Good Inside with Dr. Becky - A Different Take on Screen Time
Episode Date: August 12, 2025We all know too much screen time isn’t good for kids—and our instinct as parents is to protect them from it. But when fear shapes how we manage screens at home, it can quickly turn into shame the ...moment they pick one up.In today’s world, where screens are woven into so much of daily life, the real challenge is to face that reality with thoughtfulness - and to make choices guided by our values, not by guilt. In this episode, Dr. Becky sits down with screen time expert Ash Brandon, EdS (@thegamereducator) to talk about the moral judgments, practical boundaries, and family-specific choices that shape our approach to screens.Get the Good Inside App by Dr. Becky: https://bit.ly/4fSxbzkYour Good Inside membership might be eligible for HSA/FSA reimbursement! To learn more about how to get your membership reimbursed, check out the link here: https://www.goodinside.com/fsa-hsa-eligibility/Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterFor a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast.When it comes to school snacks, I’ve never been the “pack my kid a portable charcuterie board” kind of parent. If you are, more power to you. I’m more of a “grab-and-go” type - I want something simple, nutritious, and easy for my kids to reach for as we’re heading out the door. That’s why I like Chomps. Their full-size meat sticks have 10 grams of protein and zero sugar. They’re filling and made from real ingredients, so it’s one less thing to think about. And if you’ve ever opened your kid’s backpack to find a half-eaten snack from who-knows-when still wrapped up in there, Chomplings are great. They’re smaller sticks (the right size to toss in a lunchbox or that little front backpack pocket) with 4 grams of protein and zero sugar.Chomps are made of high-quality ingredients like 100% grass-fed beef, venison, and antibiotic-free turkey. They’re also free from the top nine allergens, so you don’t have to worry about sending them to school. Check out all the sizes and delicious flavors at Chomps.com/DRBECKY for 15% off plus free shipping.We say it all the time at Good Inside: Taking care of yourself isn’t selfish - it’s self-sustaining. But let’s be honest: Self-care can feel impossible without reliable childcare. That’s where Sittercity comes in. It’s a trusted platform that makes it easier to find sitters who are kind, experienced, and show up when you need them. You can read real parent reviews, connect with sitters directly, and even set up interviews, all in one spot.Whether you’re craving a solo errand run, a date night out, or need after school support, Sittercity can give you the logistical support you need to show up for yourself. Find a sitter or nanny that’s perfect for your family at sittercity.com and use code "goodinside" for 25% off the annual or quarterly premium subscription plans.If you’re anything like me, you’re running out of summer activity ideas for your kids! Well, exciting news for parents everywhere: Good Inside just teamed up with the Play-Doh brand and Walmart to bring you a video series on how to help kids build life-long skills like imagination, confidence, and frustration tolerance - all through open-ended play! The best part: I promise this isn’t another thing to add to your already packed plate as a parent. No hours of prep, no need for picture-perfect setups. All you need is a Play-Doh can or two.Head to walmart.com/playdoh to watch the videos. That’s walmart.com/playdoh. I can’t wait to hear what your kid creates.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This week, I'm joined by Ash Brandon.
Ash is an educator, a researcher, and a former middle school teacher who's on a mission
to help families rethink screen time.
You might know Ash from Instagram as The Gamer Educator, where they share practical,
compassionate tools to help parents set boundaries without shame or power struggles.
And exciting news, Ash's brand new book, Power On, hits bookstores everywhere on August 26.
This conversation really stuck with me.
gave me so much insight into some of my own triggers around my own kid's screen time.
That's one of the things Ash and I talk about.
And I can't wait for you to hear this conversation because I know you will also learn something
new, have a reframe for how you think about screen time, and also feel empowered to deal
with screen time with your kids in a way that feels good instead of ridden with guilt.
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is good inside. We'll be back right after this.
Hi, Ash.
I'm so excited to have you here.
I am so thrilled to be here.
Thank you so much.
Okay, we're going to talk about so many different things, screen time and misconceptions and reframes.
I know you love all those things I do too, but I'm just thinking about the time of year.
And I feel like I hear from parents in this kind of summer-to-fall transition all the time.
It's like, I feel like I had a lot of screen time over this summer.
I feel like it's time to tighten up.
Just in this moment of time when I think that thought is in so many parents' heads,
like, where do you go from there in terms of even how parents are thinking about it,
tightening up, what that means, summer to fall, screen time in general this time.
