Ask HN: How do you handle tech use with your kids?

69 points by mpsprd ↗ HN
I have a 2 year old son and I wonder how I will manage once he goes to school. He will inevitably envy the cool kids already plugged at all times on cellphones. Maybe this will cause social isolation?

For now, I try to give him a mostly screen free childhood, with occasional "treats" of dinosaur documentaries on rainy days.

How do you manage?

83 comments

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My friends have managed to avoid introducing their 5 year old to the iPad. They do allow her to use it on airplanes, but they rope the flight attendants into it and have the attendant present it as "the airplane's iPad."
Santa, Easter Bunny, Tooth Fairy, and the Airplane’s iPad. The Four Horsemen of Childhood Disillusions.
Trust in the eternal refrain “the kids are alright”.
Mostly second on this. I've heard the phrase "if you're worried about it and trying to do the right thing, then your kids will be fine" and that has helped ... assuming I can manage my anxiety properly!
This sounds nice, but headlines like “Suicide Rates Among U.S. Adolescents Doubled in 10 Years”(https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2023-05-01/...) give pause.
I doubt it's from screen time though. More the loss of family values, higher suicide rates within others they know, and the fact that kids who don't good grades are probably going to have to work two jobs for most of their lives and never retire.
Get him a laptop early. Teach him how to make things. Separate “creative time” from “consumption time”. Get a router that gives you good controls for total time and time schedule. The TP-Link Deco series is what I use and it does the job.

Avoid a real smartphone for as long as possible. 9th grade would be ideal. Give other ways to communicate - smart watcj, dumb phone, Discord on laptop.

This is about manners, literacy, etiquette, and skills. The medium is not the message, etc.

I would type more but I am on the other side of the line now, on my smartphone while I wait for my son at the orthodontist. :)

This is a really good idea, thank you! I find my least productive time with a device is on a phone. If I'm on a laptop, besides working, I'm writing or coding or doing administrative tasks. Rarely am I just wasting time time there.
Are you worried about the openness of acesss with discord, I recommend the same then my partner was like what about the randos and I didn't have an answer...
It's worth having some sort of "be careful talking to strangers on the internet, don't share personal information, use a fun username, it's okay to ignore messages, here's how to block people, etc..." talk.

Beyond that, they are going to encounter randos and need to build the toolkit for navigating those situations. Don't interrogate but try to casually chat with them sometimes about what they've been up to: anything cool, anything weird, any new hangouts.

I don't know what kids and parents are doing today with minimum age requirements for chat app usage (13 is the minimum in most places but this seems to be ignored frequently) but pre-teens might still to talk to you about weird things they encounter. You will become less cool to talk to when they are in high school but they'll still absorb anecdotes even if they scoff and roll their eyes throughout the entire conversation. If you're concerned and they don't like talking about it, an older sibling, cousin, friend's older kid, might be able to casually check how things are going without triggering the "ew, parents" reflex.

> Get a router that gives you good controls for total time and time schedule.

Or searches. With very young kids, you never know what they're going to look for and find. I'd be wary. For as little time I expect they'd be on a laptop, I am more tempted to set up a "family computer" in an open space like the old days. Really, still don't know how I'd navigate this one because it's a real concern.

Creative vs consumption is how we did it too.

Learning apps or anything that requires imagination have no or very few screen time limits.

100% consumption like Netflix, D+ etc have hard daily limits and the kids can get more by doing something that doesn't require a screen.

Now we're at a level where the media viewing very rarely occupies them a 100%, in most cases there's an iPad or a computer playing a kids show for the 42nd time just as a background noise while they're doing crafts or something else.

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Imagine how you prevent your child from eating donuts all day, every day.

Substitute sugar or something else in the house for donuts. Apply that.

The main thing is to resist the temptation to use the technology as the babysitter. But, oh god, that temptation is the hardest ever, some days.

Many schools ban phones during class anyway, so maybe get him a watch instead.

And here's the hardest - are you addicted to screens, phones, and social media? Then you've already lost. Get everyone a Light Phone: https://www.thelightphone.com

I've read up a bunch on this and we've done a bunch of thinking.

We will likely heavily restrict screentime. Ideally no screentime until we are two, and then we will probably allow 15 minutes of "watching" a day.

