Welcome to Just Breathe Parenting, your LGBTQ team, the podcast transforming the conversation around.
Speaker BLoving and raising an LGBTQ child.
Speaker AMy name is Heather Hester, and I am so grateful you are here.
Speaker AI want you to take a deep breath and know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the Just Breathe nest.
Speaker AWhether today's show is an amazing guest.
Speaker BOr me sharing stories, resources, strategies, or.
Speaker ALessons I've learned along our journey, I.
Speaker BWant you to feel like we're just.
Speaker AHanging out at a coffee shop, having a cozy chat.
Speaker AMost of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this.
Speaker BJourney right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.
Speaker AWelcome to Just Breathe.
Speaker AI am so happy you are all here today.
Speaker AI am really happy to introduce my guest that.
Speaker AThat I'm having today and introduce our topic.
Speaker AWe're gonna talk about something that we have not yet talked about on this show, and that is being online and the whole digital world that we get to explore with our kids and especially concerns that parents.
Speaker AParents in general have.
Speaker ABut parents with kids who are lgbtq and there are a lot of unknowns out there.
Speaker ASo really, really excited to bring Sarah May with us.
Speaker AShe is the founder and CEO of the Start Effect.
Speaker AIt's a digital presence educational consulting company that teaches how to navigate the digital world and manage an online presence in a safe, healthy, and beneficial way.
Speaker AAnd I like all three of those things.
Speaker AI think those are three really important components.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd not just for our kids, but for us, too.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo thank you so, so much.
Speaker AI'm really, really excited for you to be here with us.
Speaker AAnd I know you bring, with us or with you just a lot of storytelling talent you have.
Speaker AYou just got your master's recently and remind me again.
Speaker AI'm so sorry.
Speaker COh, it's okay.
Speaker CIt's digital marketing communications.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker CIt's a mouthful.
Speaker AAnd you're an illustrator and a writer of children's books.
Speaker ACorrect.
Speaker ASo very cool background.
Speaker ASo I'm really, really happy you're here today.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AThank you, Sarah.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker CThank you for having me.
Speaker CI'm so excited to have this talk.
Speaker AWell, you are welcome.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AI think this will be.
Speaker AI know this will be really, really valuable, and I'm just excited to really just dive in and kind of start.
Speaker AMaybe we'll start just really broad with, you know, things that, you know, as we're thinking about our kids, no matter, you know, whether they're.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AYour youngest is eight.
Speaker AYour oldest is 14.
Speaker AMy youngest is 14.
Speaker AMy eldest is 22.
Speaker AI mean, we worry no matter what age they are.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd there's all different things within those ages.
Speaker ASo I'm wondering if we could just kind of start with, as we're looking at this for our kids, what are some of the broader things that we should be aware of and should be on our radar?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CSo the number one thing that I tell parents, first of all, every time is to keep those lines of communication open and to start small.
Speaker CSo one thing that I kind of recommend a lot is to ask your kid what app they're into, what thing are they into online right now and download that for yourself and, you know, take a, take a little look around, see if you can figure it out, but have them teach you how to use it.
Speaker CSo have them sit down and be the expert in that area.
Speaker CAnd so before you're telling them, hey, you need to be doing this, you need to be doing this, you need to be doing this, you've already opened that door.
Speaker CAnd they're going to be so much more comfortable to even just say things without thinking, which we know they do all the time, but in this instance, it can be really, really helpful for us.
Speaker CAnd so when they're given that, you know, they feel proud about it, they're excited to tell you they, you know, they don't want you to play the game with them and all of their friends if you've picked a game, like, they don't want you to do that.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker CBut if so, one of the things we do in our family is we have parent kid dates.
Speaker CAnd one of my kids is a big gamer and he would love for us to just sit down and play half an hour of Minecraft.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CLike it is.
Speaker CIt makes him so happy.
Speaker CAnd I don't like Minecraft.
Speaker CI'll be honest, I'm not a fan.
Speaker CIt just like, for my brain, it doesn't work.
Speaker CBut I will sit down for half an hour and I will play and it'll be great.
Speaker AIt's gonna be fun.
Speaker AYes, exactly.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker CBut we do that for our kids.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CWe'll do things that make us uncomfortable and that let them show the things that they're passionate about and excited about.
Speaker CAnd once you start having more of that baseline, it's so much easier for them when something does come up in a chat room that they're like, whoa, what was that?
Speaker CIt's so much easier for them to come and say, hey, this happened.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd know that you're going to understand, first of all, the language that they're using when they talk about it, which is really important because sometimes we see it all the time and we in parents do it and kids do it.
Speaker CWhen you talk about stuff that we don't understand, you just.
Speaker CYou don't hear any of it.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker CSo if you already know a little bit about what they're doing online and how they're using it, then that becomes that baseline that you can build off of and have those harder conversations, Right?
Speaker AOh, I love that.
Speaker AThat is.
Speaker AAnd what a great way to do that because you start with something that is easy, right.
Speaker AAnd something, you know, to your point that they, you know, they want to show you.
Speaker AThey want you to.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker AI laugh because kind of the same thing.
Speaker AMy youngest, like, a few months ago, he'd been begging, please, please just play Clash Royale with me.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, I don't understand this game.
Speaker ASo we download it and he's teaching me how to play it.
Speaker AAnd his friends will get in the car and they'll be like, Mrs.
Speaker AHester, what level are you on this?
Speaker AAnd I'm like, I'm really bad, you guys.
Speaker AAnd they'll be like, no, you should try this and try this.
