Good Inside with Dr. Becky - How Do I Handle Screen Time With My Kids?
Episode Date: May 4, 2021Screen time for kids is tricky: While we love the guaranteed down time it provides, we don't love the addictive nature, the meltdowns, or the protests... Tune in as Dr. Becky answers your pressing que...stions about what's really happening during screen time, what strategies you can use to manage it, and why it never feels like enough -for any of us. Join Good Inside Membership:Â https://bit.ly/3cqgG2A Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram:Â https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinside Sign up for our weekly email, Good Insider:Â https://www.goodinside.com/newsletter Order Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books. For a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to Good Inside with Dr. Becky.
I have so many ideas, strategies, and scripts to share with you right after a word from our
sponsor.
Hey, Sabrina.
Hey.
So, I've been thinking about toys recently.
I don't want the toy to do that much of the work.
I want the toy to inspire my kid to do the work.
Because actually the toys that get really busy
and do a lot of things, kids actually lose interest
in so quickly.
Oh, totally.
There's certain toys that my kids have just played with
throughout the years.
I have a six year old and a three year old.
Like what?
So I have these wooden blocks from Melissa and Doug.
They're super simple.
Just plain wooden, no color.
And my kids love them.
They're always building castles or like a dinosaur layer.
And then my oldest will tell my youngest to like
decorate them after he's built this crazy cool structure.
My go-to's are Melissa and Doug too.
I feel like we have this ice cream scooper thing
that my kids use when they were two.
And then they used again when they were developing
better fine motor skills.
And then for my kind of four year old,
my seven year old, still using it in imaginative play.
I really only like talking about items and brands
that we actually use in our own home and Melissa and Doug.
I just don't know if there's any other brand I feel
so good about naming the way that their toys actually inspire,
creativity and open-ended screen-free child
led play.
It's just unmatched.
And like what's honestly so exciting
is to be able to offer everyone listening
to this podcast, 20% off.
Visit molissaandug.com and use code Dr. Becky20DRBECKY20
for 20% off your order.
Molissa and Doug, timeless toys, endless possibilities.
Hi, I'm Dr. Becky, and this is Good Inside.
I'm a clinical psychologist and mom of three on a mission to rethink the way we raise
our children.
I love translating deep thoughts about parenting into practical, actionable strategies that
you can use in your home right away.
One of my core beliefs is that we are all doing the best we can with the resources we
have available to us in that moment. So even as we
struggle and even as we are having a hard time on the outside we remain good
inside.
Today's episode is all about screen time. I received so many questions about
screen time and many of them included kind of a directed,
pointed question asking me, Dr. Becky,
how many hours of screen time is okay for my child?
I had a really hard time answering this question,
and the reason is because there's so many elements
that go into this decision,
and I don't know all the information. And all of our families are different.
Our kids are different.
The number of kids we have are different.
How much we need screen time in a moment to recharge
and be the parent we want to be.
These are all important factors.
And so I don't think I can come out
and give a specific number.
What I do feel I can do is that I think together
we can think about what's really happening
during screen time and we can think about
what comes up for our kids, what comes up for us
and use that knowledge to make decisions
that feel right in our specific family.
So with that in mind, let's jump into some questions.
Our first caller is Cameron from Washington DC and she has a question about her four-year-old and six-year-old. Hi Dr. Becky, my name is Cameron. I have a four-year-old and a six-year-old
that they're both boys and I'm calling from Washington, D.C. So here's a question.
My kids don't really watch any TV shows that have a lot of violence.
They really only watch shows and play games on their iPads that are, you know,
pleasant or even slightly educational.
But my husband and I have noticed that the more iPad or screen time they have in a week,
the worse their behavior is.
And this is totally seems to be regardless of the content. They have more
tantrums, they lose it, really more often they hit each other sometimes. I'm
curious what you think. As a thing, do you see that more screen time, regardless
of what it is, leads to more tantrums and aggression in kids? I'd really love
your take. Thanks so much.
Hi, Cameron.
Thanks so much for calling in with this really poignant question.
So yes, I think this is a thing in terms of more screen time
leading to more dysregulated behavior.
And here's why.
