God is at work and He's calling His people to rise in truth. Truth Rising is a powerful new documentary from Focus on the Family and the Coulson Center. See how ordinary Christians choose courage in a culture that needs. truth. Watch Truth Rising today and find out how you can become an agent of restoration and hope.
Visit TruthRising.com today. That's TruthRising.com. You know, if your snapstreaks die tomorrow, are you going to have a meltdown? That should be a red flag in your teenager's mind that it's becoming an idol. You know, we talk about that a lot in our home.
Those core things about the bedrooms, the bathrooms, at mealtime, when you're with grandparents that you see for two minutes, are you on your screen? Are you talking to your grandparents? You know, core things like that, maintaining that healthy balance I think is so important.
Well, that's Mandy Majors, and she's with us today on Focus on the Family with Jim Daly offering insights and guidance for how to manage technology and screen habits. with your family. Thanks for joining us. I'm John Fuller. You know, John, it's not an overstatement.
We hear from parents on this topic of screen, screen management every day. Parents are calling us by the hundreds saying, what can we do to better manage our kids' screen time? And there are some great ideas. And I've said this many times. You know, one of the experts that we had here said, delay phones as long as you can.
And so I remember the boys would say, you know, Dad, when do we get a phone? I'd say, oh, let me talk to mom. And six months later, did you talk to mom yet? Oh, you know, I need to talk to mom. And we'll say, well, we delayed that for years.
I think Trent was 17 and Troy was 15. And they were good with it. They kind of caught on after a while that we were going to wait until they needed them for driving and things like that. But this is a big issue. And parents are desperate to say, help us with managing this.
And I'm looking forward to talking today with Mandy Majors about how to manage this area of our kids. Development and frankly, our own, if we're honest about it. How do we manage this for the family? Yeah, we're all affected by the screen. And so, to that end, I think we parents will get some tips along the way as well.
That's good. Mandy Majors has two young adult children and is the founder of Next Talk, a nonprofit organization to help kids stay safe online by creating a culture of conversation within families, churches, and schools. And she's written a terrific book called Keeping Kids Safe in a Digital World: A Solution That Works, and 10 Practical Ideas for Implementing It. And you can learn more about Mandy, her ministry, and this book when you stop by the show notes. We'll have all the links there for you.
Mandy, welcome to Focus on the Family for the First Time. Thank you so much for having me.
So, you heard my little setup there. This is kind of the pain point for most parents. And the way we manage it generally is we just close our eyes to it at seven, eight, nine. give them the tablet, we maybe even give them a phone, a smartphone, and we just, you know, they got to get used to it. Then the other extreme is Batting down the hatches, you're never going to see the light of day when it comes to a screen until you're 21, that kind of two extremes, and then everything in the middle.
Why do you think it's such a pain point, I guess, for us, particularly as Christian parents?
Well, we're trying to figure it out. It's a new territory that we're in. I found myself when my daughter was nine, she came home and she asked me a very highly sexualized question. She didn't have a phone. And I thought, in my Christian brain, if I don't give her a phone, I don't have to talk about all the online stuff.
Yeah, that's interesting. And that was my moment that I looked at my husband and said, We're missing something in the church and in our Christian home. We're missing something because she's exposed even without technology. Yeah.
So you and your husband initially said no to technology. How did that work for you?
Well, she kept getting exposed to things, right? She would come home and tell me about, ask me questions. And I remember one night, my husband, he was like, let's just get out of here. Let's move somewhere where there's no Wi-Fi. We grow our own vegetables.
And that's what you feel like because their innocence is being stolen. And every night we would just pray about how are we going to parent this? I mean, this was 11 years ago.
So nobody was talking about it as much back then. And I remember one night we were praying, and he grabbed my hand and he was like, We can't say no to all technology. Like, this is the world they're growing up in. And I think what we need to do is teach them how to use technology like we're going to teach them how to drive. Yeah, that's good.
And when he said that, I was like, well, what do you mean by that? And he said, we're not going to start out going 70 miles an hour down the highway. We're going to, it's going to be a step-by-step process. I'm going to start with them in the driveway, and we probably won't leave the first time. And that intrigued me.
And I was like, okay, maybe we could do that. Maybe we could create this experiment in our home where we're walking our kids through a step-by-step process on how to use technology safely. And I like the idea. It's almost, we often talk about inoculation. You know, it's not that we're going to keep them from it.
