Does your teen's life revolve around Facebook?
The Faculty of Psychology at the University of Bergen in Norway has found that Facebook addiction is real, and younger Facebook users, including teens, are the most susceptible to addiction.
Facebook addiction,
like any addiction, has noticeably detrimental effects. It interferes
with a person’s day-to-day life and causes him or her to neglect
responsibilities. For your teen, this could mean that Facebook
dependence could interfere with academic performance and have a negative
impact on your child’s relationships with family members and friends.
With some research
linking excessive social media use to depression in teens, Facebook
addiction could even take a toll on your teen’s mental health.
The researchers at the University of Bergen have developed a Facebook addiction scale that helps determine whether someone is unhealthily dependent on Facebook.
Here are some of the warning signs that could indicate that your teen is addicted to Facebook, according to their research:
1. Your teen spends an excessive amount of time on Facebook and plans his or her day around using the social media site.
2. Your son or daughter's Facebook use has steadily increased since he or she began using the website.
3. Facebook seems to be a means of escaping from the pressures of everyday life for your teen.
4. When Facebook time is limited, your child becomes agitated and upset.
5. Homework and studying takes a backseat to Facebook, and your child's
grades suffer. His or her dreams of getting into an Ivy League college
have fallen by the wayside. Facebook is now your teen's top priority.
Since
Facebook addiction is a relatively recent phenomenon, there isn't much
research that indicates how to treat it. Researchers have been aware of
internet addiction, which is similar in many respects to Facebook
addiction, for a while.
If you want to help treat your son or
daughter's Facebook addiction, you might want to try out some of these
strategies, which are based on the findings of internet addiction researchers at the University of California, San Francisco:
1. Sit down with your teen and come up with a list of
all of his or her favorite activities that aren't related to Facebook.
Take the list out whenever your child has some free time, and encourage
him or her to take part in the activities on the list.
2. Set time limits for your teen's internet use.
If your teen's only able to spend forty-five minutes on the computer
each evening, it'll be rather difficult for him or her to stay addicted
to Facebook. If you try out this strategy, you can expect that your teen
won't be very happy at first. Just remember that you're the parent,
you're in control, and you're doing what's best for your child.
3. Reward your teen for decreased Facebook use. Each
week or month your child uses Facebook appropriately, reward him or her
with a book, movie, mp3, trip to the museum, or other incentive. This
will help encourage healthy internet habits and encourage interest in
other forms of entertainment that are separate from Facebook.
4. If your teen's Facebook addiction is
particularly worrisome, consider therapy and medication options.
Certain types of medication have worked wonders for people with internet
addiction. Talk to your family doctor about treatment in the form of
medication, and consider setting up an appointment for your teen to meet
with a therapist.
Facebook addiction is a real problem.
If you think your teen is dependent on Facebook, it's your job to be
proactive about it and nip the dependence in the bud. The life of a
teenager should be exciting and full of opportunities. So, don't let any
sort of addiction hinder your child's growth into a healthy and happy
adult.
Join me on Facebook and follow me on Twitter for more information and educational articles on parenting today's teenagers.
Showing posts with label Facebook Addicts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook Addicts. Show all posts
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Teens Addicted to Facebook?
![]() |
| Facebook Addiction |
Is there anything wrong with being hooked on Facebook? Maybe, if it is consuming your life, but like everything in life, you need to set boundaries.
Yes, it is long overdue, but finally it has been created – a 12 step program for those addicted to Facebook. FAA (Facebook Addicts Anonymous) groups are being formed worldwide to defeat this growing addiction. Many Facebook addicts have been ridiculed as being weak and selfish by those around them.
However, more and more people are beginning to recognize this addiction for the true disease that it is, and that it cannot be overcome by simple willpower alone.
Below you will find the Twelve Steps to Freedom that are being utilized by FaceBook addicts to break the hold of this menace in their lives.
Step 1: Acknowledge you have a problem. This, of course, is the first and most critical step. The individual must recognize and admit that FaceBook is no longer simply a place for casual social connection to them; it is an addition that has taken control of their lives.
Step 2: Recognize your need of a Higher Power. Once you recognize and admit the addicting hold that FaceBook has on your life, you will soon realize that you are unable to quit on your own. You must have help from someone, something, greater than yourself; someone…who does not live in the FaceBook world. Only you can determine who that Higher Power is. It may be your spouse, your parents or your roommate, but it will be a real live person whom you can touch.
Step 3: Surrender your password to your Higher Power. Step three is a crucial step. You must surrender your FaceBook password to your Higher Power. You must allow them monitor all your activities and change your privacy settings.
Step 4: Do a thorough and fearless inventory of your friends list. For this fourth step, you must go through each and every face on your friends list. You must acknowledge to your Higher Power whether or not you truly know each person, and in what way.
Step 5: Delete all those friends you do not truly know. Now that you’ve created that list of unknown friends, you must make the big step of deleting them from your friends list. It will be difficult. There will be a grieving process involved, but it must be done.
Step 6: Remove the FaceBook app from your cellphone. You’ve come a long way, by this point. Step six will be a turning point in your recovery. You will purposefully and intentionally remove the FaceBook app from your cellphone. You will no longer receive FaceBook status reports on your phone. You will no longer post your immediate thoughts from any and every location. You will confine your FaceBook use to your computer.
Step 7: Do a second inventory of your friends list. You narrowed it down once. In this step, you are going to make a clean sweep. You will determine which of the people on this list is actually related to you and, which are not. Third cousins, twice removed is the very farthest limit accepted in true blood relations.
Step 8: Delete everyone except family. By this time, you are beginning to get stronger. Gather support if you need it, though, this is going to take some time. Delete ALL your FaceBook friends except those you have listed on your family list.
Step 9: Begin using email again. In this step, you will begin putting your new life into place. You will begin using your email account once again to communicate with friends and family. You will re-learn how to attach photo files to emails in order to share them with others. It would be easy to turn back to FaceBook at this point. It may seem like it would be the easy solution, but it ISN’T. You know that.
Step 10: Post your final goodbye on your status. Now that you’ve re-established your new life, it is time to make an official public statement regarding your freedom from this addiction. Post your final farewell in your status.
Step 11: Delete your account. This step must IMMEDIATELY follow Step 10. You must quickly delete your FaceBook account before reading any replies to status update. Other FaceBook addicts will try to dissuade you. They will tell you that having an account won’t hurt you. You must NOT listen to them. They are as in need of help as you were when you began this program.
Step 12: Join a social network for recovering FaceBook addicts. Now that you have reached the last and final step of your program, it is finally time to rejoin the world of the living. You will find it online. A new FAA social network had been created, that will support you in your ongoing recovery. Begin to live again!
Source: Internet For Free
Join my Facebook page! Learn more about parenting teens and tweens in a society that is complex with technology and teens that have become more challenging than ever.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