I suspect we will make a pretty broad exception for actual games though. Probably airplane rides will get some general exception too since that is just a limited environment.

As we get older we may allow some more passive screen time but probably push heavily on "doing things" instead.

Montessori has this great rule when making decisions about toys: Any toy that does the entertaining for the child is disallowed. Any toy that lets the child entertain themselves and is safe is fine. I like this because it captures the "legos are great, obnoxious light up sing song toys are bad" that aligns with my inner feelings.

For our screen time we allow, I will preselect content and load it up on a tablet. Probably clone my current youtube system that downloads content from youtube and serves it up on a UI with no autoplay or suggestions. I will likely firewall off the device from the wider internet but allow it lan access so it can still get regular media updates.

> Any toy that does the entertaining for the child is disallowed.

I think this is a really important point — "screen time" isn't really a problem in and of itself. If one of my kids wants to spend hours obsessing over a composition in GarageBand, I'm going to stay out of it other than encouraging regular breaks to prevent eyestrain.

I mostly just let my kids post hacker news comments, so far nobody has been able to tell.
I'd certainly prefer that over the "I asked Chat GPT what it thought about this article" comments we get sometimes.
The original poster reminds me of the trend on twitter a few years ago where a person's opinion would be described as "my 3 year old daughter read this post and turned to me and said, 'why would anyone lie on the Internet?'"
2 years old would be quite young for regular screen time, IMHO and from what I've read. We mostly kept our kids off of screens until around three, with some exceptions. After that, we use designated "screen time," which has, historically, been an hour during dinner prep time and a some extra on the weekends. We've definitely had to hold our ground as they got older and found themselves at friends' houses.

They're 10 and 6 now and we're a bit more lenient about it. They have a bit in the morning before school as motivation and a bit more in the morning on the weekend. They play outside a lot with each other and with friends so we're less worried than we've been in the past.

In terms of social isolation ... our kids will 9 times out of 10 voluntarily skip screen time if they have a friend to play with or often they'll play a game on an iPad with a friend, which feels better than on their own. I've read that the problems with too much screen time comes down to reducing time moving their bodies, building social skills, and thinking for themselves. They seem to be doing great with that on their own so our anxiety around it has gone down quite a bit over time (it was quite high in the beginning).

Our oldest is now asking for her own phone, which is a whole other thing. I'm desperate not to become a family that just sits around with our heads buried in our devices and I've had to be mindful myself of being a good example there.

We got Gabb watches for the younger kids, and probably will go with Gabb phone when they get older.
Our oldest got my old iPhone when she qualified for gymnasium at the age of 9.5. I have configured a quite strict regime via the iOS child control features (max 30 mins per day, no purchases, blocked tiktok.com). So far it works quite well, it’s enough to keep her connected to her mates, but restricted such that often she isn’t even using it even if she could. Whenever she can get screentime on another device she is will never stop until external force is applied.
I suspect treating screen use as "treats" may not be ideal.

I also have a 2 year old son and am very curious about this.

It's tough, because I do know whatever I do won't be ideal, and we won't know till later when we learn more about how our brains work what we really should be doing with regards to screen use by kids.

And, at the same time, things are accelerating fast, so there's a decent chance tech is totally different by the time our children are in high school, or even elementary school.

I think that in an ideal world, we'd all use technology all the time and it'd be a natural extension of ourselves letting us be fuller versions of ourselves and more present with each other. It's a shame we're not in that world yet, and I'm hopeful that as we get richer humanity starts designing tech to be more agency increasing with this target in mind rather than losing agency to shorter term incentives.

With our 2 year old, I think the highest impact thing we do is try to strict about being present with him and not on our phones. I suspect this might be much more important than whatever rules are established for a child's own use of technology.

Reminds me of the pretty compelling poem "Children Learn What They Live": https://www.freepoemsonline.net/poems-htm/children1.htm

"treat" in the sense of it being a high sugar, high dopamine thing I want to avoid my children getting too used to. Not in the sense of giving something for good deeds.

Thinking about it, the concept of treat is more fitting for the parents than the kid.

I won't opine on how to manage usage of of tech as the comments already handle that well.

