Posted on 06/12/2020 9:58:36 AM PDT by EyesOfTX
I knew there was a problem when on Christmas Eve a family sat down next to us in church and before the choir even started singing, the man in the group pulled out his cell phone and began watching golf.
Yep. In church, on Christmas Eve.
Note to self: if you need to pull out your phone in church to do anything but read a Bible verse, you have a phone problem. If you spend more than two hours a day texting (this is the average texting time daily for teens!), you have a phone problem. If you miss meals and bathing because you are gaming on the internet, you are an addict. And if you or your kids are seeing psychologists for anxiety due to social media, you all have a phone and device problem.
The following is taken from my new book, All Thumbs: How Our Obsession with Phones and Devices is Damaging Our Children and Restructuring Our Lives, available only as a gift when you sign up for an annual VIP subscription at www.wildworldofhistory.com. While the field is still relatively newremember, the smart phone only came out in 2007, the iPad in 2010the vast, vast majority of research is suggesting that we as a society have phone and device problems. Simply put, the more youre on the devices, the more likely you are to have anxiety, depression, and even suicidal thoughts; for girls, the behaviors also include self-harm and cutting. What I propose is certainly not prohibition, which would be impossible in todays society in the first place, but as one would with medicine, alcohol or fast cars, management and control.
The cell phone spread to one-quarter of the U.S. population faster than any product in history except for its companion, the internet (13 years vs. 7 years). Merely finding out how much people are on phones is a challenge, because some studies double count, such as when a child is watching an iPad while simultaneously playing a video game on a hand-held device or texting. According to Pew, 92% of teens go online daily and half go online multiple times a day. Women have more extensive use of cell phones than men do, especially when it comes to text messaging; men are more likely to use a phone while driving. (More on that in a moment).
Here comes the scary stuff. Some 40% of teens hide their online behavior from their parents, including more than half of those 14-16 years old. Some kids14%hide their passwords from their parents and 10% regularly delete their browsing history. Yet parents think they know whats going on: 70% of parents are unaware of their kids online/phone activities.
The devices are just the beginning. The websites and activities are the real issues here. Heavy Facebook/Instagram use has infected youth with massive levels of anxiety. One-third of eighth graders spent large amounts of time online just reading what other kids were saying about them. One pediatrician cited in the book who only five years ago saw one patient a week for anxiety now reports three to four a day, virtually all of them young people. Merely leaving a conversation without saying goodbye (called ghosting) can cause remarkable unease. In a single year, 2017-2018, emergency room visits for suicidal ideatoin and/or self-directed harm rose by more than 25%. And this phenomena is reported worldwide, not just in America. (I cant even begin to get into cyberbullying and human trafficking via the internet in such a short column).
I found hundreds of studies on changes in the brain caused by phones and/or devices. If you want a quick source, look for anything by UCLAs Dr. Gary Small, one of the first to study the stimulation of the brain by a computer (and remember, thats what a smartphone is). Scans of brain activity on internet surfers, gamers, even girls looking at their Facebook posts, show significant effects on brain activity, few of them good. The reliable Journal of the American Medical Association says children who have more screen time have lower structural integrity of white matter tracks . . . that support language and other emergent literacy skills. Still other studies found that reading on pads or screens changes the very way we read and radically diminishes understanding and retention.
As for devices being addictive, the science shies away from flatly stating this. Usually the phrases are shows strong correlation with or is strongly associated with. The reason for such mush phrases is that controlling for phone/device use that would allow for absolute causation statements would require massive long-term double-blind studies that likely could not be conducted given the restrictions on kids that would be required.
Yet when I asked the authors of these studies, as well as pastors, psychologists, therapists and others whether they thought the devices were addictive, with only one exception, they all said yes. Steve Jobs was so convinced the smartphone was a bad thing he wouldnt let his own kids have one. Research has shown that devices cause the dopamine tickle, a phrase that refers to a release of the pleasure transmitter dopamine into the brain. Typical video game dopamine release are at the level of 100%, or about the same as sex (eating chocolate is rated at 50%, cocaine, 350%). Game-related addictions have even cause a new disorder to be named: Internet Addiction Disorder, or IAD. But its not just games: it turns out that releasing information on the web (Do you know who I saw her with??) also causes the dopamine tickle. Wait! It gets better (worse?): 55% of technicians monitoring heart bypass machines reported talking on their cell phones during surgery!
