Why I’m Putting My Eight-Year-Old on an Electronic Fast.

  1. Kathy Newman says:

    You are not alone! My name for non-screen activities for the kids is “making your own fun.” When my 11 year old forgets how to make his own fun—constantly whining and badgering for screen time—he is put on an electronic fast until he remembers. Good job! And keep us posted. You are a beacon of hope for the rest of us!

  2. Kathy Newman says:

    You are not alone! My name for non-screen activities for the kids is “making your own fun.” When my 11 year old forgets how to make his own fun—constantly whining and badgering for screen time—he is put on an electronic fast until he remembers. Good job! And keep us posted. You are a beacon of hope for the rest of us!

  3. Rachel says:

    Bravo – for your vulnerability in sharing and your courage to do what is best for your family! I may just need to to the same thing for my kid AND myself…

  4. rookiemomwhitney says:

    We are thinking about going to no screentime during the school week. (First day of school is tomorrow.) I worry about what that article reported and I think it’s like feeding our kids a diet of food that was just invented in factories this year — we don’t really know how it impacts growth and development.

    • suburbanturmoil says:

      I think this is a great idea- I just worry about creating a situation where he feels like he has to binge on the weekends. That could really put a damper on our family time. 🙁

  5. Kelly says:

    We went cold turkey last year. I had to work hard to get my husband to quit making me the bad guy, “we’ll ask your mom” and I had to be the one to say no. Once he realized the answer was always no it started to get better. Then over the summer we started to backslide. Mainly because one of his summer programs allowed tablet time after lunch, and he would have been without a device if he didn’t borrow mine, which turned into using it on the 40 minutes there, and the 40 minutes home then an hour or so during the school day, and it turned into a constant, can I play, when can I play, I want this game or this game all over again. His psychologist and therapist both said it was the right thing to do, and my husband still didn’t understand why it was a big deal for him to do it sometimes. Because sometimes turns into all the time and the begging and pleading starts again. There have been tears and yelling and door slamming, but I don’t care any more, he is not playing anymore. His brain is not mature enough to handle it.

  6. Kelly says:

    We went cold turkey last year. I had to work hard to get my husband to quit making me the bad guy, “we’ll ask your mom” and I had to be the one to say no. Once he realized the answer was always no it started to get better. Then over the summer we started to backslide. Mainly because one of his summer programs allowed tablet time after lunch, and he would have been without a device if he didn’t borrow mine, which turned into using it on the 40 minutes there, and the 40 minutes home then an hour or so during the school day, and it turned into a constant, can I play, when can I play, I want this game or this game all over again. His psychologist and therapist both said it was the right thing to do, and my husband still didn’t understand why it was a big deal for him to do it sometimes. Because sometimes turns into all the time and the begging and pleading starts again. There have been tears and yelling and door slamming, but I don’t care any more, he is not playing anymore. His brain is not mature enough to handle it.

  7. amanda14690 says:

    Hi- I’m a reader who hasn’t spoken up before, but just thought I would add a thought to the discussion of this great post. I see a similar pattern of behavior with my younger siblings and love the idea you had of going on a screen time fast. The one thing that gave me pause was when you said that when your son isn’t playing games online, he’s reading about them or drawing them or dreaming about them. Maybe there’s some real passion in there that could lead to an interest in programming – possibly worth worth exploring if you haven’t! And if that is the case, even more reason to create healthy boundaries like you’re doing now.

    • suburbanturmoil says:

      I have told myself this same thing soooo many times, which is partially what got me to where I am now. I do believe that technology has a place in his life– but right now, it occupies too much of a place in his life- It has become ALL he thinks about. In the last two days, he’s read multiple books, gotten out his wooden blocks and built things, played a LOT with his LEGOs, worked on a jigsaw puzzle, and more. He’s curious about everything right now, if given a chance. But I’m discovering that video games, to many boys, crowd everything else out because of their bells and whistles. They’re like crack, basically. 😉 And I don’t want that for him.

      • amanda14690 says:

        That’s great! And if something like programming is of long term interest to him, building skills and pattern recognition off the computer will definitely serve him well.

      • amanda14690 says:

        That’s great! And if something like programming is of long term interest to him, building skills and pattern recognition off the computer will definitely serve him well.

  8. amanda14690 says:

    Hi- I’m a reader who hasn’t spoken up before, but just thought I would add a thought to the discussion of this great post. I see a similar pattern of behavior with my younger siblings and love the idea you had of going on a screen time fast. The one thing that gave me pause was when you said that when your son isn’t playing games online, he’s reading about them or drawing them or dreaming about them. Maybe there’s some real passion in there that could lead to an interest in programming – possibly worth worth exploring if you haven’t! And if that is the case, even more reason to create healthy boundaries like you’re doing now.

  9. Danny Mosley says:

    Do you remember when you went tech free at Starbucks
    ie caffine over load. just sayin

  10. Danny Mosley says:

    Do you remember when you went tech free at Starbucks
    ie caffine over load. just sayin

  11. Tanya Goertzen says:

    We call it “unplugged day” and I randomly choose them. All day, no TV, electronics or video games. I truly believe it makes my boys not depend on them to get through a day. My youngest realy needs the breaks. He’s like yours and get really into it. 2 hours into unplugged day he is calmer, relaxed, less grouchy and eats full meals. Crazy.

  12. Tanya Goertzen says:

    We call it “unplugged day” and I randomly choose them. All day, no TV, electronics or video games. I truly believe it makes my boys not depend on them to get through a day. My youngest realy needs the breaks. He’s like yours and get really into it. 2 hours into unplugged day he is calmer, relaxed, less grouchy and eats full meals. Crazy.