One thing I'd like to respectfully point out to our community, which I personally think is going to snowball into a full blown health crisis, is children's posture while using tech. I live in NYC and everywhere I go I'm seeing kids and adults craning their necks and backs at 45-60 degree angles. My mother was a seamstress for 30+ years and the consequences are horrible. Keep an eye on it

As for my strategies to manage this, I nag frequently (and my kids know the consequences are losing access). For the few times I do give them screen time on the go, I force them to watch with the phone on the table and either leaning on sometime or in this little phone holder that forces them to sit upright to see the screen.

Here is a random link that quantifies the impact on weight on neck at different angles: https://healthmatters.nyp.org/how-to-prevent-tech-neck/

Heh, I am reading this with a nasty neck pain.

I spent a lot of time managing ergonomics on my work station (ergodox custom keyboard, single screen, raising desk, etc), but here I am looking down on my phone.

And it's fascinating how the tech-neck only affects the younger population.

My kitchen psychology theory is that it's related to privacy.

"Our" generation[0] used (and still uses) more text-based media, which is harder to get a read on with a quick glance over one's shoulder.

But with Snapchat and others where images are a huge part of the content, the users put the devices right at their chest as high as possible and crane down so that people around them can't see their screen as easily. And after doing that for long enough, it's just a habit, they do everything like that because that's the way they are used to doing it.

Maybe a privacy screen could ease the issue? The kind we have on laptops that narrow the side viewing angle so that it's completely opaque even slightly from the side.

[0] GenX/Elder Millennial is my theory about the majority age for HN

We have two kids who were raised essentially screen-free until 3, then on a 1hr a week diet until 6. We worried all the time about the transition to school, and the cultural norm of allowing a lot more screen time. This was an imagined dragon - this has not been an issue at all. My oldest just got a Switch, she plays less than 1/2hr a day - then she walks away without issue. She has friends with phones and iWatches (she has neither) and her envy level is zero.

My point here is not that we’ve done anything right, or wrong, or to emulate. Instead, I say this point out the I’ve had to learn to worry about, and address, the real issues - when they become real. There are not enough hours in the day to worry about all theoretical mistakes I’m making as a a parent. I choose to focus on the actual, observable, issues we are having.

For what it’s worth - many of our neighbors have kids that play all the time on the Switch, have phones, and watch TV every car ride anywhere, and those kids are LOVELY. They aren’t screen demons - and they aren’t behind in math, reading, eating vegetables… I think it could be it doesn’t really matter as much as it gets focused on.

At any rate it matters a whole lot less than loving them, and figuring out what works for YOU and for THEM - and that’s something it took me way too long to learn.

That's really helpful, thank you. Focusing on the actual behavioural problems instead of "having x hours a week" does make sense.

Maybe I focus on this more because younger me was denied video games for many years, until I bought my own consoles/pc and got to "eat the whole cake".

I really don't want to reproduce that pattern.

younger me was never denied videogames/consoles/pc games.

I'm now an engineer with a bunch of friends and socially well adjusted. But then each child is unique and each situation is unique, most kids in my neighborhood weren't allowed outside after dark, in winter it was basically dark when we got home from school also i was an only child so didn't have any siblings to keep me entertained, that leaves a lot of time for Homework, TV, Video Games, Reading etc.

Also it rained a lot so you were stuck inside a lot. In fact when the weather was good you were desperate to get out of the house because you'd be stuck inside so often.

If i were parenting today i might have to follow a different approach to my parents but only because i might want to curate the games my kids would play personally i actually think the right video game is just as if not more valuable than books. Learning mechanics, developing strategies, reacting to changing and unfavorable circumstances, teamwork. are great life skills. I do think i learned a fair bit playing Starcraft and Counter Strike.

I'm 22 and had no restrictions, now I'm an engineer like you. I think it's worth keeping in mind that the environment you and I were in is different than today. YouTube and TikTok are designed to be so perfectly addictive, they're practically digital crack. Even adults have trouble moderating their usage - young children stand no chance.

I don't think "screen time" is the issue, it's what they're doing on it. Are they doing something creative, or are they mindlessly clicking to feed the click machine? Are they substituting playing with their friends for playing video games?

The first part you say is so spot on - fight the battles you have in front of you and ignore the potential battles everyone is yelling that are coming, those will arrive when the time comes.

