hops&dreams
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 24, 2011
- Messages
- 1,241
I think the days of just going to play with friends or even expecting to be able to talk on the phone for extended periods of time are pretty much over. Kids just aren't freely available in their after school hours, friendships aren't limited to neighborhoods, and people in general are far more mobile than they used to be. I love that my kids text. When I was a kid and a friend moved away, it was a couple long-distance phone calls (that we usually got in trouble for because of the per-minute charges), promises to write, and then drifting apart. My son's closest childhood friend moved 12+ hours away but they text and voice-chat online through their video games so they're still very close even after 4 years of living in different states. To me, that is really, really cool.
I do think there need to be limits. My kids know better than to bring their gizmos to the table - that's a pet peeve of mine too - or check them in the middle of a face-to-face conversation. But IMO the answer to one extreme (overuse) isn't the opposite extreme (prohibition); it is good old fashioned common sense, limits, and moderation.
I totally agree. Moderation is key. I'm not so naive that I don't think DD will ever be interested in that stuff. I know she will. (my kid is just not yet, although plenty of her friends have recieved them before they even became interested in them). And when that time comes, it will be all about common sense, limits, moderation, and a good ole dose of respect. (the actual person in front of you will 999 times out of 1000 be more important than a conversation in your hand/electronic gadget.)
I do agree with the keeping in contact part though. But at my daughter's age, there's no reason she isn't able to do those things on the family's devices. We facetime with my mom-in-law at least twice a week, and with my sister's kids (10 yr old twins) often. Actually they send us Voxer messages pretty much every day. It's fun, being in their every day lives even though they live halfway across the country.