And let me say right off the bat,
before I even answer that question, I give my kids
screen time, right? So this is not an argument against screen time at all. This is us together
trying to understand this relationship and then kind of make decisions that make sense for
our family. So what's happening when our kids are watching an iPad, right? I think we see
them kind of probably quiet and sitting
and they allow us to finally do something we need to do.
And what's happening in their body, I think is this.
Their bodies are experiencing pure enjoyment
and satisfaction without them having to expend any energy
or any amount of trying.
Now I know I hear myself say that and I say,
yeah, that's why I use my phone too.
It's very enjoyable.
And yet for our younger kids,
what's happening is they're developing circuitry,
they're kind of developing expectations
of what things are supposed to feel like.
So the more our kids learn that they're enjoyment
and kind of almost success comes from no energy
expenditure, no frustration tolerance.
It's almost as if we're lowering their ability to tolerate frustration when they're actually
learning various skills in the world.
And learning skills is really hard and kids' whole
life is learning skills, right? They're learning how to regulate emotion. They're learning
how to wait for something. They're learning how to share. They're learning how to be disappointed.
They're learning how to feel jealous. All of those things require so much energy. And the more time our kids spend in a,
this is easy, I don't have to do anything circuit. They're
understandably a little less tolerant of the this feels
really hard circuit. So I think that's why you see that the
more time your kids have on an iPad, even watching something
seemingly educational,
the lower their frustration tolerance is.
So now this makes me think, well, what do I do with this information?
What am I going to do with this?
So I think just knowing this is powerful because it gives us a wider lens to understand screen time.
Second, I think we can prepare our kids for the shift from
screen time to non-screen time by actually explaining this. I don't think we
explain this as often as we should to our kids. Something like this, hey, we're
gonna end our iPads in a few minutes. I know it will be hard to end and here's the
other thing. Oh, let's get our body ready for something that might feel a little
harder because after this, I know you and your brother might want to play with blocks and,
ooh, towers might fall and you might have to negotiate what you're going to build and you
might disagree and, ooh, all of that feels so tricky inside of our body.
I'm going to take a deep breath for all of us.
Ah, after all, we're coming from screen time, which feels so easy in our body, right?
And just there, you're prepping your kids for this switch.
Cameron, I wanna share one more idea with you
and it's something I think about a lot
because in those moments when I wanna just give my kids
the iPad and say, oh, go take it
and I need to kind of take a break.
One of the things that inspires me is I think about the kind of more long term, the kind
of fast forwarded version of what I'm really working toward. And by the time my kids are
in school and they're learning how to read, how to write, how to spell, how to write
longer stories, how to do more difficult math problems.
I remind myself, I want my kids to have experience being in a circuit where they know how to
be challenged.
They know that frustration goes hand in hand with learning, right?
And these academic skills that are so important
for our kids, it's not just pure academics
that lead to our kids' success in school.
So much of it is this emotional piece
of how ready are our kids to face difficulty or how much do our kids expect
to have immediate success and rewards as what's often given to them in screen time or in video
games, right?
In video games, there's constant rewards for kind of this mindless engagement.
And I think we all know that the
rewards when you're learning to read, they take much longer, right? They're not immediately
given to us with music and kind of a sticker. And so again to me, this can be used not
to kind of drown in, oh no, I'm such a bad parent. I do too much screen time. But to take
a deep breath and say, yes, I can tolerate my kids pushing back. I know why I'm saying no to screen time in this one instant, and I can hold on to
all the reasons this is really going to be good for my child.
Our next caller is Sean from Australia, who's calling about her four and a half
year old and her two year old twins.
Hi Dr. Vicki, this is Sean I'm Queen from Australia. I have a four and a half year
old and two year old twins or boys and my question is about how to want to
your oldest child when you have so much else going on especially having twins that need my time and attention so much more.
You posted about screen time and how we monitored and I think that's one of the biggest challenges that often don't notice that my son just walked off and turned the TV on because I'm so busy doing everything and also I find
sometimes you just ignore the instruction because he knows I'm distracted and busy
so I won't go and check up that he's actually done it. So this is the real struggle from
how do I help him to follow the instructions
and actually follow through with what I've asked
if he knows that I'm not there to check
after he's actually done it,
because I'm so busy doing other things.
