Anonymous wrote:So after resisting Fortnite for a year, we caved this year and let our son play. Before that he played Minecraft and War Robots, but all his friends were on Fortnite (literally all of them).
Now I feel like whenever he plays with his friends and I don't allow them to have screen time, they are just passing the time until they can get on their screens. If they go outside, they ask for how long, and then they come back the very first minute they can so they can get set up on screens. If I tell him to do chores or homework first, same thing - he does them but then goes on screens the minute he's done. It just feels like that's the default they want to return to, and that they don't really enjoy any other activities. I guess the one thing they do enjoy is playing basketball outside, but they can only do that for so long.
If it were just my son behaving like this, it would be easier to deal with, but it's his three best neighborhood friends as well. The pressure to turn the screens on is always there.
What I am wondering is, how are other parents - especially the ones who want their kids to have less screen time - dealing with the constant pressure to get back on the screens? (They have to be experiencing it too, since whenever my son logs on to Fortnite, it seems like a majority of his school friends are online!) And for those that have successfully lessened screen time, WHAT activities do your son(s) like to do? Should I enroll him in a sport or some type of activity every afternoon? Should I restrict screen time to the weekends? (I have tried this in the past, and then just got worn down, I guess.)
I'm not sure I've clearly articulated the problem, so I guess the tl;dr is, my son and his friends want to be on screens all the time; I feel like it's not enough to just limit screentime - I need to help my son find activities that are equally compelling, and could really use suggestions. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:So after resisting Fortnite for a year, we caved this year and let our son play. Before that he played Minecraft and War Robots, but all his friends were on Fortnite (literally all of them).
Now I feel like whenever he plays with his friends and I don't allow them to have screen time, they are just passing the time until they can get on their screens. If they go outside, they ask for how long, and then they come back the very first minute they can so they can get set up on screens. If I tell him to do chores or homework first, same thing - he does them but then goes on screens the minute he's done. It just feels like that's the default they want to return to, and that they don't really enjoy any other activities. I guess the one thing they do enjoy is playing basketball outside, but they can only do that for so long.
If it were just my son behaving like this, it would be easier to deal with, but it's his three best neighborhood friends as well. The pressure to turn the screens on is always there.
What I am wondering is, how are other parents - especially the ones who want their kids to have less screen time - dealing with the constant pressure to get back on the screens? (They have to be experiencing it too, since whenever my son logs on to Fortnite, it seems like a majority of his school friends are online!) And for those that have successfully lessened screen time, WHAT activities do your son(s) like to do? Should I enroll him in a sport or some type of activity every afternoon? Should I restrict screen time to the weekends? (I have tried this in the past, and then just got worn down, I guess.)
I'm not sure I've clearly articulated the problem, so I guess the tl;dr is, my son and his friends want to be on screens all the time; I feel like it's not enough to just limit screentime - I need to help my son find activities that are equally compelling, and could really use suggestions. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two boys, one 12 and one older, and in my kids' case the interest eventually burned itself out. High school is more demanding and the kids play video games less because they have more interesting social and extracurricular options. Maybe it would help to think about this as a stage that boys go through but not one all of them stay in indefinitely.
OP here. Thank you. I am really concerned because my little brother was completely addicted to video games and played through college... he barely graduated. Today he has a decent job, but still struggles to control the amount he plays. If it really is a phase for most kids (like Thomas the Train and LEGO and Nerf guns, ha), that would be great. So I'd be really happy to hear from more parents of high schoolers...
Knowing one addict doesn't mean everyone who enjoys the substance will also be an addict, so keep that perspective. Some people can go to Vegas and play a few games, some become gambling addicts.
OP here. True, but I see some of the same qualities in my son as I did in my brother. To the PP, DS is in 5th and actually doesn't get homework from school. And I'm looking for activities that are equally compelling... but thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two boys, one 12 and one older, and in my kids' case the interest eventually burned itself out. High school is more demanding and the kids play video games less because they have more interesting social and extracurricular options. Maybe it would help to think about this as a stage that boys go through but not one all of them stay in indefinitely.
OP here. Thank you. I am really concerned because my little brother was completely addicted to video games and played through college... he barely graduated. Today he has a decent job, but still struggles to control the amount he plays. If it really is a phase for most kids (like Thomas the Train and LEGO and Nerf guns, ha), that would be great. So I'd be really happy to hear from more parents of high schoolers...
Knowing one addict doesn't mean everyone who enjoys the substance will also be an addict, so keep that perspective. Some people can go to Vegas and play a few games, some become gambling addicts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two boys, one 12 and one older, and in my kids' case the interest eventually burned itself out. High school is more demanding and the kids play video games less because they have more interesting social and extracurricular options. Maybe it would help to think about this as a stage that boys go through but not one all of them stay in indefinitely.
OP here. Thank you. I am really concerned because my little brother was completely addicted to video games and played through college... he barely graduated. Today he has a decent job, but still struggles to control the amount he plays. If it really is a phase for most kids (like Thomas the Train and LEGO and Nerf guns, ha), that would be great. So I'd be really happy to hear from more parents of high schoolers...
Anonymous wrote:I have two boys, one 12 and one older, and in my kids' case the interest eventually burned itself out. High school is more demanding and the kids play video games less because they have more interesting social and extracurricular options. Maybe it would help to think about this as a stage that boys go through but not one all of them stay in indefinitely.