Today’s children are digital natives, born into a world of smartphones, social media, and constant connectivity while parents remain digital immigrants — learning the language, but never quite native speakers.
The greatest global generational differences are in the digital divide, where young people are more reliant on social media and more convinced of the benefits of life online.
We’re not just dealing with different preferences. We’re dealing with different neural architectures. Different ways of processing reality. Different definitions of what it means to be human.
The question isn’t whether technology is good or bad. The question is: How do we build bridges between two completely different ways of being alive? How do we find our footing in their world, so we can teach them to not just survive, but to thrive?
The answer starts with understanding that this isn’t about restriction or permissiveness. It’s about translation. It’s about building what I call the Common Sense Firewall — not to keep technology out, but to help families navigate it together, blend analog and digital with wisdom, purpose, and genuine connection.
Because when we break it down to basics, we are all still humans, and we still crave the same things: to be known, to be understood, and to be loved.