Order my debut book! - 5 Habits of the Tech-Ready Family đ
.webp)
.webp)
Careful with Cousins: Holiday Prep for Parents
â
The holidays are a wonderful time of year, with family gatherings, great memories, and plenty of chaos. However, digital risk often thrives when schedules disappear, and family members we donât see often, who might also have different digital rules, are suddenly present.
â
Iâve received too many calls from parents this time of year whose child heard something, searched something, and saw something they canât unsee. And all because of the time spent with cousins.
â
Here are three steps to help your family be âCareful with Cousinsâ this holiday season.
â
1. Prepare the Places Youâre Visiting
â
Before visiting a family memberâs or friendâs house, ask three simple questions:
- What tech will be there?Â
- What controls exist?Â
- Where will the tech be used?
â
Ideally, devices should be connected to filtered routers, filters should be activated on the devices themselves, and devices shouldnât be used in bedrooms. In general, the goal is to use as little tech as possible during family gatherings.
â
If the house youâre visiting has different digital rules, remember to own what you can control. That might mean being lovingly direct with whoever is hosting. It might mean bringing board games and other analog activities. It might mean setting expectations ahead of time.
â
If people visit your home, tell them about your familyâs digital rules before they arrive. Announce them again when they get there. Have a place where devices go, and model conversation and connection.
â
2. Prepare Your Kids
â
Cousins often share things, especially when new digital devices are being opened for the first time. There are four simple things you can practice with your kids before you go.
â
First, teach them to interrupt the moment. If someone says, âHey, look at this,â encourage your child to respond with, âWait, what is it? What are you trying to show me?â This small pause can break up the interaction and often reduces the chance that someone will show your child something inappropriate. This is a tried and true method we teach during our live presentations.
â
Second, teach them to trust their gut. That funny feeling they get when something feels off is important and often trustworthy. If something feels weird, it probably is! Remind your kids to trust their gut. And to come talk to you about whatever made them feel that way.
â
Third, make sure they have a clear exit plan. Put the device down, walk away, and tell a trusted adult. Hopefully, that person is you. When they do this, be calm, be curious, and be compassionate. Remind them that they can always land softly and safely with you.
â
Fourth, practice these situations ahead of time. Actually rehearse them. Role-play them. Make them concrete for your childâs developing brain. Test them by trying to show them your phone and see if they stop to ask you, âWhat do you want to show me?â Let them know that they can always come talk to you when they get that funny feeling, and they wonât be in trouble! For older kids, itâs helpful to bring everything into the light ahead of time. Be open and honest about what they might experience and remind them that they donât have to do what their cousins do.
â
3. Prepare Your Home for When You Return
â
Hereâs a common scenario after spending time with family. A child hears something from their cousins. They come home curious. Then they search for it.
â
If filters arenât strong enough, damage can happen fast.
â
So, after you return home from traveling during the holidays, be extra cautious with nighttime internet access. Maintain physical control of devices by avoiding the Toxic Trio (bedrooms, boredom, darkness).Â
â
By protecting your homeâs Wi-Fi with router-level controls, curious searches shouldnât cause egregious harm. This also works for old forgotten phones, tablets, âburnerâ devices, and guest devices. The right router protects even the devices you donât know about.
â
Itâs also important to be aware of incognito mode. Hidden browsing is common when kids know they shouldnât be searching for something. Make sure search history canât be erased without accountability. Not sure where to start? Consider our post about Blocking Porn for Free on Any Device.
â
See our Instagram posts (part 1, part 2, part 3) and Facebook posts (part 1, part 2, part 3) to learn more about this topic.

ÂżQuĂ© pasa si tengo mĂĄs preguntas? ÂżCĂłmo puedo mantenerme al dĂa?
â
ÂĄDos acciones que puedes tomar!
â
- If you have more questions:SuscrĂbase a nuestro boletĂn de tendencias tecnolĂłgicas, el book (or audiobook)! Supported by science, built on deep experience, biblical truth, and proven by thousands of success stories, 5 Habits of the Tech-Ready Family will help readers raise wise kids in a wild digital world. . Aproximadamente cada 3 semanas, compartiremos las novedades, lo que estĂĄ haciendo el equipo de PYE y un mensaje de Chris.
- Stay up to date: Subscribe to our tech trends newsletter, the PYE Download. Monthly, weâll share what families need to know, what the PYE team is up to, and a message from Chris.
â

Una carta de nuestro CEO
Lea sobre el compromiso de nuestro equipo de proporcionar a todos los usuarios de nuestra plataforma global la tecnologĂa que puede ayudarlos a avanzar.
Presentado en Childhood 2.0
Es un honor unirme a Bark y a otros increĂbles defensores en esta pelĂcula.
Presentador del Foro EconĂłmico Mundial
Se unió a una coalición de expertos mundiales para presentar sobre los daños de las redes sociales.
TestificĂł ante el Congreso
Compartimos nuestra investigación y experiencia con el Comité Judicial del Senado de los Estados Unidos.