Tell me your thoughts.
Yeah, I think summer is that like kind of wonderful time where we can get more relaxed and
flexible and then we see sort of the like the coming reality.
of, oh yeah, and then we have to go back to the school year and all the things that that entails.
And I feel like a lot of caregivers want to, you know, prepare so that we are setting ourselves
up for success. And when it comes to things like technology, I think it is helpful sometimes
to think about, well, what maybe was or wasn't working for us before or what are some things
that maybe came up over the summer where we've relaxed a bit. Maybe there's some things with that
that actually were kind of nice.
Maybe felt kind of good.
Maybe we got in a routine of having a family movie night or, you know, eating dinner on the
couch and we picked a movie.
And actually, it really was a lovely thing.
Yeah.
Maybe that's something we can continue to incorporate.
And then maybe there are things where we know, okay, but we still got to get out of
the door on time or something like that.
And then we think about, okay, if that's the need of our family, how do I,
how do I make sure that we're incorporating the need of our family and starting from that place
when I'm thinking about our relationship with screen. Yeah. So I just want to double click on something
because I do think you're right away doing something. I think that happens for me a lot too,
like almost shifting the question before you answer it because I think especially with screens,
there's just a lot of what's the right amount? What's the wrong amount? What's good screen time?
What's bad screen time? We did too much in the summer. We need to cut back. And I think what
you're saying is you're starting not with those questions, but from something around, like,
what's going on in your family? What does your family need? What works? It's kind of a little more
personalized or a little more focused on the family first. So can you just like flesh that out
a little? Absolutely. So when I've been doing like this kind of focus on Instagram for the last
few years, I've said that I have three maintenance. And first is that screen time is in many
ways a social inequity issue, which I'm happy to come back to and drag out my soapbox.
The second is that screens can be a part of our lives without being the center of our
lives, which I think is what many families really want for their kids.
And then the third is that screen time should work for the whole family.
We should be considering the whole family.
I think we often get kind of myopically focused on our kids for good reason, right?
We're thinking about what this could do to them or how it could be helpful to them.
And the reality is, is that in many ways, screen time is often functioning to help alleviate burden for adults.
And a lot of that is not necessarily avoidable.
If I'm a single parent or I have a caregiver who is working like swing shift, and so I'm alone for big chunks of my parenting, there are going to be things that need help.
Like I need a tool that's going to help me lift that burden.
and if I don't have other things available to me, something has to fill in that gap,
and oftentimes it's going to be something like a screen.
And we might wish that there's something else to fill in for that, and that I would as well.
It's not great that we sometimes have these gaps.
And if this is something that can fill in those gaps, then instead of focusing just on a child,
sometimes it helps to instead think, okay, not what is this doing to my child, but what is
it allowing me to do for them?
And I think that that can often guide what the purpose of it is and if it is working for
all of us in the family.
Well, one of the things I hear a lot from parents is, okay, I feel like my kid's on the
screen too much.
And then I feel like, I'm such a bad parent.
I'm so embarrassed.
I don't want anyone to know.
There's so much shame, right?
And the irony also there is the things that we hold a lot of shame around, we actually
can't even change.
We might want to change them.
The shame keeps us so stuck.
So what I'm responding into what you're saying is, like, let's put the shame to the side here.
Screens, you know, in our busy world, can do a lot of different things for the family.
It's not just about a kid.
There's a lot going on.
And maybe you do want to shift screen time.
But thinking about it more from a place of what actually works for my whole family.
What will I feel good about going to bed at night?
Not what's right, what's wrong?
What's my neighbor doing?
like not from kind of such a place of judgment.
Absolutely.
And I think when we come from that place of fear,
fear is not empowering.
I'm not going to make my best decisions
when I'm acting out of fear or shame.
And when we're focused on like the potential
of what could go wrong or thinking like,
well, I need to minimize this as much as possible
because that's what I am thinking of as healthy.
