Maybe txting isn't so bad after all
Maybe txting isn't so bad after all
Teens and texting is a subject that's often discussed in pathological terms. They're texting in class! They're running up $5,000 bills! They need thumb therapy! But texting isn't always bad. In some families, it's become a primary form of communication between parents and children. In fact, one of my favorite texts from kids is the earth-shattering query "Wuz4dina?"
Yes, the finest technology offered by the 21st century is being used to pose the question hungry children have been asking since cavemen roasted mammoth bones over a fire: "What's for dinner?"
Psychologist Thomas W. Phelan, author of "Surviving Your Adolescents: How to Manage and Let Go of Your 13-18 Year Olds," says one of the biggest problems with teens is getting them to communicate at all, so if they're willing to text their parents, we should embrace the trend.
"Instead of seeing the whole text thing as an enemy, see it as an ally," Phelan said. "I've had parents say to me, 'I can't talk to my son very well face to face.'"
But if the kid is willing to use texts as a medium, go for it. "My philosophy is, 'Stay in touch.' E-mail, cell phone or text — it makes no difference to me," Phelan said.
Debbie Heisler Bastacky, a librarian who works outside of Baltimore, says her kids have a habit of texting her when they're standing right next to her.
"They text me when we're out visiting a place where they're bored and they want to go home," she said. "I'll get a text saying, 'Can we leave now?' or 'This is soooooo boring. Let's go home.' They don't just text me once. They text me every three minutes until they get a response."
Sometimes texts can even provide parents with peace of mind. Teens don't always check in or answer their cells, but they might just reply to your "R U OK?" text to show they safely reached their destination. Texts are also more discreet than phone calls, so kids can check in unobtrusively with parents without risking the ridicule of peers.
If cell reception is spotty or the teenager is in a noisy place like a party or concert, texting may be the best way to communicate. Leslie Palma-Simoncek of Holmdel, N.J., says that when her teenage sons see their favorite metal bands perform, she likes to get texts assuring her they haven't been swallowed up by the mosh pit.
But deciphering texts is not always easy for uncool old people, aka mom and dad. One of the first texts I got from my son a few years back seems obvious enough now, but at the time, I was befuddled. His message, seemingly sent out of the blue, consisted of one letter: "K."
K? What could that possibly mean?
A colleague asked if the text might be in response to something I'd asked my son to do. In fact, I had left him a cell phone message earlier that day reminding him about a school assignment. My colleague gently explained that "K'' stood for "OK," as in, "I got your message, I will take care of it."
"It's too much trouble to type the O?" was all I could sputter in response.
Phelan says one reason texting may scare parents is that "the power and knowledge has been inverted." In other words, kids know more about this than we do.
"One way to strengthen your relationship is to let the kids show you how to do it," Phelan said. "Let them teach you."
If you care to try learning the lingo on your own, several Web sites will instantly translate undecipherable text messages. Scrolling through the text glossary offered by the mobile phone company LG at http://LGDTXTR.com was a revelation to me. I learned terms like "MOS" — "mom over shoulder" — and "MEH" — which is not an acronym but an expression of apathy, as in "who cares, whatev."
At http://www.lingo2word.com you can even have your old-school mom-speak translated into a cool text message. "When are you going to clean your room" becomes "Wen RU gunA clean yr rm."
But I won't be sending that message any time soon, because I can already imagine the response: "MEH."
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- Posted on September 23, 2009
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Finally they found a good reason to text. We can actually say that texts can help us. This is actually a good thing, to text. We can actually use this in school because of how many notes we take and how fast you have to copy them down. Not everything on the outside of the situation is what you should judge it by. If people actually had time to understand they wouldn't be so confused on why we text and go on face book and all those other things we're associated with.
i dont thiink texting is bad because its just talking to your friends and haveing something to do every day i text everyday and its fun to text when your in vacation and talking to your friends about it.:)
I don't think texting is a bad idea because it teaches hand eye coordination. I also think it can teach creativity for making the words different.
My parents and I find texting a little bit easier for communication. I play softball and when I have practice it's easier for my mom or dad if they can just drop me off, and then during a water break, I could text them and that will give them some time to come and pick me up. It gives them time to do other stuff, like grocery shopping, or just peace of mind, I guess. The only problem is if one of us spells something wrong, the other gets confused and it's just a big mess. But other than that, it is a little bit easier than having to call them right after practice and then wait until they came.
No, I think its not a bad thing because i text all the time , whenever i want, and if i cant do it, it doesn't feel right at all.
I never thought txting was bad because I have a phone and my phone takes minutes so I going to have to text and who would think txting was a bad thing because a cell phone is good for people because it lets you text your friend your girlfriend if you have one and the most important is it lets you call a parent when something happens. And I want to know who think txting is a bad thing because it is not I need a cell phone and I have one but I can call but it will charge me cause I have minute I'm not on a plan like most people are.
Ya I never thought that it was a bad thing! I think texting is a really good way to communicate with your parents.Texting is also a really good way for teens to make new friends. I don't think that texting hurts your grades at all unless you aren't staying on task. No teen would want there parent to call them when there going to pick them up so they would txt them instead, Its way faster!!
I agree, Parents Really Shouldn't Stress Over Their Teens Textinq So Much. It Really Is A Good Thinq But The Parents Just Don't Get The Picture That Textinq is Bad. I Think Parents Should Just let Their Kids Text And Not Be Moody Bout It.
Told you it wasn't that bad after all . I text alot and I communicate very well so really it's not that bad. I text 24/7 and I still have good grades so people should stop saying that is bad your kids cause it's not. Also it's funner than talking on the phone you don't want your phone bill to be high.
The only way I communicate with my dad when I'm not home is through text. My mom, who lives in another state, only texts me.It is the easiest form of communication. Things are so much easier to say. Sometimes I find myself saying mhhmmm or mmkay and people don't understand what I'm saying, like the MEH so I have to explain it.