Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOLAnonymous wrote:No screens except to FaceTime distant relatives until age 7. Then up to an hour per week.
First child, bet you $100
Nope we have two kids. I work in tech - this is very common in that world.
Yeah, all my silicon valley friends are screen free, it seems. We were mostly screen free until distance learning. Life was so so much easier then, without whining to see screens. There's no reason to start a three year old on movies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we occasionally put on the occasional G movie, but mostly just things like Fireman Sam, Paw Patrol, or Bob the Builder.
Other friends watched whatever they felt like watching and the kid(s) just wandered about and either watched or didn't.
I'm talking about when you let your DC watch PG, PG-13-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOLAnonymous wrote:No screens except to FaceTime distant relatives until age 7. Then up to an hour per week.
First child, bet you $100
Nope we have two kids. I work in tech - this is very common in that world.
Yeah, all my silicon valley friends are screen free, it seems. We were mostly screen free until distance learning. Life was so so much easier then, without whining to see screens. There's no reason to start a three year old on movies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOLAnonymous wrote:No screens except to FaceTime distant relatives until age 7. Then up to an hour per week.
First child, bet you $100
Nope we have two kids. I work in tech - this is very common in that world.
Anonymous wrote:My 13 year old isn't allowed rated R yet.
I don't restrict my younger kids beyond that if DH or I are familiar with the movie and watching with them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LOLAnonymous wrote:No screens except to FaceTime distant relatives until age 7. Then up to an hour per week.
First child, bet you $100
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 3 year old watches some G movies like Frozen, The Jungle Book, Lady and the Tramp, 101 Dalmatians. We follow her lead though since there is a lot of variation in G movies as far as scary goes. We started to watch the little mermaid, but she though Ursula was too scary, so we turned it off. I can't imagine watching anything PG until Elementary school or a little later.
There was a scene in one of the Winnie the Pooh movies that sent my daughter running from the room. Nothing had ever scared her before, ever, but the Backson somehow hit a nerve. She loved all the Pooh movies and shorts, but it was a good six months before she’d watch that one again.
You really never know what will be OK and what’s going to hit them wrong, so you just have to help them learn to cope with whatever crops up. Sometimes even commercials or trailers for things you’d never let them watch can be a problem.