It's helping them to decide how to manage it, right? How to not look at something as best as possible and how to control those appetites, et cetera. But it has to come with a lot of fear. I mean, because on the one hand, we're acknowledging there's no impenetrable way, no fortress we could create. I think for a lot of moms and dads, that's disheartening.
Like, wow, it's made this battle even harder. It was scary at first. And that's one of my points. Like, I had to process that, me and Jesus, and my husband. I had to process the fear.
But also like her being exposed without technology, it just created this awareness in me that not giving her a phone until she was 30, that didn't keep her safe.
So I had to dig deep and figure out what is the solution and how are we going to tackle this in our home. You know, so much of the, whether it's YouTube or, I mean, I look up on YouTube how to get a fix it.
solution to a home problem, you know, whatever it might be.
So there's a lot of good that comes with it. But what is lurking out there for the parents that aren't aware? What are some of the things that kids can be exposed to in those same good tools where bad things are happening?
Well, we're teaching kids watch on a screen and then emulate, right? Our washer breaks and we pull out the iPad and do everything the person tells us to do to save $800, right? Because we're trying to fix it.
So they're watching that in us. And oftentimes they are watching and emulating something bad and then we're getting mad at them. And instead, I think we need to tweak our thinking. There's a thought process that happens between the watch and the behavior. But are we teaching that?
And I wasn't. The other thing, too, with YouTube, like it's evolved. Since I've been in this over a decade, you know, now I actually consider YouTube a social media platform because if you think about it, there's YouTube shorts.
So you're scrolling just like TikTok and you can comment, you can interact with strangers.
So I know a lot of parents don't think of that as social media, but it actually is. And so we always have to be constantly evolving with the apps because they're updating and changing and we need to be staying updated on that. Yeah.
And again, back to how to teach them to manage this. Do you always get a win or do you get some losses?
Well, I think the biggest thing is. You know, I know I will crawl in bed with my husband at night, and sometimes he will say to me, Mandy, can you put your phone away? You know, we're constantly connected to work, to friends. And You know, we struggle with this, but we hand our kid a phone at 16 and we expect them to have it perfectly figured out. And so I say, you know, look in the mirror, parents.
If we are struggling to have the healthy balance, they are going to struggle.
So we have to be the model here. And this is where we have to look in the mirror and admit when we're not good with our phones. When you describe healthy balance, you know, that's, boy, that's so subjective. And I can see people, parents who are talking to friends. other side of the country, whatever it might be, highly justifiable.
Mandy, I'm staying connected to my relatives and to my friends. I mean, you need to control those appetites. It's what you're saying, because you are being an example to the kids around the table. Yeah, that's true. I would say one of the things is to be very clear about your boundaries and expectations from early on.
So, a couple of things that I found really worked in our home is no phones in bedrooms at night, no phones at meals, no phones behind closed doors. That's good. Those sorts of things. And then, if you start that when they're four with a family iPad, when they get a phone at 15 and 16, like it's just standard operating procedure that I don't have a screen in my bed at night. Yeah.
And so, starting that early, and a lot of times we think parenting a phone is when they get a phone. Parenting a phone starts at four years old. Before the phone. Yeah, before. You are laying guidelines in place for your children to make sure they have that healthy balance.
You know, Mandy, I'm thinking there might be some parental hesitation to even talk about all this with their children because they don't have a handle. On what you were just describing a moment ago about controlling their own appetite, Jim, as you put it.
So, what's the grace moment there, or how do they get unstuck in that? Yeah, I think this is the moment that you have to look in the mirror and really be honest with Jesus and you. And that is what is going to make this work in your home. And apologize to your kids when you get it wrong. When you get it wrong, you know, when they're trying to tell you a story and you're on your phone and they're like, Are you even listening to me?
And it's very easy to be like, I'm responding to a work text. Can you give me a minute? You know, ironically, I would say I did that far better with the boys than I did with Gene. I would tend to engage the phone with Gene because I can do two things at once. He really can, by the way.
But it didn't give her my full attention. But I think, ironically, with the boys, I think I'd set it down to make sure I was that example, but not with my spouse. Yeah.
So you got to look at all areas. Absolutely. Absolutely. Well, and I think, too, we need to look past the phone. I mean, yes, technology has created a lot of questions on how we're going to handle this.
But when I was on this journey trying to figure out like, what is the solution to keep my kids safe? You know, I kind of went through them all. First of all, okay, not giving her a phone until she was 30. That didn't keep her safe.
