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Claire's avatar

Thank you for inviting me to be part of your onion! I am glad to have your voice, written and aural through podcasts, in my sphère as well. You make me more thoughtful and (hopefully) intelligent and I am thankful for that.

As a parent of teens the hardest part is steering them through an online life which is rich but not damaging, and an offline life which is exciting but not dangerous.

I often say that I'm glad the Internet was almost not invented when I was getting my degree, as I probably wouldn't have ended up where I am today. But it also allows me to still be connected with people I went to infant school with, despite now living thousands of miles away. And we cannot insulate our children as online life permeates everything now. Not sure what lessons to take away from that tbh.

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The Heart of Everything's avatar

Thanks Brian--always thought-provoking--as someone who also struggles to minimize/manage screen time, I can just imagine how difficult this might be for teenagers (at least most that I see are buried in their phones and simultaneously isolated in their headphones). I'm intrigued by your comment that "the more we turn our self-validation over to global communities, the emptier our local lives can feel". Here in my small Midwestern town the newspaper is gone and it's difficult to know the local and small geographic space that used to be accessible by picking up a paper. Simple things like who has died now require searching multiple funeral home websites--and what's happening locally, whether it's a sporting event or the local town play, means looking online at a variety of sources. Local churches no longer advise parishioners of who in the congregation is hospitalized (HIPAA for churches?) and might need thoughts and prayers and maybe a hot dish. I'm curious about what you think of this and how others are combating that phenomenon?

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