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making a lot of money off of promoting conflict and

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promoting anxiety and promoting this idea that we have to

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be connected. And the number one and best way to

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break that cycle is to say, enough. I'm not gonna

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be on devices all the time. I'm not gonna let my kids be on devices

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all the time. And I'm gonna insist that these products are safe. Otherwise,

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I'm not giving them to my kids. Yeah, yeah. We're very empowered.

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So thanks for that message and, yeah, thanks for your work. So we are

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mama.org join, join, join. You know, reach out to

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the organization. Watch those expert insights, join a local chapter,

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and, yeah, get involved. So thank you. Thank you again.

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This was so much fun. Yeah. All right. Have a great day. You too.

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Bye. Julie, nice to see you. Thank you. So good to see you. Bye.

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Bye.

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