Protecting Boys after High School
May 18, 2015 by admin
Filed under Blog, cultural manliness, Faith, Fatherhood, manliness, pornography
High school graduations are upon us, and many of those graduates will be moving on to bigger and better things. When they’re gone, they’re still your child, and you still have some responsibility for their sanctification. Although they’re of adult age, and many will be out of the house, your parental role doesn’t stop, it merely changes. How then do you help your college-aged, young adult children? Well, here are a few tips.
- Don’t Lie to Yourself: Realize that they’ve seen more, done more, and have been exposed to more than you’d probably like. If they’ve seen any mainstream media, heard any popular music, or hung out with any other children who have done so, they’ve seen it, done it, and/or have been exposed to it. The “it” is the junk, filth, and garbage that’s out there in TV, movies, music, magazines, and all over the internet.
- Be Aware: Most institutions of higher education don’t filter, block, or have regulations against pornography and other filth on the internet. Some do, but those systems are rare.
- New Found Freedom and Rebellion: Being out of the house lends itself towards rebellious views and ideas of invincibility, especially on the college campus. These institutions are typically not calling the boys towards authentic masculinity, but rather, allows and encourages on-going childishness and “cultural manliness”.
It doesn’t matter what they go on to do, they’ll be exposed to more and more than ever before. Even faithful, Catholic schools have problems with protecting their students, and your child isn’t the exception to the rule. Okay, okay… downer Dave here… as usual, killing the excitement and joy surrounding graduation. Harping on the bad news and leaving everyone scared to raise kids in America. Sorry. Well, not really. Instead of only harping on the bad, I’ve got a great tool to aid you in your parenting. It’s called Covenant Eyes, and I fully endorse their products.
Covenant Eyes is a filtering and accountability software for PCs, Macs, smartphones, and tablets. It works on a plethora of devices and they continually develop the software to keep up with the latest and greatest gadgets. Covenant Eyes does a number of things, and while I can’t tell you all of them in this short post, here are three of the most practical things it does, especially for your boy (or girl) heading off to college.
- Peace of Mind: Covenant Eyes lends itself towards giving parents peace of mind that the content that their child (even their young adult child) is protected from content that is bad for them. The filtering helps to block explicit, pornographic, and malicious content from entering the device.
- A Talking Point: Covenant Eyes is a gateway to conversation between parents and children. It gives a parent the opportunity to discuss the content, not ignore it. It gives the child the responsibility of having the device, with the accountability to back it up.
- Keepin’ It Real: Covenant Eyes keeps everything honest, open, and transparent. The truth is the truth, and if a site has been visited that shouldn’t have been, or an app has been utilized that shouldn’t have been, or questionable online behavior is happening, it puts it all out on the table. When it’s out there, it can be dealt with.
And it’s not only good for older kids, it’s great for everyone in the house. Dads – you need this software on your devices to keep you honest. Moms can benefit from it too! (Did you know that 1 out of 4 church-going women admit to being addicted to pornography?!) And our pure, innocent littles… it’s the least we can do for them. The least.
So how do you start using Covenant Eyes? Click HERE to go to the Covenant Eyes site to sign up for your free one-month trial. That’s right, it couldn’t be easier, just head on over and they’ll let you try it out for a month at no cost. (The link takes you to my affiliate page automatically.) Once you’ve signed up, you’ll download the program on your computer(s), laptop(s), and iOS/Android devices (get the app), set up the functionality you want to utilize (in the setting portion of the account), and immediately, the device is protected. If you have ANY problems, or struggle with technology (like so many parents do), simply call their customer service line and they will walk you through everything. It’s totally worth it, easy to do, and gives you that all-important peace of mind. What’s stopping you? Do it today!
Covenant Eyes has a monthly cost after the initial free month trial. Considering all of the junk out there, I find the minimal costs to be well worth the souls of our children. One monthly cost covers ALL of your family’s devices. Hard to beat. I’ve tried tons of different blocks, filters, and accountability, and by far, this is my favorite.
TrueMan up!
Hand-helds in Little Hands?
June 29, 2014 by admin
Filed under Blog, Faith, Fatherhood, Virtue
“Keep hand-held devices out of small children’s hands.” It seems like a common-sense approach to me, but I am constantly see small children (younger and younger every day) with hand-held devices. I even see it in Mass, which boggles my mind. The damage being done is mostly under the surface, so maybe we aren’t really aware of just what’s happening. I recently read an article from a pediatric occupational therapist and thought I’d summarize what she wrote.
*DADS: Before you read any further, and this post becomes hard to read b/c it hits too close to home, keep in mind that we didn’t have these devices. We played outside. We skinned our knees. We got dirty. We lived an adventure. Get your kids away from the screens, and send them outside! This is an opportunity to step in and make some life-changing decisions for your children.
- Rapid Brain Growth: she said that “early brain development is determined upon environmental stimuli, or lack thereof.” Think about it… nowadays we have all sorts of issues that never seemed to exist “back then”. ADD, ADHD, hyper-activity, impulse, etc. A cure? GO OUTSIDE.
- Delayed Development: imagine a few inches of a screen vs. an entire outside playground with toys, bikes, balls, and the like. Physical, mental, emotional, relational, development is hindered behind a screen.
- Epidemic Obesity: nothing to add.
- Sleep Deprivation: when we’re constantly plugged in, it’s hard to shut it off. Kids need sleep (in pretty sizeable quantities) to develop properly, especially at young ages.
- Mental Illness: apparently the increase in child technology overuse is shown to be related to a drastic increase in depression, anxiety, ADD, etc. (I don’t know if I’m sold on this one, but it wouldn’t surprise me.)
- Aggression: content leads to action. What our kids consume they will become. (You are what you eat.)
- Digital Dimentia: kids who can’t pay attention can’t learn. (Again, I’m not sure about this one, specifically, but I’m sure it correlates.)
- Addictions: I have no doubt in my mind that this one is 100% fully absolutely without a doubt true. Let’s see… addiction to junk on the screen or addicted to the outdoors? GO OUTSIDE!
- Radiation emissions: I’m convinced that there’s a conspiracy going on where cancer from radiation is in and comes from everything.
- Unsustainable: these methods, of overuse of technology starting at a crazy-young-age, by which our children function, grow, learn, and develope aren’t sustainable.
Let’s link this to virtue, because everything should. To be virtuous, and to instill this in our children, we must possess TEMPERANCE. Temperance moderates our attraction to pleasure. We should find ourselves somewhere in a moderate level of use.
Look… I’m NOT a technology hater. I’m not trying to point fingers… that’s not what we do here. I have multiple laptops, a tablet, a smart phone, a flat screen, Roku TV, and obviously have a presence online. However, when it comes to my kids, they don’t spend time on my hand-held devices. They do, however, spend some time on learning sites (we like ABCMouse.com when they’re young), and do math-fact-games, etc. on an old laptop. They watch the occasional movie (our family favorites are “The Sound of Music” and “Mary Poppins”.) But, and this is the point here… it’s regulated. They spend exponentially more time outside, in the fresh air, without their eyes buggin’ out staring at a screen. They also spend a ton of time reading books. Every. Single. Day. My kids are young, but hold conversations with adults, are polite, have imaginations, and are well-spoken. It makes a difference.
OK – now it’s time to think about our own use. OUCH! Am I right or am I right? Adults won’t be as effected in terms of the developmental pieces, but our noses in screens has a negative impact on us, too. Same principle applies… GO OUTSIDE!
TrueMan up!