Tag Archives: parenting

Checking Out of Facebook Places

19 Aug

Those of you who have read my earlier blog post about location-based social networking are already aware of my personal inhibitions towards having my real time location shared online. With yesterday’s launch of Facebook Places, the time has come for more platform specific advice.

The first thing that all Facebook users should know is that regardless of your privacy settings on Facebook the privacy options for Facebook Places by default allow:

  • At least your friends to see when/where YOU check into a location
  • Friends (your Facebook friends) are able to check YOU into places

The problems with these defaults seem pretty obvious but here are a few examples of potential disastrous uses of Facebook Places in case they aren’t:

  1. Yesterday you promised your grandmother that you would come over for dinner, but by noon today  you had forgotten. A friend from work invites you out for wings and beer at the end of the day and you go along. This friend checks you into the bar and Gramma (who’s your Facebook friend – yes lots of grammas are on Facebook!) sees. How do you think this is going to make her feel? How hard are you going to have to work to make it up to her?
  2. An old friend is having a party, but you don’t want to go. You haven’t seen her in a while, you don’t know many of her new friends and you know it would be awkward. When she calls, you lie and say that you can’t come because you have to work late. That night you go to the movies with your new boyfriend instead. Proud to show you off he checks you in. Awkward next time you do run into this old friend? Most certainly.
  3. You’re 18 years old off to college/uni for the first time. The first night you’re there you decide to go a little wild (it’s your first night away from home after all). A fun-loving new friend checks you in at “Kevin’s Crunknormous Keggar – Blazing and Boozing all Night Long!”. Your rather strict mother is your Facebook friend.
  4. You’re in high school and you’ve been getting bullied pretty bad. A friend tries to cheer you up by taking you for an ice-cream. She checks into the ice-cream shoppe via her phone and checks you in too. Five minutes later your worst nightmare shows up. So much for the cheer up!

Where the percentage of Facebook users under the age of 18 has skyrocketed these default settings are something parents of teenagers in particular should definitely be aware of not just in terms of cyber-bullying but also in terms of ensuring that the risk of your child coming into contact with online and offline predators is as best mitigated as possible.

In terms of family safety, you may not want your child naively “checking in” to places while on a family vacation or day trip if their privacy settings are set to everyone – they may not realize it but essentially they are telling the world that you are not home (and if on vacation that you likely won’t be for a while). That fake beware of dog sign suddenly doesn’t seem like full enough protection does it?

How to Disable Facebook Places

Lifehacker has created an excellent video tutorial for disabling Facebook Places as best as possible (it is as of yet not possible to disable or remove the entire feature).


If you are having any difficulties in disabling Facebook Places, or would like to discuss it further, please let me know!

Past the What and Into the Who

17 Aug

My sister is just going into her second year of high school. Every time I talk to her, though she doesn’t realize it, she teaches me a tremendous amount about life and about survival.

When principals, teachers and, unfortunately, even parents talk about the problem of bullying in their schools and in the lives of the children that they spend every day with, there is a strong group that tries to dismiss bullying as a constant. Bullying is just something that has happened since time immemorial, unfortunate and unpleasant but something that children need to get used to, something they need to grow a thicker skin about and move on from. But clearly the people making these arguments haven’t lived through 21st century high school as a walking target. I’m willing to venture a guess that many of them have probably never been bullied, but then again maybe they have because it can be the bullied who are least sympathetic to their fellow victims.

The reason I say this is because even though I was bullied when I was in elementary school (though never as bad as many people I know) I often find the same words I was told, and that I hated so much to hear, coming out of my mouth when talking to my sister. “Suck it up.” “Don’t let it get to you.” “Stop being such a baby.” “Just let it roll.” It’s only now that I’m realizing that these words could have, and probably did, cause as much pain as the insults, the slurs, the put downs and the rejections from the bullies.

When I was a kid I had two obvious targets for potential bullies – my weight (I’ve always been very heavy despite the fact that I have always been extremely sporty and physically active) and the fact that I come across as rather androgynous (I’ve always worn gender non-specific clothing and have had interests not traditionally associated with little girls). I’m sure you can guess some of the names I was called and the taunts shouted at me. However, I was extremely lucky. I was always quite well-liked by my classmates and there was a strong core of us who had known each other since what seemed like before we born. That I was so sporty probably also helped more than it harmed because there were very few people that wanted to take on the football team to pick on me. By the time I was in high-school bullying had mostly become a distant memory. I was comfortable in my own skin and with who I was which meant that trying to bully me would have been more or less futile.

