Are you sure your child is just liking memes and texting friends?
A 2023 study in the Journal of Adolescent Health revealed a frightening truth: 67% of teens participate in online communities that their parents have no idea about.
Psychologist Liana Rotter , author of the bestselling book "Digital Generation: Who Raises Your Kids?", says: "Parents live under the illusion that they are in control. But teenagers are masters at hiding their digital lives."
Your child may be running a second account under a fake name. As 15-year-old Anya (not her real name) put it: “My mom thinks my Instagram is all cat photos. I actually have a page where I discuss depression with strangers.”
Experts from the Cyberpsychology Journal warn that such “doubles” often become a platform for risky experiments with identity.
Remember the Tide Pod Challenge? Today, teens participate in games like “Get Out of the House for 24 Hours” — escaping from home for the sake of social media likes.
Harvard psychiatrist Michael Smith says: "These challenges are a way to escape reality. But parents only find out about them when their child is hospitalized."
Teenagers are using encrypted messengers en masse to exchange prohibited content.
"My son downloaded the app to buy a fake ID for a party," says the father of 16-year-old Maxim. According to Forbes , 34% of teenagers have participated in such transactions at least once.
Games, streams, endless scrolling are not just “hobbies”.
Neurobiologist Emilia Clarke has proven that the brain of a teenager who spends 6+ hours on social networks changes in the same way as with gaming addiction. Her findings were confirmed by The Lancet : such children have a 40% higher risk of anxiety disorders.
Cyberbullying, leaking personal photos, bullying in closed chats - 58% of teenagers have encountered this, but only 12% have told their parents.
“My daughter spent a month hiding the fact that her classmates had created a fake account about her with obscene memes,” admits the mother of 14-year-old Katya.
What to do? Don’t panic, but take action. Dr. Rotter advises: “Replace surveillance with dialogue. Ask: What would you do if you encountered something dangerous online?”
An anonymous Pew Research Center survey found that 73% of teens are willing to open up if they feel supported, rather than controlled.