Speaker BAnd I'm like.
Speaker ABut I mean, to your point, it's.
Speaker AWhen you're in that space with them, it totally takes away like all of the.
Speaker AWell, that's like this scary adult, right?
Speaker AAnd, oh, well, if I can talk to her or him about my game, then I can talk about all the higher level stuff.
Speaker AHigher level stuff as it comes.
Speaker ABecause it does, right?
Speaker ASo how great.
Speaker AAnd you know, then we all get addicted to games that, I mean, really clash.
Speaker AL'Oreal.
Speaker AMm.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYeah, it's on my computer.
Speaker AIt's still on my phone.
Speaker AWe might have to have a conversation about how to do that.
Speaker CThere is that.
Speaker CThere is the risk that you're gonna absolutely love it and it's gonna end up like a Candy Crush situation, you know?
Speaker AOkay, that is my.
Speaker AOkay, you've hit on my two.
Speaker ABecause now there's Harry Potter, Candy Crush.
Speaker AReally?
Speaker AYes, there is.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AAnd it's.
Speaker AYou know what it is?
Speaker AIt's the greatest thing about it is.
Speaker AAnd I think for, you know, all the.
Speaker AThe adults in, in the room we're using, you know, we're thinking all the time, right.
Speaker AWhether it's with our job or raising kids or making dinner, like, and to be able to sit down and do something that requires literally no brain power.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker AIs really kind of delicious.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo no shame.
Speaker AI don't shame anybody who plays, but I Have to giggle because whenever somebody will be like, you know, aiming any of this, I'm like, yes.
Speaker BYeah, I do know.
Speaker CYeah, we all do it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker ASo funny.
Speaker AOh, my goodness.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker ASo when, when our kids are online, or even, even us, I mean, I think these tips, like I said, they, to varying degrees and levels.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AGo through all ages.
Speaker ABut as we're kind of teaching our kids what they.
Speaker AWhen they're online, whether it's, you know, on their computers or on their phones and they are in these chat rooms or they're on Instagram or TikTok, what are the things that they should.
Speaker AThat are okay to share and what are things that they really should not be sharing?
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd how do we approach that with them in a way that they're not?
Speaker ALike, you don't know.
Speaker AYou're an idiot.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CSo my favorite thing to tell teens and kids that are online is if you don't want it on your grandmother's refrigerator and you don't want to see it plastered across the news, then don't say it online at all.
Speaker CAnd, and that doesn't cover necessarily all the privacy things because, sure, I'm sure you wouldn't.
Speaker CYou'd be fine with having your address on your grandmother's refrigerator.
Speaker CBut that's, there's.
Speaker CThere's those things we need to make sure that they, that they know not to share.
Speaker CYou shouldn't be sharing, really, if you can get.
Speaker CEspecially when they're younger, not sharing your last name.
Speaker CCome up with a screen name that doesn't have anything to do with your location because you want to keep your location private and separate and not add that to the Internet in any way.
Speaker CAnd then so along with your address is also your school, which I see a lot with, especially as kids are into sports.
Speaker CYou see a lot of kids being like, hey, my concert's tonight.
Speaker CThat's if you.
Speaker CSo there's ways to talk about that.
Speaker CIf you're in a, like a private Snapchat group with a bunch of your friends and you're trying to tell them, hey, come see my concert.
Speaker CThat's one thing.
Speaker CBut if it's on your public Instagram page, then we don't want to be sharing that there because then anyone can find it.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker CSo there's that teaching them, like, what's appropriate to share when.
Speaker CAnd location is probably the biggest thing because it's one they don't think about at all.
Speaker CAnd so your address, a lot of times people with their address, even kids are just like, nah, I'm not gonna share that.
Speaker CLike, okay, I'm not gonna tell you where I live.
Speaker CThey've had enough stranger danger situations by the time they're getting on things.
Speaker ARight, exactly, exactly.
Speaker AWe've to like, hammer that piece in at least.
Speaker CExactly, right?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CBut then when it's talking about their school or a sports team that they're on because they're proud of it and they want to share and.
Speaker CAnd so they just have to really learn where those boundaries are.
Speaker CWhen is it okay to say, hey, I had a really great game tonight with my team.
Speaker CWe were awesome.
Speaker CGo whatever your mascot is.
Speaker CRight, that's fine.
Speaker CMascots are all over.
Speaker CBut saying I'm in this city and this is my mascot, then maybe back off, just say the mascot name and move on.
Speaker ARight, exactly, exactly.
Speaker AAnd I think that even gets, you know, as kids get older, I think, you know, there's a little.
Speaker AThere's a piece of them that thinks, well, I'm older, so I can handle this, but still have to be really, really careful.
Speaker AAnd, you know, I talk to my, you know, my high schoolers about this, you know, a lot, which is people know your high school name.
Speaker AYou know, that's not, It's.
Speaker AI mean, some high schools are like, the high school I went to is North High School.
Speaker AWell, there's like a thousand north high schools.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ABut the high school that my kids go to, there's only one of those.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, and.
Speaker AAnd you can, you can Google that and find it in an instant.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo these are the things that, you know, they don't think of because they're like, you know, like, to your point, they're excited or they're proud or they're, you know, not just not thinking because, you know, they don't, they don't do that a lot.
Speaker AAnd so things just go out there.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWithout them, you know, really.
Speaker AAnd it's to.
Speaker AHonestly, to no fault of their own, because that frontal lobe just isn't there yet.
Speaker CYeah, not quite.
Speaker CSo it's.