The same can’t be said for my sister. Since she was in probably second or third grade her torment at the hands of her peers has been relentless. She didn’t have the benefit of the same kind of friend stronghold I had (I don’t even know if it’s possible to build something as good anymore) so she also had to face it utterly alone. 6 hours a day every day for the past 7 years, she has had to live in the lions den. Thanks to Facebook, MSN, cell phones etc. even the 22 hours of relative security she could have once expected have all but eroded away. My sister is one of the kindest, most loving young women I have ever met. I am so proud to have had the chance to grow up alongside her. Along with this enormous heart, she’s got quite a wit on her and a set of pipes that can rival Beyoncé (though she sounds so much more like Taylor Swift). *Note these comparisons don’t come lightly, as I am also one of her strongest critics. We couldn’t have more different personalities, but I know that I always want her on the front lines with me.

Yet despite this innate kindness, humour and strength she is torn to shreds by her peers on a daily basis. I’ve watched as she struggled, and now though I watch mostly from afar, the little glimpses of her life that I see when I go home to visit are enough to make me wish I could just bring her back with me, give her a fresh start and try to show her that there are good people in the world.

It was when she was in 7th/8th grade that I started to really notice her change. Her beautiful smile didn’t come so easily anymore and I knew the years of “Suck it up”, “Don’t take it so personally”, “Try to blend in”, “Don’t make yourself a target then” were beginning to take their toll. Yet I couldn’t stop – I didn’t know what other advice to give, my own experience being bullied already an old memory. She started to believe that it really was her that was the problem – that she wasn’t good enough for her world (when really her world has never been good enough for her). She tried so hard to change herself to fit in – to take away the reasons others were picking on her. But for every reason she was able to take away those around her only found 10 more. She changed schools – but alone and friendless in a new school she was once again an easy target. That’s the thing with bullying – it’s impossible once you’ve been identified as a target to ever become invisible.

There is only so much anyone can take before their heart begins to harden, before kindness, even to the kindest heart, becomes an impossibility. There is only so much pain that anyone can hold in their hearts before the light in their eyes dies and before meanness becomes a matter of survival not a matter of choice.

But my sister, for the most part, has stayed so remarkably strong. Every time I see her, I always get the biggest smile and hug which for 10 seconds when she says hello can make me forget every problem I have. I think we all know that 10 seconds are more than enough time to save a life. I can’t help but wonder how many other lives she could save if only given the chance.

I can’t help but worry though how she’ll make it through the next 3 years. Now that I’ve gotten to the other side I know that life is nothing like high school – it’s not just the meek, but the freaks and geeks as well who inherit the earth. Even though I try to remind her constantly, when every day is a struggle it’s so hard to see the big picture – or even to think past the next 24 hours.

I think the worst part of this is my sister’s story is not unique. It’s not even one of the worst. They are so many young people you have not only lost their light, but their lives because someone in the second grade thought they had a silly haircut, because they are good (or bad) at maths or because someone just needed a person to pick on to make their own pain go away. This isn’t my parents bullying – this isn’t even my bullying – what kids and teens today are facing is something out of us older folks’ nightmares. Round-the-clock torment from schoolmates intent on not just pain but destruction in combination with family stresses and pressures as well as the normal strains of growing up is more than any child, teenager or human being should ever have to face.

This needs to change. First of all we need to stop telling kids to “Suck it up”. In fact that phrase should be banned. Secondly those being bullied are not the ones who are ‘wrong’. We can’t let this whole generation of young people think that there is only one way to be accepted in society. Thirdly we need a paradigm shift.

We need to recognize people not for what they are, but for who they are.

This means tossing aside the labels both that we judge others against and that we define ourselves by: pretty, ugly, fat, thin, short, tall, Catholic, Jew, geek, Muslim, Arab, WOP, nerd, Irish, gangsta, gay, straight, bi, chick, dude, freak, loser, queen bee, mean girl, jock, stoner, lady, wuss, loner, spooner.

