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PThis is this: It is Saturday morning, and The year is 1995Mother and father are in the kitchen with radio, throwing pop-tarts in the toaster. Children are outWalking through sprinkler, or perhaps looking at a PBS Rerun Sesame StreetWhile a glue stick, safety scissors, sugar paper, and old magazines were fascinated with a glue to cut. In the afternoon, it is time to ride a bike with friends in the local park, or walk through the mall. The day ends with a film rented from the local blockbuster.
Once the simple day is now migrated after the burn migration. Millennium parentsThose who are fast competing with children On drug addiction technologyThey are kids Online online – From streaming materials to smartphones to beg for smartphones – even as warnings Social media threats increase,
And they are not alone: their fried parents are being bombing online with “Must-Do” and “Must-Haves”: from over-the-top Easter and Valentine’s Day Basket to Artly-Created Lunchbox, and birthday parties to compete with Met Gala.
But thirty and forty -some parents are moving to a new trend -lifting your children as it is in the 90s. This means that the board game, leaving by the public library, the installation of a lemonade for the neighborhood, and the horror of the horror – an indifferent journey with an indifferent journey to give children a chance to get bored. The incident has become so big that “Care my children like 90s ” Tikok leads to a host of the video, which has seen at least 2.2 million times.
For courtney Shults, a 35-year-old in Florida, two, raising their children, such as the 90s means no screen time during the week. She argues that she is very busy for this in any way, looking at her 11 -year -old daughter cheering and her nine -year -old son’s baseball and football practice.


“I am not against technology. I am too much for childhood,” Shults tells IndependentGiven that she and her husband do not allow their children to be cellphone. “I think the technique robs children in childhood small window children who have them.”
Shults’ children spend their weekends out, as well, their own gymnastics mat in the backyard and her son is going to fish in the local creak. If they get screen time, it is in small amounts during the weekend, especially to see things they care, such as makeup or fishing videos.
Oregon-based pediatrician Whitney Cassarece-which runs her own blog, Modern mummy doctorWhere she advises fellow working mothers-it is important for children to play self-directed. But they have all the attention in the continuous development of the screen in our homes, from which the parents have been brought to the new concept.
“Parents are seeing that their children are not developing character symptoms, which they want they want, such as patience and flexibility,” she explains. “I think this parenting movement has come because people are thinking, ‘What was different during the day? What was different in the nineties?” When we were running from ourselves here and there, and we knew that the time has come for the porch light to come. ,

While Shults’ children are barely looking at the screen, it is not necessarily a case for their friends, which can make something for a very uneven pladet. Parents say, “My daughter was a friend, and my daughter was really disappointed because her friend was using her phone so much that my child said,” I can’t even talk to her, “parents say.
Chelsea Delgadadad, one mother of three children – age seven, five, and two – in Erizona, also growing like her children in the 90s, spending out with her afternoon and weekends. This means filling his backyard with activities from his childhood, including a trumpelin, failure ball and a basketball circle.
Delgado and her husband tell their children that they have to earn their screen time, which is in just one hour on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The screen time is given to them after completing their prescribed tasks – helps to keep the house clean, and also does homework. If they do not complete the task or get into trouble in school, they lose 10 minutes or more of their allocated online time.
33 -year -old says, “I am ready to put them on reality vs. online or on screen.” Independent“I just want to get them more active, and I think it is a healthy approach to our family.”
Research has found that excessive screen time between children is increasing. A 2019 study in Jama pediatrics It is shown that 87 percent of the children, between the ages of two and five, the screen exceeded an hour per day, the recommended amount from the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Shults believes that raising their children on screen at least without any time, as they were in childhood in the 90s, have helped them become good communicators. Apart from being vocal, his nine -year -old and an 11 -year -old child is not shy around adults.
“They are not children who come on their phones when we go somewhere and do not interact,” she says. “If we sit for dinner, they know they need to talk to friends and family. If we are ordering food, they need to order for themselves.”

Similarly, Delgado credited the social skills of their children for minimal screen time and more external activity. In fact, he said that when his children have too much time on the screen, they are more emotional or excited than normal. When the TV is closed, it makes it for a more peaceful home. However, this does not change the fact that she is receiving some pushbacks from her seven -year -old son, as her friends have to use an iPad after completing their homework every day.
“He likes, ‘Okay, it’s not appropriate!” And I have to explain the benefits of being active and sit together on a screen throughout the day, “she says. “So he likes,” Okay, you’re right. I want to be better in football. I want to be fast and strong and use my brain in different ways. ”
Neither Delgado nor Shults planned to give smartphones to their children, until they become at least 14, Shults banned their children from joining social media till the age of 18. Shults are also afraid of the day that her children get a call, accepting that she will become a helicopter parents, which they can see online.
Casares accepts the parents that children raising are not an easy task like the 90s, and we cannot show off that technology does not exist. Instead, children can find ways to make it a part of our outer time, such as riding a bike with smart watches and playing tag with a rechargeable toy laser gun – tools that were never back. And giving priority to outdoor time on screen time is something that parents have to do easily.
“Giving your children an opportunity to get out is about teaching them how to take care of yourself for a lifetime. If you feel that it is actually a difficult fight to get your children to use this type of game, then try with small pay growth of time and manufacture it during days, weeks, months,” she explains.
“Because you are actually trained a muscle that our children do not know how to use many times, and we are to teach them over time.”