Vancouver Sun

WHEN IT’S TIME TO TALK WITH KIDS ABOUT INTERNET PERILS

- CHRISTIE TATE

“We have to check the browser history,” I said to my husband, as soon as our dinner guests left. He grimaced. I knew what he was thinking: I cannot believe we have to do this so soon.

“You deal with the kids, and I’ll handle the computer,” he said.

I was relieved my duties involved shepherdin­g the kids through their bedtime ritual, rather than the novel undertakin­g of reviewing what they’d searched on the computer during a playdate with a family we’d recently met. Up to this point, my six-year-old son and eightyear-old daughter had been interested only in playing games and watching kids’ shows on our ancient tablet. I routinely left my computer, never dreaming they would use it, much less for nefarious purposes.

We knew something was up when my son called down, “Mommy, how do you spell ‘naked?’ ”

When I saw my daughter sitting at my desk and the other kids huddled around her, I growled at my kids, “We don’t do screen time during a playdate. We certainly don’t search the word ‘naked.’ ”

I didn’t even know my kids knew how to use a search engine.

They were subdued as they got ready for bed, worried about the looming punishment. I stood in the bathroom doorway and toggled between drafting my speech about internet safety and berating myself for not having parental controls on the computer.

My husband announced, “There’s good news and bad news.” The good news was that they spent most of their time looking at pictures of candy bars.

“The bad news is that they also searched the word ‘butt.’”

He swivelled the screen so I could see the search results. I fought the urge to squeeze my eyes shut and preserve the illusion of my children’s everlastin­g innocence. Instead, I saw dozens of images of a well-known celebrity’s amply chronicled backside.

It could have been much worse. None of the pictures were fully naked or involved risqué acts. But regardless of what my kids turned up, we were facing a big parenting moment, and I wanted to get it right. My anxiety spiked when I realized I had 60 seconds to prepare for our first conversati­on about the dangers of the internet. My goal was to set clear boundaries without stigmatizi­ng sex or stoking a curiosity that would only fuel future secret searches.

We gathered the kids for a family meeting. “It’s OK to be curious about bodies and wonder what they look like. And you’re right that the internet is a place to find those kinds of pictures. But our family rule is that you can’t do internet searches without an adult. In their chastened eyes, I could see the question they were too afraid to ask: Why?

They deserved an answer, and we told them the truth.

The internet has pictures that are upsetting, scary and confusing for young kids. And worse, many of the pictures are harmful to girls.”

Both kids’ eyes grew wide. I turned to my daughter and told her that a search on the internet might bring up images of only one type of body. “If your body doesn’t look like the bodies you see — if it’s smaller or bigger or a different shape — then you may start to feel shame about how your body looks.”

While this was our first conversati­on about internet safety, we’ve had many conversati­ons about body image. She knows how seriously I take this issue.

My husband assured them when they are older, they can make their own decisions about what to view. “But for now, we believe you are too young to look at pictures of naked people on the computer, and we are going to fix the computer so you won’t be able to see them.”

The following morning, I dove into the research, which suggested that in addition to enabling restrictio­ns on all our devices, parents should also block YouTube.

While most of the articles I found concerned teens and technology, Devorah Heitner, author of Screenwise: Helping Kids Thrive (and Survive) in Their Digital World, (Routledge, 2017), confirms that parents “can talk about potential issues as early as third grade, because even the youngest children can pretty easily find things like pornograph­y online.”

 ?? GETTY/ISTOCK ?? Parents should consider speaking to children as early as third grade about the internet and its potential perils, advises one expert, since even young kids can access inappropri­ate content online.
GETTY/ISTOCK Parents should consider speaking to children as early as third grade about the internet and its potential perils, advises one expert, since even young kids can access inappropri­ate content online.

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