If you have children, do you regulate their use of
smartphones? In particular, what
do you do about smartphones when you sit down for a meal together? These questions came to mind when my
wife told me about a little episode she'd witnessed in a restaurant one evening
last week.
The mother and father sat on either side of the
daughter, who was perhaps 11.
Shortly after they got there, all three got out their smartphones, and
each person escaped into a different electronic world. The parents actually put down their
phones and started a conversation after a while over the girl's head, but she
held onto her phone till the food came, and after she was finished eating she
picked it up again.
In the lobby of the restaurant we'd passed a lady who
was singing pop tunes and accompanying herself on the accordion. (This is Canyon Lake, Texas, you understand,
not New York City.) Later in the
evening, the singer picked up a hand puppet and went around entertaining guests
who had brought along their children.
According to my wife, the puppet struck out with the smartphone girl,
who looked up uncomprehendingly and then went back to her phone. Evidently, live entertainment can't
compete with electronic media, at least in that particular girl's world.
When a new technology gets adopted as widely and
rapidly as smartphones have, there is always at least a theoretical concern
that some long-term effect that hasn't shown up in pilot marketing tests will
pop up later to surprise and harm us.
The worst case like this from history I can think of was the thalidomide
crisis of the 1960s.
Thalidomide was a drug introduced in West Germany in
1957 and marketed as, among other things, a treatment for morning sickness in
pregnant women. While it appeared
to help, it took several years for doctors to figure out that if a woman took
it early enough in her pregnancy, thalidomide caused severe birth defects: deformed or missing arms and legs,
facial defects, and other disabling problems. Although thalidomide is still available and prescribed for
certain conditions such as cancer, the medical community knows to avoid any
possibility of its use by women who could be pregnant.
If something as bad as the thalidomide episode was
going to happen with kids using smartphones, I think we'd probably know by
now. Nearly two billion such
devices are out there, and a survey in Britain showed that more than half of
eleven-year-olds use their own smartphone. But not every technological problem can be studied with
surveys and statistics.
What my wife witnessed in that restaurant was the clash
of tradition and something else—"modernity" isn't the right word, nor
is "technology." One way
to put it was expressed by a friend of mine, Bruce Hunt, who is a historian of
technology. We talk a lot about
"cyberspace" without always knowing quite what we mean by it. His definition of cyberspace is
this: "Cyberspace is where
you are when you're on the phone."
At the time, he meant a traditional POTS phone (Plain Old Telephone
Service), but saying that all three members of the family were in cyberspace
before the food arrived is a pretty accurate statement. So it was a clash between traditional
space and activities, and whatever each individual happened to be doing in
cyberspace.
By traditional, I mean nothing more than activities
that have gone on more or less the same for a long time. There have been restaurants and inns
and families eating in them as long as there have been civilizations, I
suppose. And the same goes for
live entertainers, going all the way back to cave men who put on masks and danced
around the campfire. Just because
a thing has been done a long time doesn't mean it's necessarily good—it's just
durable.
When it comes to a family eating meals together,
though, you can find studies that correlate all sorts of good things with
families who eat together at least five nights a week. Their kids are less likely to get involved
in drug and alcohol use, they make better grades, and they feel closer to their
parents. I don't know whether the
studies were fine-grained enough to notice how often smartphones were brought
to the table, but it doesn't take a Ph. D. to tell that a family meal without
smartphones is going to allow more opportunities for interpersonal interaction
than one with them.
The age at which a child should gain access to a
smartphone is a question each parent has to decide. Not having children myself, I have never had to make that
decision, but I hear that it's a hard one to make. Like driving, watching R-rated movies, and drinking alcohol,
using smartphones is something that adults are free to do, and it's a judgment
call on the part of parents as to when a child is mature enough to use one
responsibly.
But the little drama in the restaurant made me think
that the family that brings their smartphones to the dinner table is missing
something valuable that has no corporate-sponsored PR in its favor, no guaranteed
payoff, and no particular immediate harm that results when it goes missing. It's the chance to be with other
people, in the time-honored sense of devoting one's embodied attention to the
experience of the real, actual bodily presence of other human beings. The very name "media" means
"that which goes between," and anything between us can separate us as
well as bring us together.
So I'm not going to issue any blanket condemnations of
smartphones at the dinner table.
But I would ask parents to consider first how you use
your smartphone and what kind of example you are setting for your children to
follow. Do you let it interrupt
quality time with your spouse or children? Or do you put it away at specific regular times, and devote
your full attention to other members of your family? Children have a powerful built-in instinct that says,
"Whatever mommy or daddy does is okay," and if you tell your son to
put away his smartphone at the dinner table and then whip yours out when it
goes off, you've just wasted your breath.
The kids won't always be young, and you won't always be around to talk
with them. Do it while you have
the chance.
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