  13. Ellen Wood says:

    We gave our 7yo some scrap boards, a package of small nails, a hammer and safety goggles. He forgot that we even HAD a TV for three days. He drew “blueprints”, made designs, redesigned when he realized the plans needed materials he didn’t have, and spent hours banging away in the garage. He created…something. I can’t identify it, but that’s ok. 🙂

  14. Ellen Wood says:

    We gave our 7yo some scrap boards, a package of small nails, a hammer and safety goggles. He forgot that we even HAD a TV for three days. He drew “blueprints”, made designs, redesigned when he realized the plans needed materials he didn’t have, and spent hours banging away in the garage. He created…something. I can’t identify it, but that’s ok. 🙂

  15. Suzanne Myers says:

    Such an honest and helpful post. Clash of Clans is pure evil. Thankfully, my son finally realized the demon-ways of in-app purchase games when I forbade him to ever spend his chore money on “gems’ or whatever. I don’t mind Minecraft, and am glad when that is the game of choice when he gets some screen time. Like you all, our son had a 2-week break (from ipad – still watched movies together some nights) over the summer. He did not miss it. Thankfully, our neighbors’ kids are not that plugged-in, so it’s usually fort-building or playing ball outside with that bunch. I dread daylight savings just around the corner, though. One of the best things I ever gave my son was a pocket knife. If no neighbors are around (he’s an only child), and I have thrown my last baseball with him, he happily sits outside and whittles sticks. If he starts carving mushrooms out of soap, I’ll start to worry. Or set him up on Etsy, haha.

  16. Suzanne Myers says:

    Such an honest and helpful post. Clash of Clans is pure evil. Thankfully, my son finally realized the demon-ways of in-app purchase games when I forbade him to ever spend his chore money on “gems’ or whatever. I don’t mind Minecraft, and am glad when that is the game of choice when he gets some screen time. Like you all, our son had a 2-week break (from ipad – still watched movies together some nights) over the summer. He did not miss it. Thankfully, our neighbors’ kids are not that plugged-in, so it’s usually fort-building or playing ball outside with that bunch. I dread daylight savings just around the corner, though. One of the best things I ever gave my son was a pocket knife. If no neighbors are around (he’s an only child), and I have thrown my last baseball with him, he happily sits outside and whittles sticks. If he starts carving mushrooms out of soap, I’ll start to worry. Or set him up on Etsy, haha.

  17. Amy says:

    This sentence made me very sad. Very.

    We moms don’t admit our problems to each other. Ever.

    I’m glad you have this online community to share with.

    My kids are grown, and grew up when video games were very new. We never had them in the house. But it was a lot easier to avoid then, plus they were girls and didn’t really care anyway. That wasn’t THAT long ago. Things have changed so fast. And not for the better.
    Please keep us posted. And congratulations for your honesty. Very proud of you!

  18. Amy says:

    This sentence made me very sad. Very.

    We moms don’t admit our problems to each other. Ever.

    I’m glad you have this online community to share with.

    My kids are grown, and grew up when video games were very new. We never had them in the house. But it was a lot easier to avoid then, plus they were girls and didn’t really care anyway. That wasn’t THAT long ago. Things have changed so fast. And not for the better.
    Please keep us posted. And congratulations for your honesty. Very proud of you!

  19. Stephanie Ringel Ginsberg says:

    This is on point! My 6 year old son, first grade, asks for the Ipad right away and what does he want to do? Watch videos of other kids playing with toys! I shake my head. When we take is away, tell him the battery died, or something else, it’s amazing how he first says that he is bored, but then finds his lego sets, his cars to race, a puzzle, something else to do! I definitely see a difference when he uses it more then he should and when he isn’t just playing a game, but watching these videos. We do limit what TV shows he can watch, mostly because some are SO inappropriate and stupid (sorry) and also because little brother is watching from the wings.
    Thanks from NY!

  20. Stephanie Ringel Ginsberg says:

    This is on point! My 6 year old son, first grade, asks for the Ipad right away and what does he want to do? Watch videos of other kids playing with toys! I shake my head. When we take is away, tell him the battery died, or something else, it’s amazing how he first says that he is bored, but then finds his lego sets, his cars to race, a puzzle, something else to do! I definitely see a difference when he uses it more then he should and when he isn’t just playing a game, but watching these videos. We do limit what TV shows he can watch, mostly because some are SO inappropriate and stupid (sorry) and also because little brother is watching from the wings.
    Thanks from NY!

  21. Marcy L says:

    That’s a great sign that he and his friend could have so much fun without the screens. I restricted my two boys’ screen time a lot when they were younger, and they developed into great readers who loved to play outside. When they got older, though, they ended up loving their screens just as much as their peers. I guess that’s OK, but I always wished they did more of other things. One just headed off to college with his phone as an appendage. The other (a high school senior) is a gamer, and that’s his all-time favorite thing to do.

  22. Marcy L says:

    That’s a great sign that he and his friend could have so much fun without the screens. I restricted my two boys’ screen time a lot when they were younger, and they developed into great readers who loved to play outside. When they got older, though, they ended up loving their screens just as much as their peers. I guess that’s OK, but I always wished they did more of other things. One just headed off to college with his phone as an appendage. The other (a high school senior) is a gamer, and that’s his all-time favorite thing to do.

  23. Lynn says:

    You’re a great mom!

  24. […] I wrote a post about our plans, I got lots of questions from moms at my son’s school, at the library, at the YMCA, at the […]

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