This isn’t going to be easy – this is our entire way of categorizing people, especially in high school. But for every modicum of ease these labels bring about for people deploying them, they create one ton of lost potential, pain and humiliation. They allow people to be reduced to one aspect of themselves – something they often can’t change – and allow people to ignore all of the other parts that make us human beings such complex and wonderful creatures.

These three things are the challenges that I am placing before myself, from this moment forward. I hope that you will join me. We may not be able to change the whole world on our own, but we can do it together.

To Bubble Wrap or Not to Bubble Wrap?: The UK’s ‘Ride to School’ Dilemma

7 Jul

On Monday papers and news services across the United Kingdom (and apparently in Canada and the United States as well) were ablaze with a story about two London parents who allow their children to ride their bicycles unaccompanied to school. Though children riding bikes to school itself is not that interesting, what made this a story was that their children’s school threatened to report these parents to social services. Mr. and Mrs. Schonrock have two children, a daughter aged 8 and a son aged 5 who they allow to travel to school (located one mile away) on their own (but both children together) via bicycle by a route selected by their parents to ensure that the children would avoid all major intersections with the exception of one, which has a lollipop lady to help children across the road. (For more details please see the Daily Mail story http://bit.ly/9lOoPg or Google it)

Within minutes of the story breaking, it was all over Twitter as parents, children and people who used to be children raced to share their opinion on the matter. Surprisingly, though I thought opinion would be split, from what I saw the majority seemed to be in support of the parents in this case. Even high level politicians such as the Prime Minister of the UK and the Mayor of London (who by the way wrote a fantastic piece on the case in the Telegraph http://bit.ly/bnMAxD) have chimed in in support of the Schonrocks.

What is particularly interesting about this case is not so much the details, but the way in which the fervent support of the parents’ right to make decisions about their children’s safety might signal a tipping point in the Anglo-American-Canadian style of parenting that has predominated since the early 1990s. Now that the so-called helicopter kids are becoming helicopter-adults, many are beginning to see the effects of over-parenting and are taking steps to regain some independence for their children.

To be fair, it must be recognized that there are a number of parents that have spoken out against the decision of the Schonrocks, who have argued articulately and passionately that children that young should not be allowed to ride to school. Some of the most common arguments I have come across are health & safety (if a child falls off and is injured is the other one old enough to know how to get help), personal safety (stranger danger) and the loss of a great bonding opportunity. While I can understand concerns over health and safety, at the same time stories stories of 6 year-olds helping siblings and even parents escape fires are not that uncommon. Children are incredibly resilient. I even agree somewhat with the bonding argument, but the stranger danger argument, I think is the weakest of the lot. Statistics have shown that the number of young people ‘snatched off the streets’ pales in comparison to the number abused by people they know – particularly family members and family friends. (http://bit.ly/blqzbr – yes these stats come from Oprah and no it won’t happen again) The number of children killed in traffic collisions is much higher still, yet there continues to be this fear of the outside world that prevents many parents from allowing their children to enjoy playing outside by themselves or with friends as they once did.

I understand the need to keep children safe. I grew up in the early 1990s in an area where there had been a ridiculously high number of stranger abductions etc. per capita. While this certainly did make my parents fearful, they did their best to try to hide it. I wasn’t allowed to walk home on my own ’til I was about 10 or 11, a large part of the reason being that I lived out of the school bounds so the other children didn’t walk in my direction. Even then I usually chose to walk with friends once some moved into my neighborhood. I was allowed to play in the park on my own (until the streetlights went on) as long as my parents knew where to find me. As terrifying as this was for them, my parents knew that it would be best to let me discover the world a little on my own and with peers as opposed to carrying me through the obstacle course of life. I thank them for it – like many young people I learned as much, if not more about the danger, risk and the world in general at the playground than I did in class or when my parents held my hand. Questions like “Are these monkey bars too high for me to catapult myself off?”, “What happens if I ride my toboggan down stairs?” and “What should I say to convince J. to not give up, go home and take his new basketball with him?” had built-in life lessons as answers.

While I would not recommend having parents everywhere drop their guard entirely and let their children bike all over town, I do support fully the approach the Schonrocks took. Think about your children as individuals, assess their maturity and readiness, make a thoughtful decision that eliminates as much of the perceived risk as possible and don’t strangle your children with the reigns you want to put around them – Now that’s responsible parenting at it’s finest. Fair play to you Oliver and Gillian Schonrock! Here’s to hoping you’ve ignited a paradigm shift!

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