For our kids, it may be worse. Some 46% of all Americans said they could not live without their cell phones. A 2020 very large study of 21,000 high schoolers found the three most mentioned feelings they experienced were tired, stressed, and bored, with tired the most popular response. Why? Would it be because studies link phones to sleep deprivation? And keep in mind that a mere two hours a day on devices reduces language and thinking skills. At seven hours a day, research shows clear premature thinning of the cortex, a development that usually happns much later in a persons aging process. How much time total do kids actually spend on phones and/or devices? Dr. Eimitri Christakis puts the number at 4.5 hours a day just on phones. Even kids admit they are spending too much time on phones, with 60% saying it is a major problem in their life.
There is much more, including the dangers of texting and driving. But this is enough for now for you to ask, So what do we do?
Here are three quick suggestions:
1) The first thing you and your kids need to do is to have an honest assessment of how much time you and they are on devices. This is time you are not interacting with another live person. So, carve out specific people time. That means, especially for parents with kids, car time and dinner time. No phones at dinner. No phones for anyone in the car unless its a GPS for around town. For longer trips, have the first half-hour out and the last half-hour back as no phone time.
2) Never allow children to sleep with their phones. If they (or you!) use a phone for an alarm, get a clock. Phones interrupt sleep in many different ways, as discussed in the book.
3) Most important, as you develop non-phone time and phone rules, parents remember its your phone. You pay for it, and therefore you get to set the rules.
These and many other suggestions, along with many sources and references for help, are in All Thumbs, and Ive only scratched the surface. Start today learning to live better with your phone or your device!
Larry Schweikart is the co-author of the New York Times #1 bestseller, A Patriots History of the United States with Michael Allen and the author of Reagan: The American President. He also has an instructional history site, www.wildworldofhistory.com where this and full history curricula can be purchased.
My wife and I shut down cell phone usage at least an hour before we hit the bedroom. Cell phones are a sleep inhibitor and if someone needs to get in touch with us at a late hour, we’ll hear the notification from the other room.
ping
Our very own LS
Love the name Wild World of History. In the ‘80s when I was doing batch transmissions my receiving terminal name was “Wild and Wacky World of Wayne.”
When I turn on my phone I check FR first.
Never carry them and youve no problems worrying about abusing them.
Science has NOT shied away from stating unequivocally that a new text or new email targets the same part of the brain as sex, food and narcotics.
You get a hit of dopamine each and every time you get that ding that there’s a new text or email.
Like lab rats, we want that hit again and again so we keep checking.
Of course there are differences like no tremors and shakes and possible seizures from withdrawal.
I think!! :)
This is my one computer day for June!
......./s
This is my one computer day for June!
......./s
Here is the simplest of simple rules with regards to using the Internet on your little 2 x 3 device there
If youre around any other human beings , especially your own family or children , you should not have your phone out at all
Im talking about other human beings that youre interacting with
In a restaurant you should never ever have your phone out. Period
If youre out of doors , you should not be looking at your phone at all
Try to think of your phone this way - it is a telephone ! it is designed for you to be able to talk to other human beings
We live in a world where we numbly and blindly comply with those who seek to destroy freedom while we are distracted by our addiction to the sensual pleasures brought to us by our electronic devices.
Im lucky as those things dont affect me. I have lots to occupy my time and attention. However I love my iPhone not only because Im a photographer but I moved away from my homeland three years ago so my family and all my friends are essentially inside my phone.
As for social media Im currently in Twitter jail. Some snowflake got butthurt that I dared to post about the black on black killings last weekend in NYC and Chicago on Ricky Gervaiss post bashing those witless celebrities saying I hear you.
So Im ok being off Twitter as I appealed but more it just makes me mad their rules are so skewed. I was accused of inciting violence or threatening. Only that I called them out for never talking about black on black crime!
Little me, maturing woman, in beautiful Georgia country just stating facts. Sitting here not a threat to anyone.
I get what you’re saying and agree on all point...but to think it’s just a telephone is deceiving ourselves. It is a very powerful (in some not so good ways, too) communications device. As a matter of fact, most people use these devices to communicate WITHOUT talking...just send a text, instant message, tweet, etc. Now, that being said...just like any other tool or device, there is a proper time and place for the use and that is dictated by the family (if not adult age) and societal norms and mores...and unfortunately, those norms and mores are changing...
I definitely have a phone problem & it’s FR’s fault.
Have a great weekend. Unless something major happens, I plan to confine any FR activity to GGG.
“Try to think of your phone this way - it is a telephone ! it is designed for you to be able to talk to other human beings”
But the only human beings I want to talk to are the ones on FR!
I stopped at
“Three Things
YOU Can Do!”
.
Candy Crush you know.
Just missed That,
Dang!
Doing a Wash.
.
I miss Rush,
Prayers up for
a Full Recovery!
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