Hi, Sean.
You know, the first thing that comes to mind for me
when I listen to you talk is truly what a warrior
parent you are, twins a four-year-old that is so
much.
So, I think it's good to just start by reminding yourself of that that I'm doing so much,
parenting is so hard.
I have three kids who probably all need so much for me and to kind of go into the discussion
with that in mind.
So after that, what comes to mind for me is to think about your authority in the situation, right?
I think I need to say out loud for myself sometimes,
I'm the parent and I'm in charge.
Like it's really kind of nice to say that.
Like maybe you can just say that right now.
I'm the parent and I'm in charge
and I'm big on kind of connection with our kids
and validating their experience.
That doesn't mean we're not in charge, right?
So it's your decision, how much screen time your child gets.
It happens to be your child's kind of decision,
how they feel about that, right?
That's definitely not our domain, but it's your choice.
Now, the next thing is we have to set our kids up for success
around our choices, right?
So if I told my child on a weekend,
yeah, we're not gonna have any more candy today.
I wouldn't then walk my kid into a candy store
and turn my back, right?
That's just asking a lot.
I mean, frankly, that would be asking a lot for me
if I told myself I wasn't gonna have candy
to go into a candy store, right?
It doesn't mean anyone's bad or doesn't have willpower.
It just means we're not going to expect our kids
to make decisions that are someone impossible, right?
So you're the authority.
You get to decide how much screen time your child has.
Then we wanna set him up for success.
So what does that mean?
Put the remote somewhere your child cannot reach.
Put the iPad in some locked cabinet, right?
This doesn't mean we don't trust our kids.
It means that screens are so hard to resist.
They are designed to capture our attention and take away our active decision making.
And I think all of us know that screens do this for us.
And so it definitely does this for our kids.
So when you're thinking about these times here
with your twins, I would remind yourself,
I'm in charge, I'm allowed to say
there's no screen time for my child.
Next, where's the remote?
I'm gonna put that away where the iPads
where the phones, I'm also going to put that out of reach.
So now, I don't expect your child to say to you, wow, mom, thanks for helping me make
such good decisions.
No, if your child's like my child, he'll say, I don't get to want to screen time, you're
with my siblings, and there's nothing for me to do.
This brings up a next important point.
I don't think we can really ever have a discussion
about screen time without simultaneously talking
about independent play.
They really go hand in hand because if our kid is limited
in their independent play skills,
we are going to become more and more reliant on screen time.
Also, the more reliant we are on screen time,
the more we get in our kids' way
of developing independent play skills.
And you can see how that cycle could continue.
A couple of things to me are important
when we think about independent play.
Number one, boredom is good for kids.
I'm not saying that because I like inflicting pain
on my own children. I promise you,
I do not. But boredom is where we create. boredom is where we try new things. boredom is where a child
thinks there's nothing for me to do. I wonder what would happen if I took all those books and I don't
know kind of created a railroad with them. Never thought to do that before I'm so bored. I guess I might try that.
That's great.
And we deprive our kids of boredom often
because it's so hard for us to tolerate them
being angry with us.
So remind yourself that my kid could be angry,
my kid can be bored.
Next we want to set our kid up to be successful
in independent play.
And I think there's a couple key factors to do that.
Number one, remind yourself that you need to start small.
Parents who think my kid can't even play independently
for two minutes, you know what?
Then they need to start with 30 seconds.
And 30 seconds in a room with three kind of open ended
play items that you know they like,
a couple trucks maybe, or some coloring materials,
and tell your child they're gonna have some time
to play by themself and explain why.
I would say this explicitly,
learning how to play and create on your own
is a really important life skill.
And one of my jobs is to help you develop important life skills
and I'm gonna help you develop the skill.
We're gonna start very small.
I'm gonna give you some items in your room and I'm going to set a timer and when it goes off,
you could be done or you could keep going. Now set the timer for something so small.
20 seconds just so you can come in and kind of say a version of, wow, awesome job! So cool! I'm so
curious what you thought to do or curious what you will do next time. So much creativity you have inside of you.
