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Jack Simons's avatar

I was a high school English teacher for 14 years, from 2009-2023. In 2021 I asked all 150ish of my students to respond to this writing prompt: "Evaluate your relationship with your phone."

I gave this assignment in 2022 as well. In two years, of the 200+ essay responses I read, not one was able to describe a remotely healthy relationship between a kid and his/her phone. I found that my students were thankful to have the space to discuss what has happened to them. This gave me the sense that others (including me, prior to 2021) were actually denying them this space.

There's something very dark and reality-denying about an entire culture that won't allow its children to say that the thing that is obviously hurting them is hurting them and has them feeling trapped. As I've come to realize that Gen Zers don't even really enjoy the thing they do all day every day it's made me so disappointed in my generation, in all of us adults. Millennials. As a generation we've been so sure that "everything will work out fine" because it did for us but these new kids don't want to hear that. They want and need SOLUTIONS.

We won't even ask them how they're REALLY doing so how could we begin to solve this problem for them?

I quit teaching because of phones in my school. I'm a nobody, I was just one teacher. I feel deep in my heart though that if every secondary English teacher in America gave that prompt - Evaluate your relationship with your phone - most of them would be blown away by the results. If my students were an indicator - and they are - then our teenagers are hurting deeply and nearly every one of them acknowledges being caught up in a "vicious cycle" through their phone. My female students' essays broke my heart and made me question everything.

I have two young daughters and I see that the work starts now. Last week I took their tablet away for good on similar logic to Rikki's - "No one ever regretted not giving a smartphone to a 13 year old." There is no possible way my wife and I could end up regretting taking our kids' tablet away. It can only hurt our family. This kind of logic can be applied to nearly every aspect of the phone/device economy we've trapped ourselves within.

Thankful for you, Rikki. We need STUDENT VOICES in this fight and the great majority of teachers are far more concerned with hot-button social issues than with the injustice which appears to be affecting every teenager for every minute of every day.

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David's avatar

Millennial here, born in ‘89.

Whenever addictive and destructive neuro-chemical pathways are introduced to a society it takes generations for said society to learn how to adapt to these temptations.

China has learned the hard lesson of opiates at least twice, and I think that has some influence on their cultural (in)tolerance of those substances.

With the invention of distillation in the 18th century, 19th century America was drowning in hard liquor, 9 gallons per person annually of 80 proof. It took a century and the temperance movement (largely driven by women sick of their deadbeat husbands) to help us regulate to a point, but alcohol is still many’s greatest demon.

The same process must happen with screens. I’m pretty sure it won’t just be with screens though. All invasive technology will have to be rejected (on a personal and moral basis just like other substances which activate dopamine artificially). We must see that screens (and their connection to the internet) are like cigarettes for our soul, rotting us from the inside, making us less capable of interacting with the real world.

Until we recognize the destructive power of screens in our pockets connected to a corporate system designed to make us feel anxious, sick, unwell, self-conscious and afraid, so that we will buy more stuff to cover up the holes, we will be slaves to our addiction, just like every other addict.

This addiction hides in plain sight, sitting in front of all of our faces for far too long everyday.

Turn it off, walk outside, be with a friend. Sit in silence.

Be well!

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