So that's off the list. I'm not going to be that hyper. But I like the goal. Yes, yes. And I believe in delaying for sure.
For sure. But also, like, once she earned a phone, it was almost like all I wanted to do was have an app that mirrored her phone where I could check everything. And I'm an advocate for being in your kid's phone. Absolutely. Have the passwords, do random phone checks.
You know, be engaged in their online world. But The real solution that I think God gave me is: you know, restrictions are great, use them, but it's really about the relationship.
Well, and also emancipating them. That's a word we've used here with Dr. Ken Wilgus. You know, you're trying to emancipate your children into adulthood.
So you need to teach them what is good and what is healthy and what is unhealthy. That just takes a lot of effort. It's hard work. And I think that's why a lot of parents don't want to do it. Honestly, it's why I didn't want to do it.
I wanted to get an app to monitor everything and send me reports. And those things are great. They're great tools. But you can't do that and take your hands off the wheel and be like, okay, we're done. I don't have to do anything else with technology.
Well, if you think about it, it's a lot like church. We allow church to teach our kids. You know, they're going to get that at Sunday school.
So I don't have to be overly engaged there in doing devotional with the kids and all that. That is so far from the truth, right? You should be the core, and the church should be giving you the, you know, the additional supplemental content. Support. Same thing here.
Let me ask you this. Gaming apps, some of the dangers of online. stuff. People out there don't always have the right Uh Desires for that relationship with your child. You know, you got strange people out there looking to groom your child for their own.
Darkness, but speak to those. Yeah, so I mean, I grew up in the generation of, you know, my mom telling me, don't get in the car with the guy offering you candy, you know, stranger danger. Right. Of course, we still have to worry about our kids being kidnapped, absolutely. But now that has shifted because of technology.
Now, your kids can be next to you on the family sofa playing Roblox with who they think is an eight-year-old kid. But it's actually a 72-year-old sex trafficking pimp building a relationship with your kid in your home.
So the strangers are coming into our homes through the Xbox, through the PlayStation, and they are creating relationships with our children. And we need to bring awareness to that. We need to educate ourselves on that and make sure our kids know of the red flags of what to look for. Mandy, you and your husband finally decided to get a phone for your daughter.
Now your daughter's out in the audience.
So we may have to bring her in here in a minute. But how did you do? How did you navigate that? And was it. The kind of learn as you go?
Well, it was, but a couple key things we did was she earned it. And when I say earned, I mean I would look for things. Normally, kids play devices before they get a phone, a family iPad, or even your own phone. They're communicating with their friends on your phone. And so, what I would look for is when something An inappropriate word would pop up on an app or something that she knew was not okay, that she would confide in me when she was playing my phone.
And when she would do that, those were key indicators to me that she could be safe online because she was talking to me and reporting it to me. And she earned a phone. And I will say this too, no social media at first.
So many times we a kid is gifted a phone and they open it up and it's a free for all. That's going seventy miles an hour down the freeway. Right. It is earn one social media platform at a time. And I would say the first couple of months, there's no social media.
And so you earn it step by step, and you get on the same platform and you learn it with them. And I know some parents are like, I hate social media. I'm not going to do it. Listen, your kids will show you how to use it. They are so brilliant.
They know, they love to teach us new things. But, you know, say, how does this work? How do you DM? You know, that's a direct message. Have your kids teach you in this world too, so that you're involved with them.
Yeah, and this is so good. I want to get into the solutions because you give parents 10 ideas on how to create a culture of conversation, which I think is brilliant in your home. And let's walk through those. Maybe if you want to list them or you want to hit a couple of them, and of course, people to get all 10, just get a copy of the book. And John will give you those details in a minute.
Go ahead and hit what you think would be most helpful. Yeah, so I think one of them that's really, really important is when my daughter, she earned a phone, she didn't have social media at first, and then she earned her first social media platform.
So we were walking through that. And um I was learning it and there were Certainly, moments of, uh-oh, we've messed up, we shouldn't have done this. You know, I mean, it was a true experiment. But I would wake up every day and just pray, Lord, don't let me miss the teachable moments. Let me be intentional.
Anything that she says to me. You know, awaken me to that so I can speak into it. And one day she turned the corner with her phone in her hand, and I knew with the look on her face, it was going to be a moment. And she said, Mom, I'm scrolling through Instagram, and our friends from church went to a wedding, and it was a beautiful wedding, and they posted it, and it said hashtag wedding. And she said, I clicked that because I wanted to see pretty dresses.