Healthy doesn't always mean
minimal. And really what we want is something sustainable. And we also recognize that, you know,
our kids are going to grow up to be adults in a technologically driven world that we can't
even really fully comprehend, I think. It's going to be even different than the world that we're in
and how technologically driven it is. So really our goal is to also make sure that we're raising
kids who are digitally literate and can be digitally safe. And that's hard to do if we are framing
these things from a place of fear, I can give my kid and empower my child to have a relationship
with technology that might work for them long term if I'm able to view them with a sense of
neutrality. I think that that is really important. And I think that's very difficult for a lot
of people because they associate, as you said, the amount of screen time that their kid has,
it has some like an inverse relationship with their value as a parent, right?
If there is on screens a lot, then they might think this is bad parenting.
Like it might be benefiting me, but I shouldn't be doing that.
I should be prioritizing my child.
But that's where it comes back to what is it allowing.
Yeah.
What is it allowing to have happened in our family?
Let's go through a few kind of scenarios.
Like let's get specific.
So let's start with a parent who's saying, okay, maybe I'm not even judging myself hardcore,
core, but like, I just think we've got to get school routines in order. You know, my kid,
I'm making this up, but my kid starts their day with hours on the screen in the summer.
It's been fine. It is what it is. It's obviously not going to work when we have to get out the door at
730, 645, 8 o'clock, whatever it is. And I'm nervous. Like, my kids freak out when I change
the rules. And how do I go about that? Like, how do we start? Yeah. So in my book that's coming out,
I have the kind of last third is really devoted to really helping family.
families make a structure that's going to work for them and kind of walks through this process.
But you already outlined some of what we'll go into it.
So first we think about, okay, what's the need?
And if the need is like we have to be out the door by 745, right, then that might already determine
whether or not screens are going to happen in the morning.
Yeah.
Right.
Maybe we know, well, my kid can barely get out of bed by 715.
So I don't really think there's time in there.
Or maybe they are a super early riser.
there would be. And so if we know, OK, that's the need, then we can ask ourselves, what input can
I let my child contribute to this? And I think that is so important people, regardless of age,
we want to feel like we're contributing to a decision that involves us. And that doesn't mean
that we are necessarily guiding it. But if we feel like we have some agency and some input
and we're being listened to or considered,
it's going to go a long way to, I think,
making a rule or a boundary that's going to have some buy-in.
So I think no one likes feeling done too.
Nobody likes that at any age, right?
But what is that line between, okay,
what is input, what is giving my kid my job, you know,
and asking them to do my job for me?
So let's just take this scenario.
Let's say if a kid out the door by 745, let's say this kid, you know, you decide to screen time in the morning is just not, it's not going to end up being great.
Like what, what's like the nitty gritty?
How should we go about that?
With the input that they gave.
So if it's, you know what?
My need is we're out the door by 745.
This is sort of my non-negotiable.
Like we can't suddenly leave at 8, right?
And oftentimes in the morning, it's like if we're at 745 and 45 seconds, that can like throw off the whole morning.
And so if that's the need and that's the non-negotiable, then I might be leading with that in terms of like, so this is this is the reality and that means that screens are not going to be available before we leave in the morning and I know that's different and then give them something that they can help determine.
So then think about, okay, well, when in the day could it be and what could be up to them?
And if it is, well, once we get home, it actually could be whenever, then maybe we let them be the person who makes that decision.
So that then they're feeling like, okay, this is what I can immediately guide and have input in.
So many times, I think the decisions.
we're making as a parent are changes in rules,
like a change in screen time rules.
They feel like they can go south.
They feel like it's a disaster.
I think a lot of the times we're almost asking our kid
to like help us make that decision.
Like, and so I'll voice it over
because I definitely used to do this too.
So people always think I'm a good actress.
I'm like, that's complicated.
I just used to say these things myself.
Like, you know, there's no acting required.
So hey, look, we're starting school.
don't you think it's going to be a good idea
to not have screens in the morning
because it'll be rushed
and don't you think it would be better
and I've seen for my own kids
and then working with families
how disregulating that is for kids
and then I think parents
the language we have is yeah
because then my kid takes advantage
no it's kind of like
my pilot saying like
don't you think we should make an emergency landing
I'd be like are you seriously asking me that
just make the decision
and then I maybe can have a
reaction about whether I want, I don't know, a refund or if I want to change my flight,
but don't involve me in a decision that really isn't my domain.
And so I think what you're saying is, I just want to reflect back, make sure I'm getting it
right.
If you have a non-negotiable as a parent, take some time, figure out what that is, and then
lead with that, right?
Because you can still let your kid have agency, but now there's no confusion about where
that agency lies.
