Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

How sad is it when parents focus on phones, not kids?

- | CAROLYN HAX Email tellme@washpost.com.

Hello, Carolyn: Went to breakfast today at a family restaurant. Sat in a booth next to a mom and dad and two boys about 8 and 10 years old. The parents each had their cellphones on. The boys had no cellphones. The only time the mom looked up from her phone was to order and once in a while, when she ate, to speak to her husband. The only time the dad looked up from his phone was when he ordered or when he looked at his wife’s phone. There was no communicat­ion between the parents and the kids. I watched the kids eat their fruity face pancakes and not talk to their parents or each other through the whole meal.

I am very, very saddened by this. What I wouldn’t give for a chance to have a breakfast like that again with my boys when they were small. We had such fun when our family went out to breakfast.

Just can’t get my mind around this. What has happened to families? I would appreciate your thoughts.

Concerned Mom

Concerned Mom: That certainly paints a depressing picture. Except we don’t know what it’s a picture of. You believe it’s a picture of phone-addicted parents and the disconnect­ed children who speak for all modern families in their silence. And you may be right. But your snapshot says nothing of where they came from, where they’re going, why they’re on phones, who they’re becoming. You’ve drawn conclusion­s utterly out of context.

I also note an absence that’s often distressin­gly present at family-restaurant tables where children don’t get their adults’ attention: desperate ploys to get their adults’ attention. So maybe what you saw as neglect was the eating of meals in peace by two nurtured, wellbehave­d, listened-to children. Maybe breakfast wasn’t the family event, but the break between events.

Maybe they were on the last day of a vacation, relieved not to talk.

Maybe the parents were tying up loose ends at their jobs to clear the rest of the day for their boys.

Maybe they agreed, “You let us work a bit, we give you fruity face pancakes, then we go on an adventure.” Maybe the parents were looking up children’s museums or walking trails.

Maybe their phone time would yield the name of a restaurant that pleases all ages and is halfway between the two road games their kids were playing with their different teams that day, so they could make a day of it together.

Are you still certain of what you saw? Are you willing, at least, not to be?

Here’s something I can say with confidence. Judginess is more reliably alienating, and less potentiall­y helpful, and less open to interpreta­tion, than phones at breakfast. If you are worried about the state of families right now – justifiably, they are navigating a lot, the multifacet­ed mindfork of smartphone­s included – then I encourage you to channel that worry into the kind of supportive connection you wish to see.

If you can genuinely leave your judging impulses out in the car, then engage a family like this with kind words. Bring kindness, an open mind, a humble awareness of what you don’t know.

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