And she said, Mom, this popped up. In that moment old Mandy, literally would have been like I tried to be cool Instamom, but we are done. That is of Satan, and we're done throwing it away, deleting the app. That's what Old Mandy would have done. New Mandy and Matt When I told him this story, he's like, there's no way you responded that way.
I'm like, yes, I did. He was like, that was Jesus. But New Mandy, this is what New Mandy did. New Mandy takes the phone, puts it face down, and I look at my daughter. And I say, I am so proud of you.
You saw something that made you feel like, oh, this is not. Normal, and you could have kept clicking, but instead, you took that captive. You didn't go down that rabbit trail and you trusted me with it.
So, because you trusted me, you get a new app today. Wow.
Now, her eyes lit up, and I was an experiment, so I had to roll back a bit. I said, Okay, not, it has to be mommy-proved app. Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's not any app. It's not a free-for-all. Yeah, but I like the concept of that.
Well, well, I didn't know what I was doing in the moment. I didn't know what I was doing. I phrase it in my book as one, avoid crazy parent mode. Yeah, don't be me, don't throw away the app or take away the phone when they confide in you. Because, listen, all these years later, now I'm looking back on that moment.
What that does. is it creates an environment. When your kid is exposed to something, they are going to hide it from you because they don't want to lose their device or lose the app, and that is creating a space where Satan is speaking harm into our children and they can't confide in us. Instead of switching to thank you so much for telling me, and what was even cooler in that moment that night, I crawled in bed with my daughter and I said, I'm having trouble getting those images out of my mind. Are you okay?
Are you okay? And you guys, I mean, that's Deuteronomy 6, 6, and 7, right? Talk when you're going to bed. Like, God knows what he's doing. And that night was so cool because we talked about, I looked at her.
I mean, you know, we were laying there in bed, but I said to her, honey, when you see things like that, you're going to go to school tomorrow and you're going to see people differently. And I don't want that for you. Like, I want you to protect your heart and mind. And also, I said, we're more than objects. Like, we've got skills and talents and we're more than body parts.
And so, you know, you're going to have to make a decision. This is readily available for your generation. And I want you to understand why it's not good for your heart and mind. No, it's so good. And I think that avoiding crazy parent mode is probably the toughest thing to do because you're reacting in the moment.
And it's even touching our core fears ourselves, right, of our own.
So we react and then we, then you're going to have to clean up on aisle one on that and then move to the object. Lesson. That's critical. Absolutely. Well, and I would say, for any parent out there who are like, oh, I threw away the iPad last night when they showed me something on Roblox.
I boiled it in water. I want to encourage you because I've had to do this myself, so I know what this looks like. Go back and apologize to your kid. And it goes like this: I am so sorry that I yelled at you. I was not mad at you at all.
In fact, you did everything right. Right. Something bad popped up and you showed it to me. You did everything right. And that's what I want you to keep doing.
I'm sorry that I yelled. I'm mad. Because that shouldn't be on a kids' app. That you live in a world that that shouldn't be on a kids' app. And I'm mad about that, but I'm not mad at you.
Yeah.
So if you keep confiding in me, you and I are working together to keep you safe from all that. That way it creates a team environment. You and your kid are working together to protect them from harm. Yeah, that's good. Describe what family screen guidelines should look like.
I mean, everybody's struggling with this one. Don't have them. Have 14, 20. What is a good family screen policy?
Well, Is it becoming an idol? Like, that's what you have to ask yourself. Can you live without it? You know, if your snapstreaks die tomorrow, are you going to have a meltdown? That should be a red flag in your teenager's mind that it's becoming an idol.
You know, we talk about that a lot in our home. And those core things about the bedrooms, the bathrooms, at mealtime, when you're with grandparents that you see for two minutes, are you on your screen? Are you talking to your grandparents? You know, core things like that, maintaining that healthy balance, I think is so important. Really good.
Mandy, right at the end here, speak to the mom or dad who has given in and really cast it. Away. You know, everybody's going to deal with this. You're going to deal with this. You'll figure it out.
Kind of a hands-off approach. And they're hearing this going, uh-oh. Yeah, what do I do now? Yeah, well, first of all, what I would say is, give yourself some grace. Like, we're all learning how to parent this in real time.