And then maybe the next time is a minute,
then maybe two minutes.
So to kind of summarize that,
you're in charge, you get to make the decisions,
set your child up to not be able to violate your boundaries
and let's start building his independent play skills.
Sean, here's one more idea.
My guess is that it's hard for your four and a half year old to have twin younger siblings. Now, I don't think that means anyone did anything wrong.
My guess is this is just kind of tricky to have two siblings who are younger and need so much from
a parent. And my guess is that it would be important to approach your child when things are calm,
not in kind of a difficult moment when no one's in trouble and just say something like that to him.
Huh, it can be hard to have younger siblings, huh? Or do you ever feel like your younger siblings take so much
of mommy's attention that sometimes you want my attention and I can't quite give it to you because
they need me to or maybe do you ever feel like you wish they were three mommy's one for you,
one for your brother, one for your sister? I get that. We want to help your child feel
seen. So when those moments come up where he might reach for a remote, he knows
that you kind of acknowledge and have already validated the feelings he's having.
Let's hear from our last caller Kim, who is a question about her six-year-old and eight-year-old.
Hi, Dr. Becky. My name is Kim. I have a six-year-old and an eight-year-old, and I was wondering,
have a set appropriate time limits on iPad use when the iPad's are around theism and watch shows
and play games after school, but because of COVID
and limited activities and cold weather, they live in Canada.
They end up spending just a lot of time on them and I don't know how to stop on the minute.
I set timelapse and they have for more busy cooking dinner or finally putting my seat
up to relax and then I just dinner, or finally putting my feet up to relax, and then I just
I press at more time. Please help me, help point me in the direction of figuring out how
I will manage this. Thank you so, so, so much.
Hi, Kim. Thanks so much for calling in with this question. So here's what I start thinking about when I heard you talking.
Screen time is designed to never feel like enough. This is something I talk with my kids about,
and I recommend you do this as well. It's really important to have that kind of understanding as a kid,
and I think it's really important to have that understanding as an adult
because I think we have kind of a hope
that we're gonna give our kids some screen time limit
and at the end, if we kind of do it right,
they're gonna say, oh, okay, I'll put it all away.
Thanks for letting me have this amount of screen time.
Right, what's much more realistic
is just helping our kids be prepared
for the not enough feeling that is inevitably going to come at the end of screen time.
Not because our kids aren't grateful, but because screen time is designed to make you want more.
So here's how you might have that conversation with your child.
You might sit your child down and say, hey, I wanna talk about something that's really interesting about screen time.
Don't worry, you're not in trouble.
And this is not even about limits.
I just wanna talk about something really interesting.
Do you know that screens for anyone, adults,
and kids never feel like enough?
Here's kind of what never enough is like.
Imagine a jar and you're pouring water into it
and it has a hole in the bottom.
And you pour it up really, really quickly and it's full
and then you stop pouring into it.
What would happen?
Your kid will say, well, probably leak out the bottom.
Yes, that's what screen time is like.
No matter how much we put in,
it's never gonna feel full to you. It's always going to feel like you want more, just like a jar would if you were trying to fill it up, but it had a hole at the bottom.
That's one of the reasons why things always feel tricky when we end and you always ask for more time. This is a very non-shaming and respectful way of talking about screen time. And it also
gets your children emotionally prepared and gets you emotionally prepared for the inevitable pushback.
When we give screen time for our kids, our goal can't be, I don't want pushback. If we're giving
screen time, we have to be ready for the pushback at the end. And then we can prepare ourselves and our kids to handle those emotions.
But we can't entirely get rid of them because again, they're kind of just part of the screen time process.
And here lies kind of an ultimate irony about feelings and regulation in our kids.
The more we expect and allow hard feelings, the more we set up our kids to be
able to regulate those feelings when they come. Which means, of course, that, say, the
feeling of disappointment around screen time ending. It's still there, but it won't
look as intense on the surface. When we accept that screen time ending is really hard
on our kids, we can then empathize and even help our kids prepare for that moment
and this ends up leading to less frequent and less severe meltdowns.
Let's turn all of this into a strategy.