Speaker AIt's kind of our job to be their frontal lobe a little bit.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker CI love that.
Speaker CYes, exactly.
Speaker AOh, my goodness.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker ASo, okay, that is really, really helpful.
Speaker AAnd I think, I think too, when, you know, when our kids are really little, you know, just getting entering into the digital, all the digital stuff, it's hard to know what to say and how much to say.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd in some ways that does kind of go through because as they get older, then you're.
Speaker AYou're not just saying, well, you know, don't share your address.
Speaker AI mean, you're really having to talk about things like don't put pictures of yourself in a certain way.
Speaker COh, my goodness, yes.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABecause even though you look at it and you think, I, I'm just really proud, I, you know, I love the way I look or whatever.
Speaker AIt's out there.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd it's never going away.
Speaker ANever going away.
Speaker AAnd that's what, you know, my thing that I always would say, you know, in my.
Speaker AWhen they were a little bit younger, like just going into high school.
Speaker AIf you don't want this to be on your college application or people looking at your college application to see this, don't put it on there anywhere because this will affect your college acceptance period.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd that is to your point, actually, it is becoming a really big deal for colleges to want to use AI to sort through before they even look at your application.
Speaker CAnd then if they're making decision between you and 10 other people, they will look for you, they will see what you're saying and.
Speaker AOh, absolutely, absolutely.
Speaker AGosh, I even remember, well, my daughter, which, you know, I was one of those total aside.
Speaker AI'm not sure why she was wanting to rush for a sorority, but she did.
Speaker AShe decided she wanted to.
Speaker AAnd that no shame or shade to sororities, it just was not something that was ever on her radar and not her personality at all.
Speaker ASo the fact that she kind of last minute decided to rush was like, oh, okay.
Speaker ABut anyway, what she discovered was that in a lot of the sororities, you needed a curated Instagram in order to even be considered.
Speaker AAnd she was like, this is crazy.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ALike, it's just this wild thing.
Speaker ABut it is, it is a thing.
Speaker AAnd, and you know, no judgment, however, you know, however you wish to.
Speaker ABut just I think it's important for people to know that that is a thing.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AThere are all these different levels of, as our kids go into it that I was completely unaware of, of that being something that she would face that, you know, any of these, like, kind of more nuanced pieces of our, the digital age that we live in.
Speaker AIt's, you know, it's hard when you kind of come up against it.
Speaker AThen you're like scrambling to figure it out.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker AAnd that's like the worst feeling.
Speaker ASo I'm really grateful you're here to kind of talk about some of these things to help us from having to scramble.
Speaker CYeah, I feel like it's a little bit like insurance in a way, because you don't need it until you need it, Right?
Speaker AYeah, exactly.
Speaker AAnd then you're so grateful that you have it, right?
Speaker COh, yeah, you're very grateful.
Speaker CYou started that conversation when they were 10 years old playing Minecraft, by the time they're 17 and dealing with, well, things I don't want to think about.
Speaker AThings that you don't want to think about, but we do have to think about because, I mean, kind of to that point is, you know, things start coming up like, you know, very specific apps that our kids want to be on or come across and they're curious about and they want to see what it's all about.
Speaker AAnd if we don't know what those apps are or if we don't know how to not only educate ourselves on them, but to educate our kids on them, it can be come very, very dangerous.
Speaker AVery, very fast.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAnd that's what we ran into with Connor, and that's what we had to.
Speaker AYou know, it was a very serious, very scary situation.
Speaker AAnd he had no idea, you know, when he.
Speaker AAnd we had no idea.
Speaker ASo this is, you know, as we talk about, you know, there are apps out there now, apps that are specific to, you know, the LGBTQ community that are really.
Speaker AAnd, you know, TikTok is one that does a phenomenal.
Speaker ALike I use that word usefully loosely, but their algorithm is crazy good.
Speaker ABut it does point you in all these directions, right.
Speaker AWhere you can find all this stuff.
Speaker AAnd so, as parents are, you know, of course, sorry, I'm having like 12 thoughts at once here.
Speaker ABut as we kind of move into this stage, right, where we aren't on top of them all the time, right.
Speaker AAnd there is that kind of natural beginning of separation where we hope what we've taught them, not only do they keep in there, but also that we have created that relationship where they will come to us and talk to us.
Speaker ABut what are the kind of the things that we really need to start integrating at that point, just to kind of reiterate safety?
Speaker AAnd then kind of on the other side of that, what do we need to be looking at as parents?
Speaker ALike, what are things that we need to know?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker COh, gosh, that's huge.
Speaker CSo one of the first things that I tell parents, thinking about social media in general, a lot of times I will hear parents say, like, well, how do I get my kids not to be on it?
Speaker CIt's like one of the first things a lot of parents will ask.
Speaker CAnd for kids under 13, the easy answer for me and in our house is that until you are 13, you're actually not legally allowed to be on those sites.
Speaker CThe sites people do it and you put, that's why they ask for you to put your, your age in, because they can't collect your information.
Speaker CSo they just say, no, you can't do this.
Speaker CSo that's usually the first place.
Speaker CAnd you can see like the relief off the like 11 year old parents.
Speaker CLike, oh, they can't.
Speaker COh, that, then it's not my fault, then it's not me, then it's okay, like, yeah, you have two more years, don't worry.
Speaker ARight, right.
Speaker CBut then when they start getting into these things, it can be even for like a really tech savvy parent, it can be absolutely daunting because they change all of the time, especially if you're on one of the apps and the sites that they can have a public profile that is open to the entire world.
