After co-sleeping and breast versus bottle, itās harder to find a bigger parenting hot button issue than screen time. Alarmists point to research that links delayed child development with time spent in front of screens. Others dismiss this as scaremongering, often pointing to the hours of television most of us watched growing up, and the fact that we still grew into (mostly) functioning adults.
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While I spent my fair share of time in front of the TV as a kid, when I became a mom, I landed firmly in the anti-screen time camp. I committed the AAPās guidelines to memory and strictly adhered to them, admonishing family members who dared flash their phones in front of my child.
I had my reasons for wanting to avoid screen time. Some of this hinged on the frighteningly ubiquitous nature of screens today. Everywhere I went I noticed kids staring at them: in line at the grocery store, playing games on a parentās phone, out to lunch at a restaurant where televisions covered the walls, or sitting in traffic watching the built-in screen in the seat in front of them.Ā
Iām ashamed to admit I was the first to judge the parents of those kids. Most of my anti-screen time stance, though, had to do with my own ideas about the kind of mom I wanted to be.Ā
Most of my anti-screen time stance had to do with my own ideas about the kind of mom I wanted to be … then real life sunk in.Ā
I wanted to be a creative mom: the kind who could invent games that would keep my child enthralled for hours instead of turning on Paw Patrol. I wanted to be a patient mom: the kind who could calmly diffuse a public tantrum without handing over my phone. Most of all, I wanted to be a present mom: the kind who would savor every moment with my child instead of wasting that precious time in front of a Disney movie.
Then, real-life sunk in.Ā
While I relished time with my son, I wasnāt only a mom. My responsibilities ranged far beyond motherhood, from my career to my marriage to my community. Some days it felt like the demands on my time came at me from all angles and I struggled to meet them.
I doubled down on routines and systems, and on the days when everything went according to plan, it felt possible to keep my house of cards from collapsing. But throw one wrench into the well-oiled machine, like a sick kid or a snow day, and everything fell to pieces.
I remember one particularly stressful day when my son was home with a mild fever. I had a canāt-miss deadline at work and no sitter available. So, I spent the morning attempting to entertain him while also leading conference calls and responding to email.
The result of my juggling attempts was a child unhappy with my half-hearted attempts to pay attention to him, colleagues irritated at my distractedness during meetings, and my own humiliation when at one point I accidentally unmuted myself while singing āThe Wheels on the Bus.ā
Then it hit me: in the midst of my multi-tasking, I was no more present than if Iād plopped my child down in front of a show. My son wasnāt fooled by my divided attention, and I was growing increasingly stressed about the work I needed to get done. It was a lose-lose situation.
Two episodes of Daniel Tiger later, Iād submitted my deliverable and was able to power down my laptop for the rest of the afternoon. Plus, while I was working, my son had been happily singing along with Daniel and friends instead of grumpily vying for the crumbs of attention Iād been doling out earlier.Ā
Since that day, Iāve found screen time to be a helpful tool during times when I need to get something done that just canāt wait. Rather than having my phone or computer out while Iām also trying to play Legos or read a story, screen time allows me to step away for short periods of time and then be fully present when I return.
More than anything else, our children crave our attentionāour full attention, without stolen glances at our phones or furtive conversations with other people while we also claim to be listening to them. They can tell when weāre not paying attention. When weāre not, the message they receive is āYouāre not as important as this other thing Iām doing.ā Given the choice, Iād much rather my son watch some television than ever feel like heās unworthy of my love and attention.
In addition to my own reversal in thinking on screen time, Iāve also come to understand that how much screen time other peopleās children have is none of my business. There is nothing to gain from shaming each other for our parenting decisions, especially when we have little to no context for them. Weāre all part of the same community, and the sooner we start acting like it, the better of our kids will be.
If youād told me a year ago that Iād be writing an article trumpeting the benefits of screen time, I would have said you were crazy. However, it turns out the best parenting motto is āNever say never.āĀ
You never know what youāll end up embracing in the name of being a better mom.
Ā
Read More: How Iām Juggling Working Full-Time From Home While Also Homeschooling My Child