Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are children being massacred in large numbers now and this is what you're concerned about....I feel sorry for you that you have zero perspective.
Video games can get quite violent and de sensitizing. It’s not an entirely unrelated subject.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We bought a switch for my 7 year old. he had been complaining "his friends have it", but he hasn't played with it since the last playdate. It's not that he hasn't asked, but it's for "playdates" only. That's our compromise.
At 7?? My 7 yr old doesn’t even know what a switch is.
I'm sorry you child will be light-years behind their peers because of their Ludite upbringing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We bought a switch for my 7 year old. he had been complaining "his friends have it", but he hasn't played with it since the last playdate. It's not that he hasn't asked, but it's for "playdates" only. That's our compromise.
At 7?? My 7 yr old doesn’t even know what a switch is.
Does your child have social anxiety or other social disorder?
Switches are quite well known to children who talk to other children.
Anonymous wrote:There are children being massacred in large numbers now and this is what you're concerned about....I feel sorry for you that you have zero perspective.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is fine to do this when they are this ages but once they get into middle school video games are an important social connection for boys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We bought a switch for my 7 year old. he had been complaining "his friends have it", but he hasn't played with it since the last playdate. It's not that he hasn't asked, but it's for "playdates" only. That's our compromise.
At 7?? My 7 yr old doesn’t even know what a switch is.
Anonymous wrote:I really don’t like how kids just want to veg out playing video games. We have tried fighting it but now allow our 7 year old 1-2 hours video game time on Saturday’s after chores. Our 4 year doesn’t get any time right now.
What really getting to me is that so many of the kids in his class seem to have unlimited video game time and access to games which are totally inappropriate( Fortnite/ roblox). I want I tell these kids parents WTF- what’s wrong with you?
My kids think we are the bad parents for restricting this stuff - I don’t want to tell my kid the truth that his friends parents probably just dump their kids of video games to get some peace and quiet.
these games are so absorbing I fear our kids won’t want to do the fun activities I love doing with them (hikes, bike riding, family game night). I just feel like I am killing myself doing what I think is right for my kids and society is pushing in the opposite direction.
How do you manage this stuff?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We bought a switch for my 7 year old. he had been complaining "his friends have it", but he hasn't played with it since the last playdate. It's not that he hasn't asked, but it's for "playdates" only. That's our compromise.
At 7?? My 7 yr old doesn’t even know what a switch is.
I'm sorry you child will be light-years behind their peers because of their Ludite upbringing.
Anonymous wrote:
We bought a switch for my 7 year old. he had been complaining "his friends have it", but he hasn't played with it since the last playdate. It's not that he hasn't asked, but it's for "playdates" only. That's our compromise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We bought a switch for my 7 year old. he had been complaining "his friends have it", but he hasn't played with it since the last playdate. It's not that he hasn't asked, but it's for "playdates" only. That's our compromise.
At 7?? My 7 yr old doesn’t even know what a switch is.
Anonymous wrote:
We bought a switch for my 7 year old. he had been complaining "his friends have it", but he hasn't played with it since the last playdate. It's not that he hasn't asked, but it's for "playdates" only. That's our compromise.