And to the second, I remember reading old Wodehouse "school stories" where the teachers were complaining about the students wasting their time with worthless "book time" reading such useless works as David Copperfield. O tempora, o mores!

This is such a wonderfully insightful comment. I think the bit about learning to worry only about the current issue is especially important, but the whole thing is gold.

My oldest just turned 7, and I have slowly learned that the kids do best and are happiest not when I set them up with the best possible environment or activities or rules or whatever, but when I’m consistently and actively engaged with them and considerate of their needs and perspectives as much as my own. Sometimes I worry that they might get too much screen time, but sometimes I go to wake them up and discover that they’ve snuck out of bed to quietly read together.

Address problems that need addressing as they arise, but try to remember that, on the balance, things turn out ok.

> I think it could be it doesn’t really matter as much as it gets focused on.

Not to downplay everything you said, because that's a great mentality to have towards technology, but regarding this point, the problem with technology is not that kids are spending too much time in front of a screen. The problem is with the content they're consuming, and the people they're exposed to online. There's a lot of potential harm from being manipulated by advertising, to seeing disturbing content like Elsagate, to getting absorbed in the vapid and obnoxious culture of influencers, to meeting someone who might actually harm them.

It's good to be pragmatic about how children use technology, as they will be surrounded by it during their lifetime, but it's also important to have strict controls, boundaries and discussions with them so that they understand the very real threats that technology enables.

Really good point. It’s not just about screen “time” - it’s about screen content. We also try and share the screen time with them as much as possible, so we can engage and discuss what we see and who they interact with.
I think these days getting kids involved in non-tech based activity groups could help a child have a more balanced relationship with technology.

There are also options like homeschooling, but that is obviously a massive commitment and different life journey for a family to take.

Then ofc there are rules and enforcement mechanisms. Rules can really be whatever you like. Enforcement can happen at your router, DNS or maybe firewall. If you like to configure those sorts of things you could block access to certain services or websites based on time of day, or target specific devices in you network. When they are not home you won't be able to do this so easily. There is also risks of coming off too adversarial and damaging your relationship with your child.

edit: typo

For my family it’s just about finding a balance. I have a 4 and 6 year old. During the school year there’s no TV during the weekdays. When they wake up on the weekend they can watch TV in the morning until the house is up and ready to start the day. This is also good for my wife and I because we can sleep past 6am.

Our family is usually pretty busy with sports, parties, and other activities on the weekend so there are fewer chances for screen time throughout the day. But we don’t mind an hour here or there between activities or at the end of the day.

Both my kids have Kindle Fires. It gets used on airplanes, drives longer than 4 hours, or if they can’t agree on something to watch or want to play a game instead of using the family TV. We don’t allow the use of screens at restaurants or in the car.

During the summer they go to camp from 8:30am-4:30pm. They usually come home and watch TV for 1-2 hours and relax from a day of being outside and running around.

Sick days are TV days.

I’d love for them to maybe have a little less screen time. That’s also coming from someone who’s watched almost zero TV in the last 6 months but spends 12+ hrs a day on a computer. But I feel like we’ve found a decent enough balance. My kids do there school work and are active and have other interests. They don’t put up a fight when we tell them to turn the screen off.

I've thought a lot about this and am currently developing screenshot/AI-based monitoring for device usage for my kids under the age of 12. Aside from that, here's what our family does. We have three children under the age of seven. 1. Limit use to specific days, and specific time of day. This will keep them constantly asking you for it. 2. Choose high quality, age-appropriate shows like Daniel Tiger, Bluey. High quality creative games like Minecraft. I wrote some code to filter Rotten-Tomatoes "Fresh" movies by age-appropriateness via commonsense media. I'll host this on a website sometime soon. 3. Choose a DNS filter for your home router as a back-stop against accidental searches with inappropriate results. 4. Get to know the Screen Time options. It is possible to disable age-restricted content and disable Safari web browser. 5. I don't let them roam YouTube. It's mostly junk. 6. Probably goes without saying when considering young children, but still worth repeating the surgeon general's advice: Avoid social media until at least age 16. 7. Also worth mentioning that human trafficking of children does happen, even among young children, and predators use online spaces to find and groom children. So keep this in mind when you consider what you allow for your kids. 8. Also, sexting is a real thing that happens frequently and is frequently regretted or weaponized. Teach your kids to never ever take an inappropriate photo of their bodies.