Absolutely.
And what I think is so funny is that.
that framework of, like, having some very clear boundaries or rules or non-negotiables,
whatever word you want to use, that really is how video games work, which is...
Ooh, tell me more.
So think about...
I feel like now I'm like in...
You know that?
Like, not the Matrix, but I'm like, this is like a meta-conversation about the conversation.
I'm excited.
Have you played a video game before?
Of any kind.
I feel...
I'm going to de-shame myself.
It's very revealing.
I know.
I am not...
I have not really played that many video games.
But like, have you played Pac-Man?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, of course, okay, of course.
You never know.
So, okay, is that a good example to use?
Yeah, great, okay.
So, like, you're playing Pac-Man.
Or Super Mario, like, back in the day, Mario?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, like original, like, do, do, do, do, do, do.
Yeah, great, okay.
So you're playing Mario, right?
And you notice that there's, you know, the brick blocks and the little question blocks, right?
Yes.
And you figure out what happens by testing them, right?
So you go up and you jump under the brick block and when you're tiny Mario and it just moves up, right?
Just back down.
But then you go to the question mark block as tiny Mario and you get a coin or a start, whatever happens, right?
So you're learning the conditions of the level.
You're learning the rules.
And then learning how the world works.
Yes.
And then you get your one-up mushroom and you get bigger.
and then you learn that, oh, if I hit bricks as Big Mario, then it will break.
Yeah.
And you test these over and over again to make sure as a player that they are what they say they are, that they're sturdy.
And if, for example, if like one out of every 100 times that you jumped under one of those brick blocks, if instead of breaking it would randomly, I don't know,
like warp you to the end of the level, what would you do? You would stand under that and you would
jump as many times as you need to to get that outcome because now it's, there's a, there's a chance,
right? So the video games are very good at laying out the sort of non-negotiables. Here's the walls.
Here's the levels. Here's like the edge of the world. Here's what the characters will say.
But then what you do within those rules gives you a lot of
of freedom. You can do whatever you want within those rules. If you want to stand and do nothing,
if you want to run off the edge of the world, if you want to test them, you can. But I feel like
rules and boundaries for kids provide that sense of like, here's the world we're in, here are the
things that you can count on, whether or not you like that, right? Sometimes we don't like the rules
that are presented to us in a game or in real life. But then we know, okay, so my
freedom is within these things. And that there's a lot of agency and a lot of autonomy that comes
from that. I think that is so beautifully stated. And the thing about it that it also makes you think
about is, let's say, in Super Mario, right? Where when I'm little, I'm not going to like maybe be able
to reach the bricks or break it, right? Where if I try over and over and I'm little, try, the bricks,
the bricks aren't like getting mad at me. The bricks aren't like, come on, Mario, come on. Why you
keep doing this, Mario? Like, the bricks are just the bricks. They're like, I kind of know.
My rule. And like little Mario can press me as many times as little Mario wants and nothing's
going to happen. They don't like the bricks don't take it personally.
Thousand percent. Yes. I'm so glad you picked up on that. Yes, the video game enforces the rules
consistently, but neutrally. Right. So you can do, you can do all that rule breaking or attempted
rule breaking as many times as you want and the game is not going to admonish you. And it's not going
to be like, how many times do we have to tell you stop trying this? This is not what you're supposed
be doing, right? And there is freedom in that. There is a sense of autonomy in that and being
able to test that just to make sure. Yeah. And I will say someone who still plays video games in my
life, if I'm talking to like a character in the game, I will talk to them like at least three
times to make sure that I've heard everything they're going to say. And then once they start
looping, I think, okay, I can stop talking to them now because I've made sure I've exhausted all
information, but I've learned that
by testing. Yeah. And that's
obviously, that's more fun in a
video game than it is when you're the parent.
In real life.
There's no prizes. No.
No. No. No.
Yeah, and there's no like power apps and
no. I know. One of the things I always say
is like I think about boundaries
a lot and, you know, I think
people have some unconscious fantasy
for me that like I go over to my kids and
let's say it is screen time. Screen time is over
and you're allowed to be upset and my kids
like, mom, you are such a sturdy leader. I really love you. You're really crushing it right now. Two
coins. It's never happened. No. You usually get rewarded with a tantrum at first. That's usually the
reward. Like, you know, why? Yeah. You know, although over time, if you are relatively consistent,
none of us are all the time, then those reactions decrease because on some level your kid thinks,
this is how the world works. I got it now. I'll move on to the next one to test. Exactly. Right.
there's that feeling of consistency.
