Step Up and Power Down

Screen-Free Week (formerly TV-Turnoff) approaches, April 29-May 5, we all have the perfect opportunity to reflect on the impact of our family screen time—and to choose: Participate or not participate? Don’t panic. The Campaign for Commercial-Free Childhood, organizer of this national effort to “turn off screens and turn on life,” isn’t asking you to stop using your computer for work or to stop talking on your phone. The goal of the week is to power down screens used for entertainment, so you’ll have more time to do other things such as play outside and read.

I’m all for giving it a try—and here’s just one of many reasons why: The more we learn about interpersonal neurobiology and how the brain works, the more evidence there is that we become less capable socially if we spend too much time in front of screens. This is especially true for our children, whose brains are still in the process of being developed. All the ins and outs of how dramatically media use can affect the pathways in brains are yet to be discovered, but here is some scary evidence:

  • University of Washington pediatrician Dimitri Christakis shares his research in a TEDxRainier talk called “Media and Children.” He states that every hour per day a child under three watches TV increases that child’s chance of having attentional deficits by 10% (no matter what the quality of programming). With the brain pathways being laid during a child’s first thousand days of development, these attentional deficits are irreversible and will impact the child’s social and emotional skills throughout his/her life.
  • Stanford psychologist Philip G. Zimbardo delves into another frightening phenomenon related to digital use: He points out that boys start watching pornography as young as age 10, that the average American high school boy spends two hours each week watching porn, and that it can lead to “arousal addictions.” To further underscore the consequences of pornography addiction, a 2011 study showed that, over time, pornography addiction can lead to erectile dysfunction—a dramatic example of the brain’s rewiring due to the overuse/abuse of media. For further exploration of this important topic, check out Gary Wilson’s TED talk on the Great Porn Experiment or Philip Zimbardo’s TED talk.

Whether it’s watching TV shows, cartoons, or movies, playing games, engaging in social networking, or just surfing the Internet, screen use for entertainment is likely changing who our children will become. In that light, I recommend being vigilant about the quantity and quality of what they’re seeing and doing. Here are a few tips to consider as you contemplate your family screen time:


Be careful what you let in.

Buddha said, “The mind is everything. What you think, you become.” What if this quote were true, that “You are what you think”? If you watch Bart put down his dumb dad every day, how do you treat your own dad? If you watch “Power Rangers” regularly, dress up and “play fight” with your friends as a Ranger, and write stories about Power Rangers for school, how do you handle real-life conflict? In contrast, if you watch Mr. Rogers patiently teach you about the ways of the farm, the family, a restaurant, or how to treat others, do you develop patience and tolerance and learn how to get along in the world? And, think about the nightly news. Does it inspire you to be a better person and help others?

Choose your media as carefully as you choose your friends.

I first heard these words from Mary Pipher, author of Reviving Ophelia. She shared the irony that we keep our kids inside, afraid of the strangers at the park, yet plop them down in front of the television and let all kinds of unseemly characters into their absorbing minds–from violent cartoon villains, to snarky “cool” kids, to Disney princesses needing to be rescued.

It’s harder to change a bad habit than it is to keep a good one.

Screen-Free Week is a good time to start cutting back on screen time and then carrying over the new healthy habits into an outdoor summer. The Campaign for Commercial-Free Childhood has a free, comprehensive Screen-Free Week Organizer’s Kit available for download on its Web site. It’s filled with suggested activities, fact sheets about the impact of screens on our lives, sample promotion materials, and much more. If you’re inclined to acknowledge the week in a more low-key way, have a family meeting to brainstorm what you would like to be doing more of as a family, especially physical and/or creative activities. Once you have the list, make a family plan to do the activities; you’ll find that you need to cut back on screen use to make the activities happen.

Moderation is the key.

I would never in a million years ask you to give up chocolate completely. Same thing with TV and movies and playing video games. As with chocolate, the key is moderation: Every once in a while is OK, but too much is not. Unfortunately, the average American watches more than four hours of screen entertainment per day. That seems like a lot of “connecting” time given over to media. Doreen Dodgen-Magee, Ph.D., examines our digital dilemma in her article, “The Key to Surviving the Negative Impact of Digital Technology: Moderation,” and she offers a lot of food for thought. For a few other ways to keep digital entertainment in check, consider these suggestions:

  • Keep the TV and computer out of the bedroom.
  • If your kids are under 10, think about limiting screen entertainment to weekends. Weekdays are complicated enough with homework, sports, music, dance, gymnastics, etc.
  • If your kids are a little older, come to a mutual agreement about the quantity and quality of their screen use—even to the point of their writing out and signing the agreement. Build in consequences for not following the agreement.
  • If your family watches TV shows and movies and plays video games, choose wisely. Organizations such as Common Sense Media provides reviews and recommendations for age-appropriate TV shows, movies, music, games, apps, etc.