Also would love to hear what everyone else is doing!

> Avoid social media until at least age 16

I see the benefits of this in theory but in practice I worry that it will just cause more IRL bullying and isolation.

>I see the benefits of this in theory but in practice I worry that it will just cause more IRL bullying and isolation.

I have to disagree. There was plenty of bullying and isolation for kids before social media, before the Internet and, I'm sure, even before the printing press.

Kids can be very cruel to each other. This is (mostly) due to an understanding of the world that only includes a limited understanding of cause and effect.

That's not new, nor is it particularly profound. And it has nothing to do with computers or "social media."

Before social media no one had interactions on social media because social media didn't exist. Now if you avoid social media you become the kid who sits alone at the lunch table and weren't allowed to go outside to play with kids in the park (the park and lunch table are analogs for social media). Are you telling me that kids socially isolated kids weren't bullied in the past?

Bullying has and will always happen but the form it takes has changed significantly.

It absolutely will. They will not be able to participate in almost all modern social interactions. Like, yeah, they will be able to talk to their friends, but only when at school and at sleepovers.

And even then, being excluded from having normal access to a phone still isolates them from "normal" people. Everyone pulls out their phone and all the phoneless person can do is either sit there in jealous silence like a loser or try to get everyone to stop playing on their phones when they're around them (also like a loser).

Overall not an ideal situation.

> Avoid social media until at least age 16

I think it depends which social media, and this needs to be audited. I was using forums/IRC from about 14(and these are pre-cursors to social media) and there was benefit to being able to discuss things that you might not have been able to IRL.

I think the issues come with image based social media where it's not about exchanging ideas/talking about things but with "living your best life" and curating your public image.

> predators use online spaces to find and groom children. > each your kids to never ever take an inappropriate photo of their bodies.

I think in this day and age it's essential to teach kids how to stay safe online (once they reach an age where the internet is an appropriate place to be). I see people talk all the time about the internet being a dangerous place and it needs to be restricted but not as much about how to manage this.

i remember many discussions about meeting someone form the internet and how to do it safely. i.e. Get a verification photo with today's date, meet in a high-traffic public space, tell a friend (or your parents) where you are going and who you expect to be meeting, ask for a check in at a specific time etc.

We follow a similar structure at my home. They have iPads but strict screen time limits during the week, and less strict on weekends if we are home. No social media, no chat of any kind, and they are not able to install apps without me approving them (iOS parental controls feature).

YouTube is an interesting one. Like the Internet itself, there is some really great stuff, but letting them roam is a recipe for disaster. YouTube Kids has gotten better over the years but nothing's perfect. On one hand, I didn't want to block YT completely but I also wanted to be able to approve anything they watch. So, I did what any other programmer dad would do in this situation and built what I wanted.

They now have a permission layer on top of Safari (as an extension that cannot be disabled when coupled with Safari's content moderation setting). I set Safari to only allow YouTube and any channel they try and view that I have not approved will require them to send a permission request to my phone. That "permission request" is a button + them coming to me with "Hey Dad, I sent you a request". It's worked quite well in our home and has opened a nice dialog about what they are trying to watch and why. I made it public if any other parents are interested -- https://www.sunscreenapp.com/

I'm not / won't be a parent, so please take this with a grain of salt and not as an offense to your or anyone elses parenting.

I think the fact many of you have deeply thought about the topic is amazing, but what I wonder is if you, by restricting devices so heavily (and it's seemingly only about tables and smartphones), also take away any chance at kids getting proficient with computers?

Like, you know, the knowledge people here have: How computers work, hardware, programming.

Maybe it's just not mentioned here, but I see a lot about avoiding social media - which is fine, I get it - and not a lot about teaching kids how technology works.

When I was a kid, I sat at a computer (with my dad) with 3 and the internet starting at 5 or 6.

That said, the internet was very different in the 2000s. It lead to the current hobbies I have and I'm so happy I've had that chance. I, for example, experimented with my own phpMyBB forums at 14 because forums where cool back then.

I've seen reports of more and more younger people having no idea what a file system even is because they have never seen one before because they mainly grow up on tablets, and now they seem to have less of a chance to learn about tech at all because they've barely seen any tech - except smart devices - until they're teenagers.