Yes.
And that doesn't necessarily mean they like it.
And we also know, and I know this is something you say a lot, is I take a lot of, I do a lot of comparisons between video games or technology and food.
And I think a lot about the division of responsibility model with food, you know, parent or an adult is in control of what.
Like Ellen Saturn.
Yeah.
Of what is available and when, right?
And a child decides how much to eat of what's available.
Well, I really think about screens the same way.
An adult decides what content is available and when.
And a child decides what to do within the content that is allowed, which might mean they're doing something ridiculous for that half hour because they're testing a rule.
But I think the other part that's really important is that a child's job is also to have feelings about it.
Yeah.
And they're really good at that part of their job.
They really?
It seems like every generation we're getting a little better.
There's a lot of, a lot of range of feelings.
No, no, it really is true.
And look, you know, one of the reframes, whether we're talking about screen time or anything else with boundaries, is when you realize your kids' big feelings are actually a sign you just set a boundary.
Because some parents know it's hard for me to set boundaries and I'm working on setting boundaries.
And it is true.
It would be amazing if the world worked where it's hard for me to set a boundary.
So when I set a boundary, I get coins and you know.
unicorns and rainbows and you know that would be an ice cream cone that doesn't happen but having a
signal is helpful so if you start realizing my kids whining and complaining or protesting it's not the
it's not the sign i would choose but it is a sign that i just set a boundary it's i think it's less
likely you interpret it as a sign you're doing something wrong and actually a sign you're doing your
job right yes and i think with technology and particularly with screens i think it just it hits a little
but differently. I think for a lot of parents, because in that moment, I think we're in that place
mentally where we might already be wrestling with. Should I even allow this? Should I have said
yes to this? I'm worried about what it might do. And then if at the end, they're protesting,
we reasonably are thinking like, there's that part of your brain, or at least my brain,
that's like, you should be happy. I said it all.
100%. Like, can you not assuage my guilt with your compliance?
Right? Like, for real? Isn't that what my kid's supposed to do?
And also, it's like, okay, if we peel that back too, it's like, okay, if we were in another scenario, if we were at a playground, at a pool, at a friend's house, and they protested our tantrum because they didn't want to leave.
We probably wouldn't blame the playground.
We probably wouldn't blame the pool.
you know
this freaking pool
and we also
probably would not say
well we can't come to this playground ever again
like we instead
are able to look through
the medium
and see the skill
yes
and see okay so it's hard to leave
fun places it's hard to stop in the middle of things
whatever the
the underlying feeling is
Yes. And that's often what's happening when kids are having a hard time on technology
and because we might have our own association with that technology, like, I shouldn't be doing this.
I'm a bad parent if I do this. Then that kind of supersedes. And that's why I talk so much about
having neutrality because when we can be neutral, that doesn't mean it's a free-for-all, right?
Like chips are neutral morally and broccoli is neutral morally.
and we can offer them in different amounts
or with different frequencies
and we can be similar
with how we think about technology
because when I can think about it neutrally
then I can also make comparisons
to other parts of my kids' life
and see the skill and how it transferred.
I really mean this.
That is such a brilliant layer to add to this.
I haven't ever thought about that before.
So I feel like that's one part of this conversation
and it's going to stick with me that it is so true.
Our kids get upset at the end of screen.
our kids get upset when we say they can't have a third ice cream scoop if they had whatever the
rule is our kids get upset exactly they get upset when we say yes to the thing they just ask us for
that is very true again it's the being so good at feelings since generation um and and so rarely
in those situations probably because it's not so complicated by our own set of conflicts or guilt
or narrative that we that we are more likely to realize it is so hard to end things that are fun
It is so hard to stop things that you want to keep doing.
It is so hard for something that's enjoyable to ever feel like enough, right?
But with screens, we are so quick to rattle off.
Like, we're never doing this again and I'm throwing away your iPad and, you know, this is bad and I knew it and I'm a horrible parent.
And I think you're so right that that, you know, has to do with what we've been telling ourselves and our narrative.
And if we do see it, as again, it's always hard to end things that are fun.