Speaker CAnd so knowing each individual app's privacy, like whatever app your kid chooses to use, knowing what privacy settings you can use and talking to them about why they want to be on there in the first place, is it because that's the one thing that their 15 friends use so they want to be able to be part of the conversation?
Speaker CWell, okay, well then maybe you don't need to have a profile that's open to the entire world.
Speaker CYou can keep that as a closed profile and only have your profile picture and a bio on there.
Speaker CAnd then you can still interact with your friends and you can still see the things and you get all the things out of it you want.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CSo, and I think it's important to have to sit down with them and have those conversations and say, well, what do you really want?
Speaker CI mean, which can go huge directions for everything later.
Speaker CJust giving them the autonomy to say, well, yeah, I want to do this because.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd then helping them use the tools within each app to create a safe space.
Speaker CAnd one of the things I talk about a lot is exit strategies.
Speaker CWhat do you do when you get into a conversation or somebody starts following you and commenting that is rude or just any number of troll like behaviors.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd having them know that it's okay to not follow them.
Speaker CYou don't have to follow everybody that follows you.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CYou can, you can restrict the things that people see.
Speaker CYou can block people and letting them know that those things are available and that it's a good idea to use them when you need to.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CJust having that knowledge can be so helpful, especially for kids in the LGBTQ space, because it can be really, really scary.
Speaker CTo get online because some people are just not nice.
Speaker CAnd as unfortunate as that is, it's good to give them the tools.
Speaker CAnd the Internet has really allowed a lot of people, a lot of LGBTQ people to find community, to be able to connect, to start to know who they are, to understand terminology that they didn't understand.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CSo there are so many wonderful benefits to using it that it's just important that we start with that foundation and start with that, like, okay, well, why do you want to be there?
Speaker COkay, you want to be there because your friends are on there and you want to help.
Speaker CYou want to learn more about you.
Speaker CYou want to find a community you fit in.
Speaker COkay, well, let's look together at a couple of different sites and see.
Speaker COkay, this is a good.
Speaker CThis is a good profile to follow.
Speaker CThis is a.
Speaker CYou know, these people are talking about things that are important and look through things together, like, sit down on a TikTok and say, scroll through somebody's profile.
Speaker CThey have it all out there.
Speaker CYou can see it.
Speaker CAnd if they're not comfortable sitting next to you and watching it, say, okay, well, let's just do it in the same room, right?
Speaker CLike, maybe if we're in the same room, then I can watch their body language.
Speaker CI can see what they're.
Speaker CWhat's coming across their face.
Speaker CAnd even if it's something that is maybe looking at, like, body positivity, which is huge and can be just so, so hard on social media, where the whole.
Speaker CThat's a little squirrel aside, but social media started as a.
Speaker CFrom, you know, two guys in Silicon Valley or something that was basing it off a website called Hot or Not.
Speaker CAnd that was basically the.
Speaker CHow social media was born.
Speaker AOh, my gosh.
Speaker ASo I did not know that.
Speaker AOh, my goodness.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker CBefore it was Facebook, it was Face Mash, and Mark Zuckerberg used the idea of Hot or Not to come up with this liking and not liking and.
Speaker CMm.
Speaker AOh, my gosh.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AWell, and now it's morphed to the place where Facebook is like, you know, our kids don't use Facebook.
Speaker CNo, they don't.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker CBut it was really that parent that, like, that now everything is kind of evolved out of.
Speaker CAnd there's.
Speaker CThere's liking on all the things, and.
Speaker AThere'S different ways to like things.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AI mean, there are so many.
Speaker AEverything is nuanced just a little bit.
Speaker ABut I really like that suggestion of.
Speaker AAnd I think that is vitally important to really ask, what are you looking for?
Speaker ALike, what are you really wanting to get out of this.
Speaker ABecause I think that's a question that sometimes we're afraid to ask.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWell, I think it's a hard question to even ask ourselves.
Speaker CAnd Right.
Speaker ADoesn't have a direct answer.
Speaker AI mean, it has.
Speaker AYeah, you have to really think about the answer.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd so that is really, really important, too.
Speaker AAnd it's part of just like, keeping that conversation open and going.
Speaker AAnd even if they don't give you an answer or a direct answer, it at least gets it in there.
Speaker ASo they're like, huh, why?
Speaker AWhy do I want to do this?
Speaker AYou know, And.
Speaker AAnd kind of leaves that door open.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd those are the kind of thinking skills we want them to have, because they're going to come across stuff and be like, why am I still watching this?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CWhy.
Speaker CWhy should I even like this in the first place?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CLike, you know, maybe this person changes their content and they're not somebody I want to follow anymore.
Speaker CAnd that's fine.
Speaker AAnd that's okay.
Speaker CAnd it's okay.
Speaker CYou're not hurting anyone's feelings.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWell, and I think that's the other thing that you said that I really like so much, is that empowering them to say, if you're uncomfortable, you have.
Speaker AHere are all of your options.
Speaker AYou don't have to sit there and take, you know, if something's coming at you that makes you feel uncomfortable or it's mean or whatever.
Speaker AThere are multiple options for not having to deal with that.
Speaker ARight, exactly.
Speaker AAnd so that's a piece of like, not only educating, but it's really empowering them to advocate for themselves and to know that they can, because I think a lot of times they don't realize that they can.
Speaker CRight, exactly.
Speaker CAnd they need.
Speaker CThey need that skill because this isn't going away.
Speaker CIt's not going to stop.
Speaker CAnd they're.