Which, again, I understand completely. There are dangers online nowadays and I'd want to protect my kids, as well, but while reading all your posts, I felt a bit sad because it also felt like it may take something away, too.

Not an easy problem to solve. How does the crowd here see this?

My son is 4, only tech he uses is the TV and some toys. Down the road, when he is 8 or so, I'm going to lock down a raspberry pie to tinker around with. No free rein to the internet, though. Just would like him to be curious, then ask me for help, so we can figure it out together. I'm still thinking about what I'll do with the cell phone situation. Lots of variables to consider.
My friend has raised her daughter (8yo) virtually "mobile screen free" so far. Whenever we meet up for a meal out I often look around and see other kids transfixed with phones, wheres as my friends kid is fully engaged with us adults. To be honest it's fun playing childhood games I remember with her if she needs "distracting" while other adults might need to discuss something.
Doing the same. No cellphone. Even in a plane during boring couple hour plane trip. Only computer games, much healthier for posture. Computer games only during holidays and no games during school days. Most of the kids in class have smart watches, so smartphone pressure is very low.
My friend is quite nostalgic about the 90s so her daughter's exposure to gaming is via a rather envious collection of PS1/2, N64 and SuperNES games!
Never had a console, always played on PC. So these worlds are unknown to me.
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I run Hack Club, which is a nonprofit that helps high schoolers who love computers connect with each other.

I’ve talked to a lot of parents about this, and one policy that stood out to me was:

- It’s allowed to use a computer to create things as much as you want, but you need to use the family computer in a common space - learning to code, writing a book, composing music, anything where you’re making something

- You can have 1 hour of screen time daily on personal devices outside of common spaces for consuming - TV / etc

I liked this because it emphasizes positive use of computers. I think something like this could be great up until age 13 or so, then it should probably be a lot more permissive.

Edit: I’m pretty sure bentt, who is also in this thread, is the parent I’m referring to. Hi Ben!

Mine is a few years older than yours. We just talk about it and set clear expectations. The only context I allow her to watch videos is when she's video chatting with her grandparents and they co-watch cartoons in another language so she can learn. So I hit a few birds with one stone.

On special occasions we watch movies on the projector.

Consistency is key; don't break the rules yourself. When my wife watches videos at the dinner table my child points out the offense and I happily encourage her to stick to the rules.

Kids let you know when they don't like something. In that case you can try to explain the rationale for the rule at their level. That works for me. Weaving some fun into the rule can make it easier to go down; e.g., making funny faces while you brush your teeth for one minute.

Sometimes they will try to surreptitiously break rules. And you can have a talk about that.

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We have a 4 and a 6 year old. They are allowed a maximum of 30 minutes of screen time.

The 4 year old would get less if it weren’t for the 6 year old.

Our older one can decide between certain iOS games (like monument valley and some others) or watching a video. Grizzy and The Lemmings is something they enjoy a lot at the moment, the younger one like to watch Blaze and the older one likes to watch Checker Tobi. The latter is a fellow explaining all kinds of stuff in an age appropriate way, but 6+ would be even better.

We are planning to keep the 30min for the forseeable future. But there are exceptions like long travels, sick days, etc.

idk my parents officially limited my screen time and did not buy internet service for the house, and I worked around it by being really stealthy about gaming / acquiring hardware at low cost / scamming free internet service

no kids yet but one trick could be figuring out what computer related chores you could make them do so they just don't want to spend more time at a screen

I had a friend who basically gave their kid a tablet instead of a pacifier and, without trying to be mean, that kid was so weird. Immediately tantrum if the tablet was taken away, never made eye contact, etc. I can't say that was the whole reason, but it made me really scared when I had my own.

She didn't get any screen time at all until 7 or 8. Then we gave her 30 mins a day. If she was doing something interesting she could ask for more time and tell us how much and what for. But she usually just watched youtube or play pvz for 30 mins and done. No social media, but allowed a few messenger apps.

So far she doesn't seem to resent us or even care. Not sure if it's where we live, or the age, but most of the other parents seem similar.

She did have one friend who was always on TikTok and trying to make vids. Instead of begging us for TikTok, she recognized and pointed out to us how weird it was to always want to be doing that.