That's true for four-year-olds and 44-year-olds.
Right?
Like no one, I think humans are just never that good at wanting things and not having them.
And I don't know if we ever want to be that good at them.
You want to be good enough to like function in society, but it's good to know what you want.
Yeah.
It drives you, right?
And also, and I think this is part of it too, it's okay to have leisure, be leisure.
And I think with something like screens or video games or more passive activities in terms of like their productivity.
Right.
I think we might look at that and go, well, they, but they could have been doing something
better with their time. But leisure for the sake of leisure is also valid. Yeah. And everybody
deserves that. And that includes our kids. Okay. So now this is like, this is like not on my
questions. Like throw these out. But you just, you know, brought something up in me. I'll never
forget talking to my therapist years ago. And I was talking about coming home with our kids and being
exhausted on Sundays because we often would travel for the weekend and so tired. And, you know, my kids would go off and
do their thing, and my husband would be on the couch, chilling for a little bit. I was just
taking my therapist, like, something's wrong with him. Like, I don't understand. Like, there's
so much to unpack. There's so much to unpack. And, like, I don't get it. And, like,
and then we get in a fight, of course, and I'll never forget my therapist saying, I think you need
his help. And I was like, yeah, I know. And he goes, let me finish. She goes, I think you need his
help sitting on the couch literally like I don't think you heard me is he pending a secret
yeah like literally like what the fresh heck is happening because like you no no he needs to help me
and he's like you sound really tired and like some version of rest is not a reward and also if
I'm going to be direct I think you're so triggered because there's a part of you that wants to sit
on the couch and you don't know how to give yourself permission I was like
do you have catch why does it always come back to us but I think is this all connected to
to like when I see my kids, you're like, yeah, it is connected.
Well, I keep going because I'm, I went and I see it and I feel like you could be reading.
Like, you could be doing art.
Like, can we finish this?
Let's play a family board game.
I do love board games.
And like, I just, it's hard for me to, it's hard for me.
It's just, it's hard for me to stay neutral.
I haven't thought about that word since you've been saying it.
It's hard for me to stay neutral.
Yeah.
I hadn't really thought of it quite in the terms that you have.
I often think of it from.
the kind of weight that we put on our own parenting, like, ability or our goodness as a parent.
And I think we want to do right by our kids and we want to always be doing the best for our kids.
And that is a noble thing.
That's not a bad thing.
And so if our kids are doing something like using their iPad or watching a movie, we kind of put into that all the things we can think of that we think
hold more value. This is a reason that there's a phrase of like think about what is screen time
replacing. And I have taken a lot of umbrage with this phrase because if you're coming from a place
of thinking of screens as bad, you're going to fill that what they could be doing instead
with every single thing that you can think of that would be better. Right. And it might maybe that's
they could be playing a board game instead of a video game. They could be reading a book instead
of reading the words on the screen.
They could be, you're going to come up with this litany of things.
And so it really means like, well, then we're not thinking of it as like a tool.
We're not thinking of it in this neutral place.
And I think it's a big part of our own judgment of ourselves of feeling like, well,
if they're doing this and they're just doing it for fun, which is a valid reason to do it.
But if they're just doing it for fun, it's almost as if we're.
condoning it?
Yeah, like I guess I have
almost like I'm just thinking about now
it's coming up for me as I'm saying it's like a fear of laziness
or it's like going to take over and crowd out
the other stuff and I think what you're saying
is like just putting screens aside.
Like what is our relationship with rest
with just, you know, fun with something
that's not quote productive toward an outcome?
Because if we know as an adult that we have
some like stuff there that'll probably act itself out a little bit in how we approach like you know screen time
with kids yeah absolutely absolutely and you know involving something in our kids lives you know we do
we have so many parts of our kids lives that we make sure they get exposed to and that doesn't mean
that they are just unconditional and that there's no rules or guidance or boundaries around those
things, right? Like, we have many neutral parts of the day, like bath time, but we also wouldn't
let our kids stay in the bathtub for six hours. Right. And we also probably wouldn't let them be
the only person to guide that decision. So by that neutrality piece allows us to think, well,
okay, if we want our kids to think of technology or screens as being just another part of their
lives and it's not a huge deal and they don't need to obsess over them, then we have. We have,
have to treat them like not a big deal.
And that doesn't mean they're available
as much as reading or bath time or family time.