Speaker CI mean, because us as adults, we need it all the time.
Speaker CHaving that reminder is very, very helpful.
Speaker AOh, my gosh.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AOh, I don't have to sit here and take this.
Speaker AOh, my gosh.
Speaker AYeah, I don't.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI can.
Speaker CI can block you.
Speaker CTurn off my phone and walk away and do something else for a while and I'll be okay.
Speaker AExactly, Exactly.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AI think that is so valuable.
Speaker AOne of the things that I.
Speaker AThat I like, too, that you talked about is really the positives of kind of taking that break from social media.
Speaker AAnd that is a very, very difficult thing to do.
Speaker ABut I have seen it working with my older kids, and I think it's because they've gotten to that age.
Speaker AI mean, they're 19 and almost 22.
Speaker ATo where they feel they're very in touch with how it makes them feel.
Speaker AAnd so when they get to a place where they're like, I just don't, like, they will either delete things or just, you know, hide it and not.
Speaker AAnd stay off of it for a couple of weeks until they, like, you know, are kind of back grounded, connected, whatever they need, you know what, whatever they're needing and, and then they can open that back up again.
Speaker ABut I wonder if you could talk about that a little bit and how we talk to our younger kids about that and letting them know that that is an option and their life, even though it feels like their life will be over, because FOMO is a real thing.
Speaker COh, it's so real.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker ABut how to really talk to our kids about it in a way that they're not.
Speaker ALike, you're old and you don't know what you're talking about, right?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker COh, gosh.
Speaker CI just wanted to.
Speaker CTo your point about knowing what they need, like, that's, it's so impressive for them to be able to look at it and say, you know what, I need to take a break.
Speaker CAnd that's what we want from all of our kids, is to be able to look at it and say, you know what, I need to step back from this for a while.
Speaker CIt's not a core part of who I am that I'm on Facebook constantly or on TikTok all day long.
Speaker CAnd to be able to separate themself from those apps is really important.
Speaker CAnd so one of the things that I have found really helpful with my kids and they share with a lot of parents and families is when you.
Speaker CSo you have these devices.
Speaker CAnd I think people see this a lot throughout the summer because there's, you know, you have.
Speaker CThe devices are there and they're so easy and, and so you can, you can see your kids being online for.
Speaker CAnd just having screens in front of them for so long.
Speaker CAnd so one of the things that I love to tell people is how involve your kids in the conversation about how long they think their screen time should be and have them sit down and say, okay, well, I really want to make sure that I beat this level.
Speaker COkay, how long is it going to take you to beat that level?
Speaker CHow long do you think it's going to take?
Speaker COkay, well, let's give you another 20 minutes after that so that you can get on, you can wrap up, but put on a timer and say, okay, We've committed that this is what you're going to have today.
Speaker CAnd even if you talk about that the day before and say, okay, I know tomorrow, we've talked about how you're only going to have this much.
Speaker CMaybe that's two hours, maybe that's half an hour.
Speaker CBut letting them know it's coming and letting them know how long it's going to be.
Speaker CSo especially as they're younger, they don't know how to regulate anything.
Speaker CThey have no idea.
Speaker AThey don't.
Speaker CAnd time is almost just like.
Speaker CI mean, it's a concept that.
Speaker CNo, not at all.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CBut letting them know that they have a specific amount of time and that it will end.
Speaker CAnd the part that can be really hard as the person that has to say that ending is you have to stick to the ending.
Speaker COh, my gosh.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker CAnd you have to.
Speaker CAnd the more times that you do that, the more often that you do that, they'll get used to it and they're gonna stop the like, oh, my life is over.
Speaker CYou never let me do anything.
Speaker AYou're the worst.
Speaker AYou're such a mean mom.
Speaker AYes, yes, yes.
Speaker CProbably the worst.
Speaker ALike pushing of the envelope, right?
Speaker CYes, yes.
Speaker CWhich, I mean, when we're working all day and we're exhausted and it's the end of the day and you're tired, it's hard.
Speaker CWell, it is hard.
Speaker AI mean, the thing that I run into right now with my 14 year old is, you know, he loves his Xbox.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so.
Speaker AAnd you know, kids apparently don't need sleep anymore.
Speaker ASo, you know, I will go down at midnight because I am fighting to keep my eyes open.
Speaker AI'm so tired.
Speaker AAnd I'll be like, okay, 15 more minutes.
Speaker AThat's it.
Speaker ALike we're done at 12:15.
Speaker AAnd getting him to get off of that stupid thing and you know.
Speaker ACause he's on there with his friends and they're all, you know, this is after they.
Speaker AAnd thankfully, you know, he's out playing, you know, playing baseball during the day, running around, doing all this stuff.
Speaker ASo I.
Speaker AI'm like, okay, it's okay.
Speaker AI feel good with him having that time at night then connecting and playing and whatever.
Speaker ABut holy cow.
Speaker AI mean, that is to your absolute point, like, literally, I have to stand there and be like, okay, five more minutes.
Speaker AOkay, it's now 12:15.
Speaker AOkay, finish it up.
Speaker AI'm gonna come down there and unplug it, right?
Speaker CYes.
Speaker CYeah, because.
Speaker CAnd the time doesn't mean anything, especially if you're on a video game.
Speaker CLike the time doesn't mean anything.
Speaker CAnd I definitely see that when kids are playing with their friends.
Speaker CI think we saw this a lot with the pandemic because parents were like, well, you're with your friends.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CYou're playing with your friends, you're being social connection.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CSo you didn't.
