Clueless
Social Media Neophyte
“Mommy, this is hilarious!” “What is so funny?”, I ask. “Look”. I look at the screen of his phone and see a list of comments attached to crazy names and even crazier pictures. Apparently, something is trending on Instagram, and if I were even remotely hip I would understand and be rolling on the floor laughing with him. Instead, I’m clueless. Totally left out of the joke.
Let me lay it out there. I don’t get social media. I am not on Facebook, got an i-phone for my 40th birthday and am slowing learning to navigate Twitter. Writing this blog is actually a stretch for me. And full disclosure, I nearly lost a draft of this post by saving it as a new page and not a post. Who knew there was such a big difference…..
At Least I’m not a Helicopter Mom…..
Over the past few years child-rearing trends have been swinging away from helicopter parenting towards free range parenting. For the most part, I feel that my peers and I are in line with this shift. We are generally doing our best to give our kids the space within which to “fail”. I would venture to guess that kids today have more freedom to roam than did their peers even ten years ago.
Even schools seem to be aligned with these trends. I have seen a marked decrease in elementary school homework in five years. “Play and read” is the new mantra in second grade. I interpret this as take time to develop life skills to be able to cope when the stakes are actually high.
Schools in our area are also actively encouraging parents to seek out alternatives to carpool. “Let your kids walk or bike to school.” The hidden message is that not only is it good for their health, but also for their souls. And guess what? Chances are pretty high they will manage to get home safely!
And the Problem is?
So herein lies the rub. Just as society is easing up on kids and giving them back the boundaries within which to learn how to make their own decisions, this thing called social media is taking over their lives. I realize that many, if not most, members of Generation X are more adept with technology than I am. The problem is that that is not enough. Their kids are ahead of them.
Neither is it simply a matter of withholding technology from them. Technology is used in schools, it is required for homework, and it is the lynchpin of their social lives. My son was among the last of his peers to get a phone, and strangely it was not that big a deal when he got one.
I wish I did understand what so funny on Instagram. It would make teaching my children to use technology wisely much easier. As it is, even if I wanted to be a helicopter parent around technology I couldn’t be, and that scares me.