So, that's the first thing. The second thing is, I would not go in guns blazing and say, I heard this podcast, no phones in bedrooms, no phones in bathrooms. Because here's the thing: your kids are gonna hate you for that. And I don't want that. I don't want there to be a breakdown in a relationship.
I think what you could do is have a real, sincere conversation with your children and say, I think I messed up. I gave you your phone. You have it at night. I set no boundaries. Have you been exposed?
And say the big words because your kid has a phone. You need to say those words with your kids. Say the big things if your kid has a phone. And, and, and, Own your part. I messed up.
I should have created some boundaries. I should have warned you that there's dangers on that. And I just didn't know. And I'm really sorry. Think of the power of that as a parent, kind of fessing up.
I blew it. I was looking the other way.
So, can we have a reset? You know, can we have a reset? And I always tell parents: like, the number one thing that I would want you to do, move towards, is getting the phones out of bedrooms at night. That's critical. So, maybe just having a conversation with them is, you know, one of the things I've learned is online predators target kids at night and they DM and they act like they're your friend and they're not and they get you into weird situations.
And kids have literally been lost by suicide because of sextortion schemes like this.
So talk with them about that and explain the why behind it. And then, also, like, just the science. You need eight hours of sleep. You're going to be a better athlete tomorrow. You're going to be a better person tomorrow.
You know, recognizing that. Absolutely. It strikes me that. You know, even Every area of your life, I think of this in managing here at Focus on the Family, up on the table, get everything into the light. If we've made a mistake, let's talk about it so we can correct it.
Same is true for parenting.
Okay, I've made a mistake. I want to get this up on the table. It's a great demonstration for your children to see you doing that. And it allows them a mechanism to say the same thing. Bring it into the light.
That's one of the things we say all the time. And I also want to say, parents, Christian parents, if you found something on your kid's phone and you're just disappointed. This in. if we have not talked to them about that. We're partly to blame, and we have to own that.
And I'm not, that's not getting me a scapegoat to your kids. But what I have found working with these families is sometimes if parents will fess up, then eventually the kids will be like, Yeah, I should have known better. And they'll own their part, and then we can come together and heal together as a team.
Well, that's so good. Let me turn to our listener. I hope you know Focus on the Family is here for you. We have a dedicated team, our plugged-in team, who has their finger on the pulse of all things technology-related. They review all kinds of entertainment to help you, as a parent, determine what's best for your family when it comes to movies, games, music, and so much more.
I want to encourage you to check that out. We also have the terrific book by Mandy Majors, Keeping Kids Safe in a Digital World: A Solution That Works, which is full of insight on ways to develop a healthy relationship first with your kids, then with technology. And we'd like to send you. That for a donation of any amount today. When you contribute to the work we do here at Focus on the Family, you're helping people like Megan, who wrote to tell us this.
I've listened to Focus on the Family every day, but this is the first time I've ever called. My husband and I have been struggling, and I couldn't move forward without really understanding what went wrong, not just for us, but for our kids too. Talking with your team today gave me so much clarity and hope. Thank you so much for helping me see that our family can heal. Oh, that's a wonderful story.
It is, and it happens literally hundreds of thousands of times each year. And here at Focus on the Family, we're committed to helping families not just survive but to thrive in Christ. But that's only possible with support from friends like you. This Christmas season is the perfect time to deliver hope and joy to families in crisis through your support of Focus on the Family. You can continue to.
To provide that much-needed help to folks like Megan when you do ministry, your ministry, through Focus on the Family.
So please donate today.
So donate and get your copy of Mandy Major's book, Keeping Kids Safe in a Digital World, when you call 800, the letter A and the word family. 800-232-6459. Or check out the show notes for the details and links.
Well, next time we're going to hear from Pastor Gary Thomas, who has some insights and thoughts on how to rediscover God's love, joy, and peace. And I found Satan as a father of lies will try to sow these lies into our soul. to create bitterness and frustration with God. He doesn't care what Lie we believe. He cares that the lie will separate us from seeing God's goodness, God's grace, God's mercy.
God's truth, that God's way. is best. Thanks for listening to Focus on the Family with Jim Daly. I'm John Fuller inviting you back as we once again help you and your family thrive in Christ. God is at work, and He's calling His people to rise in truth.
Truth Rising is a powerful new documentary from Focus on the Family and the Coulson Center. See how ordinary Christians choose courage in a culture that needs truth. Watch Truth Rising today and find out how you can become an agent of restoration and hope. Visit TruthRising.com today. That's TruthRising.com.
Yeah.