Speaker CIt felt so hard to take it away and to say, we need to stop.
Speaker CAnd I think that we're still, we're just now really starting to get into this.
Speaker CLike, well, it's okay.
Speaker CYou can talk to your friends and play a game for an hour and a half or two hours, but you don't have to do it for six.
Speaker ARight, Right.
Speaker AAnd that's a little bit of the, I mean, it's kind of the digital detox light, right?
Speaker CYes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI think that's really important to start to.
Speaker CBecause I think when we think about digital detoxing, there's a lot that comes up with, well, I just have to stop everything.
Speaker CI'm taking a two week break and I'm not doing anything at all, just shutting it all down.
Speaker CBut really what we need to be teaching our kids is how to put a little bit of detox time into every single day.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWell, because that teaches them a much more valuable skill, which is being so aware.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo having that awareness of, okay, you know, whether it's time, you know, time spent or whatever that is, but just having that awareness of, I can do this and it's fun and I can walk away and you know, play outside or do some chores or, you know, whatever it is that's kind of on the, for your day and then learning that they'll still survive.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker AAnd that they probably feel better.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd I think it's important for them to know when you do spend that, you know, when you intend to spend two hours, but you spend six, you have another opportunity tomorrow.
Speaker CYou, you don't have to say, well, that's it.
Speaker CI'm just always gonna be on it for six hours.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CLike you can, you can say, you know what, actually, maybe tomorrow I don't need to play at all.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd that's okay.
Speaker CAnd it's really, it is, it's, it's empowering them and giving them that voice to themselves to say, you know what?
Speaker CActually I'm good.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWell, it's kind of, again, I mean, these are such great skills because it's learning the skill of, you know, self regulation and also, you know, the skill of you are imperfect and you're going to mess up and just because you mess up doesn't mean you throw in the towel.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker APick yourself up and you start doing it all over again.
Speaker AAnd, you know, the more that you practice, whatever that skill is, whether it's awareness or, you know, you get better at it.
Speaker AAnd as adults, I mean, I think that's such an important thing for us to model, too, is that we're still not perfect at it.
Speaker ALike, we're still.
Speaker AStill make mistakes.
Speaker AWe still.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AI still spend, you know, time on my phone that then I'm like, oh.
Speaker CYeah, get in like a.
Speaker CYou know, you get in one of those rabbit holes and you just.
Speaker AI mean, and ours are different.
Speaker AI mean, we get on Pinterest and we're like, oh, my gosh, two hours just went away.
Speaker AHow did that happen?
Speaker ARight?
Speaker CLike, how.
Speaker CSo, you know, I'm never making any of those things I pinned either, ever.
Speaker ALike, ever.
Speaker AI will never cut my hair or color it the 5,000 ways that I've pinned.
Speaker ABut, gosh, it's cute.
Speaker AI mean, right?
Speaker CYes, 100% that.
Speaker CYes, totally.
Speaker ASo, I mean, I think those are the things that are, like, important to share with our kids and be like, look, I get it.
Speaker AI mean, these are the things that I do.
Speaker AAnd it.
Speaker AThey're, you know, I get it.
Speaker AAnd we keep working at it.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker CRight.
Speaker ASo we keep shifting and journey.
Speaker ASo, yeah.
Speaker ASo I think that's just in it all.
Speaker AThat's all good with, you know, that helps with the whole, you know, communication and connecting and.
Speaker AAnd just being, I think, you know, our kids.
Speaker ASomething that I've, you know, learned later in my parenthood that I do talk about so much because.
Speaker AIs just allowing our kids to see our humanity.
Speaker COh, yes.
Speaker AAnd that's something that, you know, I personally did not grow up with, and I know a lot of people in my generation did not, and I think is so vitally important for our kids to see.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CYeah, I think that's a.
Speaker CThat's a really great point, because especially if they are on social media is the majority of the time, social media is everybody's highlight reel.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd so if, you know, us on the other side of this screen with them can say, you know what?
Speaker CThat's not really true.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CLike, they may have taken that picture.
Speaker CAnd like, I love those pictures when people will take, like, this gorgeous picture of whatever product they're trying to show, and then they show you a picture of the room in which they took that beautiful picture.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd it's like, you know, one cubic square that's Perfect.
Speaker CAnd the rest is a hot mess.
Speaker AYeah, exactly.
Speaker CAnd that's, that's social media.
Speaker CSocial media is that square.
Speaker CAnd then the rest is a hot mess.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AOh my goodness.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AIt is so, so true.
Speaker ASo, so true.
Speaker AI mean there are so many valuable lessons.
Speaker ASo I always feel like, you know, it's a net positive on social media and you know, just digital presence in general.
Speaker AAnd there are a million more things as parents that we just need to know, need to know how to navigate.
Speaker AI'm wondering.
Speaker AI think I'm looking at our, at our time here.
Speaker ASo I just have one or two more questions just kind of more specifically when we're looking at.
Speaker ASo there are some, some really dangerous things that our kids can get into online, whether it is, you know, on online.
Speaker AOnline or social media apps.
Speaker AAnd these are.
Speaker AIt's hard to stay in front of it.
Speaker COh yeah.
Speaker AAnd so I'm wondering what your advice would be because I know the way I learned about it is not a way that I would recommend anybody learn about it, which was after the fact and scrambling.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo how do we kind of, are there places that we can go and like learn about, you know, what's out there?
Speaker AAre there, are there ways that we can be kind of aware so that we can get in front of, you know, like, let's say like you're, we both have 14 year olds, right.