I call this emotional vaccination, which means getting your kid prepared for something that's
going to be emotionally hard.
This strategy pairs really well with being very specific about what's to come,
so our kids aren't overwhelmed by a sense of surprise.
Clarity is key around screen time, as our kids are already primed to field disappointment.
So we want to, as much as possible, avoid any added element of confusion or a gap in expectations.
I'll model how this would sound, being direct and specific and combining that with emotional vaccination.
All right, we're going to have screen time now. You can watch two shows, right?
And here's where you have to be so specific, I think.
Two shows means one show and then another. And even if your
sibling isn't done with her show, your two shows will be over. I just want to make sure
we're on the same page about that to be super, super specific. Does two show mean an hour?
Or does that mean two shows that are 28 minutes and when it's done, it's done. So I would
definitely be specific to set expectations. But then I would do this. I know it's so hard to end screen time and it's never going to feel
like enough. Like we talked about, you know one of the things we could do? Let's get out some of
those feelings together now. Now, to me, what we want to be careful about is being playful,
but not using mockery, right? So that's an important difference. So to me, playfulness would sound
like this. Let's get some of those feelings out now. Oh, mom, I just want to watch one more show. Please
one more. I promise if you watch one more show, it will feel like enough. And my friends,
I'll get more screen time and you never let me do it. Oh, it's no fair. And I would be doing that
all myself. I might even drop to the floor. And again, doing it in a way that's connected and
playful with my child, not making fun of my child. What does this do? Well, it actually
changes the feeling. By the time the feeling comes up at the end of screen time, because instead of
the feeling being surprising, which is one of the elements of dysregulation, our child is not only
ready for the feeling, but is actually infused some understanding, some playfulness, and some
connection with me. So it's actually changed the feeling because we've surrounded it with those elements that
actually help with regulation.
There's not really one right way.
There's not one right way to give screen time, one right way to determine limits.
I think we want to be clear.
We want to establish that it'll never feel like enough.
And then we can even add in that kind of pre-melt down.
We can get into that post screen time feeling
together with our child before screen time.
So that when it comes,
it's a little more neutralized by what we've done beforehand.
Can I want to add one more quick thought that I think will be helpful for you in holding your boundaries around screen time? I always find it useful to say to myself,
I only have to convince myself about this decision. I don't have to convince my kids
that ending screen time is actually the right decision.
That's my decision.
And reminding myself that the only kind of approval I need
is my own helps me tolerate their pushback.
So I think I would use that self-talk
and the way you can kind of represent that
to them is by saying something like this. Screen time is over. One of my jobs as your parent is to
make decisions that I think are good for you, even if you don't like those decisions. So here we are
I'm making one of those decisions. You're not liking that decision. I actually totally understand that.
You're allowed to be upset.
We will get through this, right?
And we're really being clear about what my job is,
what my kids' job is, and that will help you,
I think feel like a sturdier leader
in those difficult moments. Let's tie this all together with three main takeaways.
First, remember that kids have feelings about ending screen time.
This makes sense and it isn't a sign of a lack of gratitude.
So rather than trying to convince your child why she shouldn't have a hard time, prepare your child for the feelings that come up when screen time is over.
Second, talk to your kids about the not enough feeling that they have at the end of screen
time. Use a metaphor of pouring into a jar that has a hole in the bottom or some other
visual that might resonate with your child. Third, consider working on your child's independent play skills.
Start short, very short, so you can facilitate a feeling of
capability as your child develops this skill.
Thanks for listening to Good Inside.
Let's stay connected.
At GoodInside.com, you can sign up for workshops and subscribe to Good Insider.
My weekly email with scripts and strategies delivered right to your inbox. And for more ideas and tips,
check out my Instagram. Dr. Becky at Good Inside. Good Inside is produced by Bethro and Brad Gage, and Executive Produced by Erica Belski and me, Dr. Becky.
Please rate and review our show. Let us know what you think and what resonated.
I actually do read each and every review, so please know that your feedback is meaningful to me.
Let's end by placing our hands on our hearts
and reminding ourselves, even as I struggle,
and even as I have a hard time on the outside,
I remain good inside.