GetDeAddicted
Is handing your child a phone or tablet to calm them down quietly making things worse? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we explore one of the most overlooked harms of early screen use — the loss of emotional regulation skills that children are supposed to build in their first decade of life. When screens become digital pacifiers, kids don't just get distracted from their feelings — they miss the crucial reps needed to develop frustration tolerance, patience, self-soothing, and the internal capacity to sit with uncomfortable emotions. Over time, this can show up as bigger meltdowns, shorter fuses, anxiety, and difficulty handling boredom, disappointment, or transitions. In this episode we cover: * Why emotional regulation is a learned skill — and how it's built moment by moment * The neuroscience of co-regulation: how kids borrow calm from caregivers before developing their own * How screens short-circuit the "discomfort → coping → growth" cycle * The link between early screen soothing and rising rates of childhood anxiety and meltdowns * Why frustration tolerance is one of the strongest predictors of long-term success * What recent studies reveal about toddlers who are regularly handed devices to calm down * Practical, realistic alternatives for car rides, restaurants, waiting rooms, and tough moments at home This is essential listening for parents, caregivers, teachers, therapists, and anyone who wants to raise emotionally resilient kids in a world full of screens. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, brain development, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.
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