Speaker ASo where we can think, okay, this is what, when they're 15 and 16, what they might be into.
Speaker AHow do we kind of get ourselves to that point?
Speaker ASo we're like, yeah, this is what I need to know.
Speaker ASo I'm ready.
Speaker COh, so the problem is it changes all the time.
Speaker CYay.
Speaker AI don't like that answer.
Speaker CNo, it's bad.
Speaker CIt's really unfortunate.
Speaker CAnd I hate that I don't have a, like there, there's.
Speaker CBecause even if there was a book, it would be wrong in a year.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker CWhich is, which makes it so hard.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CSo I mean the, the, the biggest thing I think is that is really that foundation is those things that aren't going to change.
Speaker CInterpersonal relationships talk just how we talk to people.
Speaker CKnowing that you're worth being talked to like, and being respected when people talk to you, you and, and, and knowing that you can shut it down when people aren't that way to you.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker CBecause the apps are going to change.
Speaker CThe, you know, the websites are going to change.
Speaker CNow if we're talking about like how, especially when they're younger, setting up some boundaries within what Just specific ones on their device.
Speaker CLike Apple has an option that if on their device they have their own icloud account, the parent can be in control of the things that they see.
Speaker CAnd I know there are ways to do that with Android devices as well.
Speaker CWe're just an Apple household, right.
Speaker CAnd so you can slowly start to give them more freedom.
Speaker CAnd instead of just being like, here's the Internet, right.
Speaker CWhich isn't helpful because it's too much.
Speaker CIt's too much.
Speaker CAnd they can find things that they're not even remotely ready to find very, very quickly when you give it to them that way.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker CAnd so kind of kind of funneling things for them as much as you can by setting those boundaries and by having this foundation and saying, look, you're gonna see some things.
Speaker CSo I actually have a digital device agreement on my website that lays out like different things that you may want to talk to your kid about when you're giving them their own device.
Speaker CSo things about like what kinds of pictures you should post, what kinds of pictures you should take of other people and post, if any things that you might see.
Speaker CAnd then even bringing in that digital detox piece, like from this time to this time, you're gonna shut your phone down, right?
Speaker CLike, or your tablet or whatever it is, and you can customize that to however you want that works for your family because you may have a 10 year old, you may have a 17, 18 year old and they're gonna look different.
Speaker AVery different.
Speaker AYes, yes.
Speaker AVery, very different.
Speaker CI'm sorry, I don't have a very concrete answer there, but yeah, it's gonna change.
Speaker AIt is.
Speaker AWell, sorry, actually the answer is it's a very good one because I think a lot of times we're looking for something specific like that, like I just want to know this, is there something that's going to tell me that?
Speaker AAnd to know that there isn't.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIs also an answer because then we know like that's just something that we as part of our parenting, right.
Speaker AThis is something that we have to make time to stay on top of because this is where our kids are, whatever ages they are, this is what we need to stay apprised of and on top of.
Speaker AAnd I, you know, you're the, the answer of it comes back to what we've been talking about this whole time, which is communication and, and that, you know, that is through everything, right?
Speaker ASo having that foundation, having that open commun and creating those opportunities that may seem so, you know, small or just kind of, you know, whatever you don't realize the impact that they have.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo that I think is, you know, it's a beautiful answer and it really is, I think helps give a ton of guidance.
Speaker ASo thank you.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker COh, good.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker CI'm glad it was helpful and you.
Speaker AReferenced to your on your website.
Speaker ASo I will link your website in the show notes just so everybody knows.
Speaker ASo it'll be there.
Speaker ABut is there anything else that you kind of want to share about what you do and how you, how you get all of this out into the world for everyone that people can check out for you?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CSo I'm, I'm on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter and I share stuff on all those platforms all the time.
Speaker CBut I also have a blog called Think before you hashtag or maybe thoughts before you hashtag.
Speaker CI've changed it like three times.
Speaker CSo I've been like trying to brand things so they fit well.
Speaker CAnd it's.
Speaker CYeah, it's on my website too.
Speaker CIt's something before you hashtag.
Speaker CThat's very helpful.
Speaker AIt's on the website.
Speaker AIt was.
Speaker ALong as it's on your website.
Speaker AWe can click right through.
Speaker AI did see it and I can't remember which one it is either.
Speaker CYou're right, it.
Speaker CAnd yeah, but there we are.
Speaker CBut that's where I kind of go into some deeper, deeper topics a little bit and talk things through a little bit more.
Speaker CAnd yeah, yeah, I've got some products and things that can help if you're looking for things.
Speaker CThings that are simple.
Speaker CAs simple as a magnet to put on your fridge to remind you to take that detox to a journal for teens to get them off line and think through some thoughts before posting those things with pure emotion that are never.
Speaker AGoing to go away.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AI love.
Speaker AThat's so great.
Speaker ATeaching that 24 hour rule is really a valuable skill, one that I did not learn until much later in life.
Speaker AYeah, right.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWell, you know, as we're growing up, the Internet.
Speaker CWe were growing up with the Internet.
Speaker AWell, exactly.
Speaker AI mean, the Internet.
Speaker ANobody knew what we were doing here until the year that I graduated college.
Speaker ASo my kids always laugh when I'm like, they're like, well, how did you research stuff?
Speaker AI'm like in a library with a book.
Speaker CLike, yeah, like we had that whole set of encyclopedias and we had to know where to find it.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker ASo the whole thought of, you know, being able to respond to something emotionally in a way that was instant wasn't something that we learned.
