Screens, Teens & You: A Family Guide to Getting Your Attention Back
If screens are creating distance in your family, this episode is for you. Mike breaks down exactly what's happening in your family's relationship with technology — and what to do about it — for three groups: parents, early teens, and experienced teens.
Most families don't have a screen problem — they have a presence problem. In this episode, Mike unpacks why "just put the phone down" doesn't work for anyone, what the research actually says about screen use and teen wellbeing, and delivers specific, age-appropriate action steps for every member of your family.
The key insight: your phone has quietly become the manager of your attention, your mood, and your nervous system. Getting your family's attention back starts with you.
Why willpower doesn't work. Studies show that simply having your smartphone visible — even turned off — measurably reduces cognitive capacity. Lasting change comes from environment design, not motivation, and apps are engineered around intermittent variable reward — the same mechanism as a slot machine — making the urge to check nearly automatic.
For parents — professionals & working adults
1. Create one daily recovery zone — the first 30 minutes after you get home. Genuine presence at that transition point does more than hours of being physically nearby but mentally elsewhere.
2. Whitelist, don't blacklist. Allow only urgent contacts and channels. Batch everything else to 2–3 scheduled check-ins.
3. Name your reflexive checking out loud in front of your teen: "I just picked up my phone without deciding to. I'm putting it down."
4. Invest in non-screen restoration — walking, nature, slow breathing, meals without devices. Rest replenishes attention. Stimulation doesn't.
5. Have an honest family conversation, not a lecture. Families that build media norms collaboratively get significantly better outcomes.
For early teens — ages 11–14
1. Devices charge outside the bedroom. Screen use in the hour before bed disrupts sleep quality and duration with cascading effects on mood and mental health. Frame it as a health protocol, not a punishment.
2. Device-free mealtimes — and that includes yours. Regular connected family dinners predict better mental health and lower risk behaviors in teenagers.
3. Build the boredom muscle. Unstructured, unstimulated time is a foundational skill for creativity and emotional regulation. It has to be practiced.
4. Monitor content, not just time. Not all screen use is equal. Stay genuinely curious about what your teen is doing online.
5. 1–2 hours of device-free one-on-one time each week, their choice of activity. This is the strongest counter-programming to device dependency that exists.
For experienced teens — ages 15–19
1. Shift from rules to agreements. Agreements created collaboratively are honored at significantly higher rates than rules handed down.
2. Teach the "how do you feel after" test. Evaluate screen use not by how engaging it felt during, but by how they feel 5–15 minutes after putting the device down.
3. Help them map their urge patterns. When do they reach for the phone without deciding to? Self-awareness changes the behavior.
4. Collaborate on device-free zones rather than imposing them. Ask: "What do you think would actually work for our family?"
5. Model and narrate your own screen relationship. For older teens, watching a parent actively manage their own habits is the most credible message you can send.
The real cost isn't the time — it's the presence.
Every reflexive phone check mid-conversation sends a message: something else just got prioritized over you. Done consistently over years, it shapes how a teenager understands their own value. Someone has to lead. It has to be you.
Ready to go deeper?
If you're stuck — lack of connection, screen battles, disrespect, or a relationship with your teen that feels distant — the PACE Parent Leadership Academy was built for this moment. Register for the free masterclass at www.presentsolutionforparents.com [www.presentsolutionforparents.com]
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