GINTA: The antidote to internet challenges is presence — the real kind
LIKE ALL PARENTS WITH SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN, I received the district heads-up letter about the Momo challenge. By now most are familiar with the strange, creepy face of the Momo character and the internet storm it has created. My eldest had heard about it, while my youngest had not. I passed on the heads-up. They shrugged. “There are just so many wacky things out there,” my eldest said.
True. The many things that lurk in the virtual darkness of the internet are not reduced to Momo or another challenge. It’s an ongoing thing. There are controversial videos and memes that are inappropriate for kids but they access anyway because they are there; there is pornography (see Katie Neustaeder’s column from last week); there are violent or troublesome-imagery games parents sometimes approve as okay because ‘so many people are doing it so it must be fine’ – which only confuses things.
We can all agree that whoever created Momo has a sick, twisted mind — but then again, that is the category we can (almost) place so many of today’s online happenings, including the addictive features of apps and games. As we know, children respond scarily well to that and get hooked easily.
The reality is, the internet murkiness and disturbing-at-times content will not go away. I say this with profound sadness. I grew up without the internet and loved it, and I love it even more now, retrospectively. It had all the magic in it a kid could want.