Speaker AGrew up having to learn how to navigate.
Speaker ASo it is something.
Speaker CAnd now they have their friends in.
Speaker ATheir pocket all the time.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AIt's a different.
Speaker ADifferent.
Speaker AIt's different.
Speaker AWhich is why it's so important for us to stand.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker ABecause the last thing they want to hear is, when I was your age.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AReally?
Speaker ADon't ever start a sentence with that.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker CWhen I had to listen to the dial up modem and I couldn't call my friend on the phone.
Speaker CThey don't care.
Speaker AThey really don't care.
Speaker AYou know, as we watch Stranger Things and I'm like, I had that phone, I had those shoes.
Speaker AAnd they're like, you're so weird, Mom.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker ASo it's all right.
Speaker AThat makes it so much fun.
Speaker AOh, my gosh.
Speaker AWell, Sarah, thank you.
Speaker AI've so enjoyed our conversation.
Speaker CYes, me too.
Speaker CThis was wonderful.
Speaker CThank you so much.
Speaker AWell, you are very, very welcome.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AWe will definitely stay in touch and I'll get all of your stuff.
Speaker CPlease do.
Speaker AInto the show notes so everybody can check this out because this has been really, really valuable.
Speaker ASo thank you.
Speaker CAwesome.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker BWelcome to the first edition of the Q and A part of the podcast.
Speaker BI do not have a really clever, catchy name yet for this segment, so stay tuned until the next episode and see if I've come up with anything.
Speaker BBut I didn't want to wait any longer because I had two.
Speaker BHad several really great questions come through and two of them actually came from a Google form that I put out there, just asking for feedback and questions that people were thinking about and concerned about.
Speaker BAnd two questions came up that were rather similar, and they are ones surrounding politics, which I know is a difficult topic for people and one that I typically do not address on this podcast.
Speaker BBut I do think it is something that obviously impacts all of us, is part of who we all are, whether we want to talk about it or not.
Speaker BAnd it is something that does influence our decisions and it influences how we are in the world, how we speak to one another, how we approach things.
Speaker BAnd so I think that it is something that is actually, in a constructive way, very, very positive to speak about.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd the more that we talk about it, the more that we share ideas and share thoughts, because if there's anything that we all have learned, this is not.
Speaker BThere's nothing black and white about it.
Speaker BIt's incredibly nuanced, every single political topic.
Speaker BAnd the more that we talk about all of our feelings and all of our thoughts and where we're coming from and these different nuances, I think the richer the discussion will be and perhaps we will be able to make some headway, some positive headway.
Speaker BSo circling back to these first two questions, one was regarding where to find factual information from the community regarding the political arena.
Speaker BAnd the second is how to educate oneself so that we can educate, as quote, unquote, the haters and one another, and how we can be educated so that we can vote for supportive lawmakers.
Speaker BAnd I read this one to really this part of it to mean that how do we know what our candidates stand for, right?
Speaker BHow do we know who we're really voting for?
Speaker BSo I have a ton of resources around this for both of these questions and I'm just going to kind of go through them and they will all be linked to the show notes as well.
Speaker BSo don't worry about having to write them down.
Speaker BThey'll all be linked there.
Speaker BSo you can just click on through and check them out.
Speaker BAs far as finding factual information from the community regarding the political arena, where we are, you know, where the politics are, where people stand geographically, how things are different.
Speaker BMy favorite two resource sites for this are the Human Rights Campaign and It's human rights campaign.org as well as PFLAG national.
Speaker BAnd they both do a really, really nice job of following local politics, national politics and reporting about what is going on.
Speaker BSo I highly, highly recommend those two just so you can, you know, again, that's a great way to educate yourself on what's happening not only in your community, but in the nation and in the world.
Speaker BSo those 24 or factual information from the community as far as educating yourself, educating ourselves on who our political candidates are and what do they stand for.
Speaker BThere are a couple of different places that you can go that I have found to be, when kind of used in tandem, are really great to really kind of weed out what's true and what's not true.
Speaker BSo, so the first one is pewresearch.org the second one is just facts.votesmart.com and those two allow you to really put in either specific candidates, your zip code to find out who your candidates are, different topics you can put in there as well into the search bars.
Speaker BAnd both of those.
Speaker BSo really great resources in that way of just kind of starting to get a feel.
Speaker BAnd then if you're really interested in just knowing where kind of everyone sits on different issues and different topics, I found this wonderful site, it's called All Sides.
Speaker BAnd what they do is daily they give you where the right is, where the center is and where the left is.
Speaker BAnd this is all coming from different publications, different, you know, news sources, different journalist sources, and everything is in there for you.
Speaker BAnd it really kind of spells, spells it out for you so you get a better understanding of, you know, what the thinking is, why the thinking thinking is what it is, and it just allows you to be better educated.
Speaker BAnd when we're better educated and we have a better understanding of not only what we think, what our values are, but then what is truly going on around us, then we're able to have more productive conversations.
Speaker BSo I do hope this was helpful and I look forward to answering more questions and the next episode.
Speaker BThanks so much for joining me today.
Speaker AIf you enjoyed today's episode, I would be so grateful.
Speaker BFor a rating or a review, click on the link in the show notes.
Speaker AOr go to my website chrysalismama.com to.
Speaker BStay up to date on my latest resources as well as to learn how you can work with me.
Speaker APlease share this podcast with anyone who.
Speaker BNeeds to know that they are not alone.
Speaker AAnd remember to just breathe.
Speaker AUntil next time.