But we can still be neutral in the framing around them.
And that also makes it a lot easier as the parent or the caregiver
to hold that boundary because we've sort of removed
the emotional weight that we might have been holding around it.
So maybe this is like an overly simplistic question.
But is there a such thing as too much screen time?
Would it be like that is a thing?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So depends kind of how you want to define that.
And a lot of the like research literature that looks at impacts of different amounts
and quantifies things like more problematic relationships with gaming or screen time,
they tend to define excessive use
as generally like four more hours per day
but even that depends on the study you're reading
they might be talking about like just playing a video game
they might be talking about different uses of screens
and when it comes down to
our real lives
I'll sometimes have families who reach out and say like
okay but if my kid is on a Chromebook at school
does that count what if they're typing in a document
what if they're reading an e-book does that count
And it's so easy to get into the granular minutia.
And that's why I like to sort of pull back and instead ask, like, is this an amount that is working for everyone and allowing us to get our needs met?
And is it also like sustainable in terms of the management I have to put in?
Right.
Right. Like if I am letting my kid watch a 30 minute episode of Paw Patrol while I make dinner, but then at the end it's a 25 minute meltdown to end it. Well, then that I'm not getting it. Right. I'm having to invest a lot of time to get that 30 minutes. But that is information. And so instead of immediately being like, I knew it. I shouldn't have let you watch that. If instead we go, okay, what about this coming back to the need? What's the need?
If the need is I have no other caregiver and I want to make a meal that isn't frozen chicken nuggets for the third day in a row and I need to be able to safely be in my kitchen and so I need my kid occupied, okay, that's the need.
Then yeah, a screen might be the tool that you need in that moment if there isn't another one available.
And if that's my need, okay, if today, wow, PopTroll really did not work that was rough.
What can I change?
I can't change that I need that need met.
I can't change that I don't have another caregiver available.
I can't change if we don't have access to a playground that my kid can play alone at.
But I could change what show they watch or maybe I change going to the park right before.
So they've had some big input and maybe that makes like the dysregulation not as impactful that day.
So that neutrality allows us to see it as data as information.
and then we can, you know, shift and try things out to figure out what's going to work for us.
And that also shows our kids how they can apply that to their lives as they grow up.
And the layer that I often think about when parents ask me these questions is I think there's so many other factors here because one of the things I think about a lot with screens, again, is not moral, not good or bad.
But one of the things I think we all want for our kids is for them to learn.
that success, that excitement, that dopamine, you know, does not always come quickly or to
them. It's not something they can just easily consume. And for example, like, I sometimes need to
work hard before I get success. I can create things and it's messy and I can take ideas inside
me and make towers or do things, right? Now, I agree, like, that does not have to be mutually
exclusive with screens. But when I'm often talking to families about is an amount working,
to me where often families say it's stopping working or where they maybe wish they did things
a little differently is where they see this pattern of my kid is almost so accustomed to, quote,
success and dopamine coming to them with relatively little effort that their tolerance for
other forms of play. Their tolerance for learning how to read, which is just a lot of
effort. I see it lower. And so in the early years, the one of the things I say to parents is it's
not about, again, every family's so different. I hate the idea of like, this is the amount or this is
like, every family's different. I don't know what's going on. There's so many factors.
Equity is a huge thing to do. But you just think like, does my kid have opportunities where,
by the way, I'll probably have to tolerate their frustration. They're going to whine. They're going
to tantrum. Right. But where they are building kind of some emotion regulation skills for working hard
at something and sticking with things and trying things and negotiating and doing things that
are really complex without some immediate reward, I think is like a really, it's an important
offset.
Absolutely.
I remember actually the other conversation that we had about screens, you framed something
in a particular way that I come back to and think about all the time.
And it was similar to this.
And it was more from the kind of more extreme side.
talking to, I think people you'd work with who were in, like, coming out of addiction,
but with substances, not with technology.
And I remember you saying something about, like, if we're trying to find something
that can kind of function as not like a direct supplement, but we're trying to kind of shift
that, you know, it's not going to be as satisfying, right?
If I am suffering, if I am in an addictive relationship with, like, a substance, right?
And I'm suddenly like, I'm going to do yoga.
You know, like, not going to feel as good as fast.
Right.
It's not going to be the same.
Right.
So we can't find a direct substitute.