Because our children are digital “natives” with the Internet and digital devices available 24/7–unlike any generation before them–we need to mindfully make choices and cultivate in them the inner wisdom that will allow them to master the art of social connection in this challenging Digital Age. Our forthcoming book, Face to Face: Cultivating Kids’ Social Lives in Today’s Digital World, will give you the tools and encouragement to address this critical new parenting dilemma. In the meantime, ask your family: Are we playing outside more than we’re playing video games? Are TV shows and movies we watch influencing us positively and inspiring us? Do we have enough quality “connecting” time? If each of you can answer yes to the above, you’re on the right track and your children will thrive. If you can’t answer yes to the questions, it may be time to step up and power down.

With admiration for all you do,

Dr. Kathy

P.S. For inspiration, check out The Campaign for Commercial-Free Childhood’s “101 Screen-Free Activities.”

Invasion of the Brain and Body Snatchers: Making a Scene about Screens

Our problems with screens start out innocently enough. A little TV here or there while I make dinner, a cell phone to stay safe, a little video-gaming-fun so friends will come over to play, computer learning modules to help our kids do better in school, a little Facebook to stay connected to friends. Then, little-by-little, step-by-step, we seamlessly allow this BEAST called media into our lives. Eventually, left unchecked, screens can lead to life-devastating problems.

The biggest issue I have overall with screens is the myriad of things we are not doing because of screen-time. Having 8.5 hours (some say 6.5, some say 11) of screen time per day in the lives of our children is like eating an entire chocolate cake every day and simply not being hungry to eat anything else.

Here are “Dr. Kathy’s Top Ten Worries about Media Influence in Our Kids’ Lives” (and, frankly, ours, too). Watch the videos we have linked to each of these problems and you will cry.

1. Loss of relationship skills and eventually loss of the very core of who we are and what matters most–our relationships with others. Without practice with empathy, love, and conflict resolution, the quality of our relationships with others goes down. Consider even the tragedy of Facebook envy!

2. A future generation of super-consumers who start early and become addicted for life to more stuff than ever. They will have to work longer hours than we do to pay for it all (until the “stuff” runs out).

3. Obsession with thin and beautiful: It is hard to like yourself as you are when everyone in the media is perfect. This obsession can lead to low self-esteem, self-loathing, depression, eating disorders and more.

4. Desensitization to violence–both tolerating it and doing it!

5. Promotion of extreme gender-identities–of what it means to be a man (tough, in-control, stud) and a woman (sexy, passive, and always wanting sex).

6. Promotion of fear and anxiety–by a focus on negative events and stories.

7. Unnatural sexual relationships: The message in many games and movies is that women are objects to be used sexually–sometimes leading to rape and pornography-addiction. Another message is that a woman saying “no” is just teasing and that she really “wants it.”

8. Unnatural brain state while watching screens, especially immature brains. They soak in media images as real.

9. Addiction to fatty food and to alcohol: Food is viewed as entertainment rather than nourishment. Our children will die earlier than we do from complications of obesity and diabetes.

10. Video-game addiction is costing time, money, jobs, and relationships. The average gamer is 37 years old and showing up in marriage counseling.

For a ton more links to sad but fascinating videos pertaining to research on these topics, check out this link.

HOW DID WE ALLOW THIS TO HAPPEN?
We have fewer laws to protect our kids than any other industrialized nation. When did WE allow the health of corporations to be more important than the mental, emotional, physical, and even spiritual health of our children? And what are WE going to do about it? Most parents want the best for our kids. We invest a lot of time and energy in their futures–spending our life energy and our money on their education, sports teams, music lesions, and many other experiences. Then, in a blink of an eye, we undermine it all by allowing screens in to the tune of 6.5 hours/day, a full one-third of their waking hours. Check out “Generation M2: Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds,” 75 pages of research on this topic by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

SO WHAT TO DO?
Dr. Doreen Dodgen-Magee is a fantastic Portland psychologist who is passionate about addressing media issues in families. During her presentation, “Plugged In: The Neurological, Interpersonal, and Personal Impact of Technology-Only Entertainment” (which you can attend at the Multnomah Arts Center on April 17), she offers some absolutely, right-on messages for all our families to embrace:

  • Use technology with moderation.
  • Promote a life of messiness and stickiness. Have creative corners all over your house. Find ways to bring art into your kids’ lives.
  • Remember it’s easier to establish healthy norms than it is to break bad habits. Regarding technology, ask questions before bad habits happen; get at real issues to get at real solutions. (e.g. If your son loves “strategy,” for example, try the “FIFA Soccer” game rather than first-person shooter games.)
  • Do everything possible to protect your children from violence, gender bias/objectification, and the overly consumerist media. You can reduce exposure to commercials, for example, by taping shows so you can watch on your schedule and fast forward through commercials.
  • Be honest: You are what you ingest (sounds, visuals, etc.)
  • Value a counter-culture lifestyle.

I would add: BE ACTIVE IN CHANGING OUR CULTURE to one that protects its children. Let’s get closer to the 1750 BC Code of Hammurabi: “It is a crime punishable by death to sell anything to a child without first obtaining a power of attorney.”

With admiration for all you do!

Dr. Kathy

A few additional ways you can be proactive about being keeping screens in check would be to: