When I gave my daughter a mobile phone three years ago when she was 13, I did not allow her to have access to social media.
Having read the literature on the ills of social media on teenage girls in particular, I decided to err on the side of caution.
When she entered secondary school in 2022, she was among the minority who did not have a social media presence.
I explained to her that I felt she was too young to handle the possible ill effects of social media, specifically Instagram, with research that found links to depression and body-image issues. I also reassured her that we could revisit this decision when she was older.
She accepted my decision even if she was not entirely happy about it.
In the light of the recent move by Australia to ban social media for under-16s at the end of 2025, I reflected on my decision and how it has worked for my daughter in the last three years.
To be transparent, it was not just social media that I restricted. There were other measures I took as I did not want her free time to be consumed by screen activities.
We gave her my husband's old phone, with a slower processing speed. She used her elder brother's old SIM card with just 500MB of data a month (which he had used for the three years prior).
We used a parental control app and restricted screen time to three hours a day, with more time during weekends or school holidays. Any increase was subject to approval.
The phone was shut down during her sleeping hours, at a time pre-determined by us. There were also restrictions on downloading new apps.
Both her and her brother's mobile phones were to be left in the living room at night.
To an outsider, the measures may sound draconian.
But for a mum about to hand her 13-year-old daughter a mobile phone, it provided me with a sense of security that I was not letting her into the big unknown on her own.
This story is from the December 09, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 09, 2024 edition of The Straits Times.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
FIRING UP OLD TRADITIONS
In his seaside workshop on the Greek island of Lesbos, Mr Dimitris Kouvdis uses ancient techniques to create pottery pieces that have recently been honoured with inclusion in Unesco's National Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage.
Megan Fox, Machine Gun Kelly may have split
American actress Megan Fox has reportedly split with American rapper Machine Gun Kelly (MGK), just weeks after the couple announced they are expecting.
Shares linked to Squid Game star soar after Golden Globe nomination
SEOUL - Shares linked to South Korean actor Lee Jung-jae are soaring after the announcement that hit Netflix K-drama Squid Game 2, in which the star will reprise his leading role, has been nominated for Best Television Series in the drama category at the Golden Globes, ahead of its premiere on Dec 26.
Actor Dick Van Dyke, approaching 99, dances in Coldplay's latest music video
LOS ANGELES - American actor Dick Van Dyke, the lithe and witty nonagenarian whose career spans more than seven decades, has added yet another role to his lengthy resume: music video star.
High website traffic on Disney cruise booking launch day causes delays
Bookings for Disney Adventure – Asia's first Disney Cruise which will be homeporting in Singapore for at least five years – opened on Dec 10 to overwhelming demand, with its inaugural sailing selling out within the day.
Pharrell Williams' exuberant biopic Piece By Piece, Hellboy's faithful reboot
The life and career of American rapper-songwriter-producer-entrepreneur Pharrell Williams are reconstructed in Lego animation.
At The Movies In horror film Heretic, Hugh Grant makes niceness feel nightmarish
Two Mormon missionaries, Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East), call at the home of Mr Reed (Hugh Grant), who claims to be interested in their religion. The women, to their horror, discover that they have walked into a carefully laid trap.
Hugh Grant Is enjoying the 'freak show era' of his career
The seemingly droll, breezy star is utterly serious about his work, including his villainous turn in the horror film Heretic
A bewitching tale of power
Set 10,000 years before the events of the two Dune films (2021 and 2024), this six-episode series streaming on Max chronicles the goings-on at the Bene Gesserit, a religious order whose sisters serve as advisers to the aristocrats leading the Great Houses of the galactic empire.
Villain with a moral compass
That is the take of British actor Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who plays Kraven The Hunter in a film on the antagonist from the Spider-Man comic books