The Peterborough Examiner

Set rules around gaming

- DEAR ELLIE ellieadvic­e.com

Reader’s commentary regarding the column about the video game “Fortnite” (May 25):

Reader: “My son, 18, is an elite athlete and AAA Hockey player since age six. He’s extremely intelligen­t ... but he wasn’t as socially mature as his schoolmate­s.

“This year he was introduced to casual gatherings with hockey teammates and to video games. He’d never played these at home.

“Last November, he purchased a PS4 console, started playing “Fortnite,” and got hooked. We tried to get him to stop.

“Now he’s addicted to the game. He’s skipped school since February, dropped out of Grade 12, withdrawn from his real-life friends, and from spending time with family.

“This all happened pretty fast and we’re seeking profession­al help.

“Video games can take over someone’s life and this needs to be addressed more publicly.”

A. The public, along with health profession­als, just acquired a name for it on June 18: It’s called “Gaming Disorder.”

The problem isn’t unique to “Fortnite,” which became wildly popular partly because it was initially given away for free.

Ever since computer games became available, there’ve been young people (adults, too) whose gaming crosses over into “unhealthy” levels of play.

Finally, the World Health Organizati­on has announced that compulsive­ly playing video games now qualifies as a new mental health condition.

Your son definitely needs profession­al help, as does your family in learning how to handle the situation.

According to Dr. Brent Conrad, a Halifaxbas­ed clinical psychologi­st for www.techaddict­ion.ca, “It’s critical that any rules around gaming are not only set, but consistent­ly enforced.”

Your son acted so independen­tly — buying the PS4 himself and dropping classes — that you unfortunat­ely missed discussing controls early. That’s why a mental health expert’s voice needs to be heard by him, e.g. helping him understand how dropping his education and all other interests will diminish his quality of life now and in the future.

Dr. Conrad says, “the most popular treatment approach for computer game addiction is cognitive-behavioura­l therapy (CBT).”

Seek a CBT specialist for your son. Seeking counsellin­g for yourselves as parents, will help you learn how to discuss with your son the idea of his seeing a therapist himself.

Explain that going to counsellin­g on his own is essential for his making choices about his own future.

Say too, that it’s your responsibi­lity as parents to get him to see someone with knowledge and facts on where his obsessive gaming is leading.

It’s not to self-satisfacti­on nor rewards beyond a computer screen.

You and your husband then need to learn how to apply boundaries without losing your main goal, i.e. not driving your son away nor rejecting your guidance.

Feeling left out

Q. I’m one of those grandmothe­rs who feels left out as I age. I’m in a retirement residence and get only rare visits — a common complaint among the residents.

I know my children love me, they tell me in emails. I wasn’t perfect, but we had a good relationsh­ip.

I’m independen­t and try to manage without them. But why don’t they drop in for just a half-hour coffee?

The stock response: “Sorry I didn’t call, we were so busy.”

We looked after our parents, and thought we set a good example.

What is wrong now? Even if we’re loved, we feel neglected and alone.

A. Many people equate being busy with their kids to “parenting.” But the task of raising children also includes teaching/ portraying values, such as caring and showing up. A quick email doesn’t cut it. Nor does a 30-second call or text.

Grandchild­ren, adult children and grandparen­ts all need connection, if at all possible.

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