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Is it Important to Limit Your Child’s Media Time?

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Is it Important to Limit Your Child’s Media Time?

Tips on Parenting: Is it Important to Limit Your Child’s Media Time? Help for Parents in Making the Right Decision in such an Important Aspect of Great Parenting

When our children are born, we gaze into their eyes and vow to be the best parent possible. Yet the daily grind and routine can wear us down so that years, if not months later we usually parent without that goal in mind, at least some of the time. I believe that too much media time is as corrosive as any other parenting mistake, and yet is so often overlooked.

How much media time your child should consume is an issue that parents grapple with starting from birth. We now know that the Baby Mozart program was ineffective, and that babies were better off interacting with their parents than being exposed to that program. I believe that this is one of the top two or three major issues of our time, and that your child’s success will have a lot to do with how much media you allow them to consume.

Two recent events brought this to my mind again. One was the chance to ask Dr. Edward Hallowell a question about how to best raise high achieving kids. He is the author of numerous books including The Childhood Roots of Adult Happiness, and one of the educators whose work I highly admire. The other event was me reading an article that links depression and other mental health issues with too much gaming when kids are younger.

The question I asked Dr. Hallowell was how do you encourage hobbies and constructive pasttimes in your teen. My 13 year old son recently discovered Dungeons and Dragons. We also are getting much more involved as a family in cross country and downhill skiing on weekends, attending plays and other activities that keep all of us active. Dr. Hallowell’s response was that we need to limit, not eliminate media time, so that our kids have free time that they have to fill. He also advocated exposing them to as many activities as we can so that they find other activities to engage in. So it seems we are on the right track. Our son only gets an hour and a half media time per day, including tv time with family, and as I mentioned, we are getting more active in order to expose him to activities.

Limit Your Child’s Media Time

When I read the article, I was grateful that we have a handle on our son’s desire to game. He is a bright, responsible, well rounded young man (does sports, drama, etc.), who left to his own devices, would play video games for hours and hours. It is a complaint of his that he gets much less time on electronic games than many of his friends.

I know that it is hard to limit electronic time for many reasons. If no one is home after school, it is hard to monitor. We are all so busy that sometimes it is easier in the moment to have kids occupied, especially when they are younger. They complain when they get less time than their kids to be on electronic media. Yet study after study, parenting expert after parenting expert have said that kids feel more loved and do better with limits.

I know another barrier is that many parents find it hard to find things to do in the evening outside of watching tv or playing on the computer. Hopefully knowing what a powerful role model you are being, and how important it is for your kids to be active, will make it easier to find alternatives to media for some of your free time. I believe that our kids challenge us to be better people, and this is a great example.

On people’s death bed, have you ever heard of anyone saying they wished they had watched more tv, or played more on their computer? It is important to limit not only your child’s media time, but your own, because although media is entertaining, it is not deeply satisfying in the same way as hobbies or spending time with family. Although consuming lots of media is easier, and more pleasant sometimes than having discipline and exercising or starting a project, the easy life in so many ways becomes the hard life.

Do what is difficult, and your life will be relatively easy. You will have health, great relationships and success. Avoid what is difficult and your life will be hard. I am not sure where I first heard that wisdom, and I live by, and have found those words to be true. When I succumb to my desire to do what is easy in the moment, I am a worse parent, and I feel worse about myself in the long run, than when I do what I know to be right, even when it is the harder choice in the moment. Media time is one of those critical choices where to be a great parent, we must be prepared to do the hard thing, so that our children will have an easier, better and more satisfying life.

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