And I think what you're saying, too, is that we don't want necessarily to find a direct substitute.
So one of the things that screens are very good at is they are very good at providing dense, immediate, and consistent feedback.
Yes.
And in ways that the real world just doesn't do.
And would be nice sometimes if it would.
But even if I'm a two-year-old and I'm trying to balance blocks, right, versus like a block tower on an iPad, right, those blocks on that iPad, they're always going to have the same center of gravity and they're always going to go the same way.
And they might have the same like wobble animation every time.
So I know I have to make an adjustment.
And all of that is going to be a lot more.
immediate and a lot more consistent than the physical blocks. So I like to frame things that is thinking
not as a substitute, but instead as a supplement. Yes, I think that's it. We're both like it's a
part of your world and not all of your world. And I've had that same conversation in my own
household when it came to like coloring. Yeah. Like apps for it's like, well, I just click this and I
click this and now it's like fully saturated. And I'm like, but I get it. It is deeply satisfying. I
I totally get it. And I also want you to be able to color that in just as satisfyingly. And it will
take more time. And we're going to try that right now. And like you said, some days, some days I have the
capacity and I know I have the time. I have the capacity. I have the emotional wherewithal that
I can sit with you in this discomfort and help you manage this discomfort. That's a skill I can
help you with right now. And some days, I don't. Yep. Right. And so if that's not something that I
have available to me, again, one of the benefits of the neutrality is that then I'm not in my
brain going like, oh my gosh, they're only going to want to color on this iPad ever again. They're
never going to pick up a pencil. I'm not going to doom spiral about uncontastrophies. But instead,
I can go, okay, I can't handle this right now. Today, they're going to color on the iPad.
And mental note, like, we need to make sure we're also getting in some of these other
opportunities. I love that. Well, look, your work, thank you. And your book is, you know, is so
wonderful. Any kind of final or things you're like, oh, I just have to get this in. Final
Thoughts or something you really want a parent to know? I think the other aspect I just add that I think
we've talked a lot around, but maybe not directly about, is there are many reasons that are
like reasonable to have fear when it comes to technology. I think it's,
especially as our kids get older. We start feeling afraid of things that could be bad or dangerous or feel really just scary. And we want to, obviously, we want to protect our kids. And we, at least for myself, I don't tend to do my best parenting or even like existing when I am coming from a place of fear. Because all I can really do is react. I can't really be particularly proactive. Yeah. And I think with things like as
because you get older we're thinking about like smartphones or social media and all the all the things
that can come with that. We want to shield our kids from it. And again, I think that's like a
reasonable concern that people have and they want to shield their kids from it. And I'd like to
make a comparison to thinking about pools. We just mentioned pools a few minutes ago, but thinking
about pools because pools are fun, have a lot of opportunity, bodies of water can enrich your
life and they are inherently dangerous. Yeah, right? Like we are not born suddenly able to swim and
navigate and do all those things. And we also know that because a pool or body of water is dangerous,
we have to give our kids the skills they need to navigate that thing. So what I try to do in
conversations like this, but also I made a book, is to really emphasize how am I thinking about,
the skills that my child may need to navigate something, even if it's just balance
between responsibilities and leisure, both are valid. We also have to find a way to make
them all work and something like being able to navigate something that can be dangerous.
And when we're able to see through to the skill, instead of focusing on the fear I have
about what could go wrong, then we're able to empower our child and empower
ourselves. And I think that when we're coming from a place of fear, we're not going to be
empowered. We're not going to be able to empower them. But being able to focus on this skill
and then we can help them see all the ways that applies. And then that helps them in their
lives as they grow up, whether it's in the digital world or the real world. I love that.
The shift from fear to empowerment and skills. So thank you. It's a great note to end on.
Well, thank you. I'll go to talking to you again soon. Thank you for having me.
I don't know about you, but for me, the biggest thing I took from the conversation is realizing how loaded screen time is and actually how I can make better decisions that I feel good about with my kids when I do kind of strip away the shame and I look at it as one part of their life and figuring out what works for the family and not adding such an intense layer of judgment that will actually help me show up in a way I feel proud of about.
Anyway, let's end the way we always do.
Place your feet on the ground.
Place a hand on your heart.
And let's remind ourselves, even as I struggle on the outside,
I remain good inside.
I can't wait to see you next time.