My Space

Myspace_logo_newsletterWhen the New York Times writes about My Space in the Thursday Styles, it has become mainstream.  The article, like media in general, creates fear and spin.  Parents are scared.  Your children are potential victims.  This is bad.  FBI agents are advising parents to examine this situation. 

I have 2 kids that use My Space.  It is their generations space to represent themselves.  Did parents freak when Elvis came on the scene?  Did they freak when the Rolling Stones came on the scene?  Did they freak when they grew their hair long and rebelled?  Answers to all of the above and more is yes, yes  yes.  Think about what you did growing up that your parents were scared of.  They were scared because they didn't understand the space and weren't sure how to teach you the tools to navigate the situation.

What I take from the article is to be intimately involved in what is happening with your kid.  There are tons of users of My Space.  It is impossible for a predator to pin point a kid who is not interested in finding the predator too.  If someone lets an unknown person in to their space and begins conversations with someone they don't know, yes, there could be consequences. The key here is talking to your kid.  Knowing what they are doing on the Internet.  Going to their site and checking it out.  Making sure that they are blocking people who they don't know to become "friends" on their site.  Kids who are looking for something will find it regardless of My Space.

Perhaps I sound naive and too trusting of our kids but we believe in making our kids feel like confident in their decisions by giving them our respect for their intellectual decision making.  It is a give and take relationship. Giving them our trust instills confidence and tools to navigate the world.  Yet, do we know what is going on with their use on the web?  Sure.  Do we discuss not talking to invisible strangers?  Sure.  Do we talk about what is appropriate to post and what is not when it comes to pictures?  Sure.  We have a continual open conversation about My Space, email and anything related to the web and their life in general.  Life in general covers school work, friends, music they are  into, their take on politics, sports, books, movies, their thoughts and how they feel.  Just liked we'd talk with our friends.  We are interested in their thoughts.

David Brooks also wrote an editorial in the Times today called Both Sides of Inequality.  Annette Lareau is a well known sociologist who has spent the last 20 years literally in American families living rooms watching them interact with their kids.  Her findings are quite interesting.  Working class child rearing is very different from upper middle class homes.  She writes that upper middle class homes spent a lot of time talking, involving themselves in their kids lives, allowing their kids to pass judgment in situations which in turn helps them to become better navigators of the world once they leave the nest.  Working class child rearing tends to have a starker difference between adults and children. Less talking, less decision making, less explanations for their choices.  These kids end up have a more difficult time navigating the world.  This is obviously generalized but she has spent the last 20 years researching this topic. 

I bring up this article with My Space because the disconnect in our society between the upper middle class and working families gets larger every day.  My Space is an area where kids can lose themselves, find new communities if they aren't happy with the one they live in, also enhance the community they love. We are now completely entrenched in this new world.  Perhaps we  should give some thought about our social differences and how we can help all kids navigate this world we live in with a clear picture of the downsides and upsides of the world wide web. 

Whether you like it or not, they are going to use My Space or other aspects of the web.  It is up to us as a community and parents to help our kids understand how to use all aspects of the web intelligently.  Telling them no only works until they understand how to do it without your knowledge. 

blog comments powered by Disqus

Joanne Wilson Joanne Wilson loves food, books, and music. She lives in New York City. Her husband Fred and children Jessica, Emily, and Josh are bloggers too. More »

gotham gal updates

RSS    Email updates    Gotham Gal Twitter updates

books of the moment

  • Jean Thompson: The Year We Left Home

    Jean Thompson: The Year We Left Home
    An American novel. We follow the lives of four Iowan siblings including a cousin and how their lives take different turns. An insight into life in the midwest and the family dynamics. Each chapter blends brilliantly into the next. Beautifully written.

  • Michelle Haimoff: These Days Are Ours

    Michelle Haimoff: These Days Are Ours
    Post 9/11 meets post college as young NYers return to their city after graduating. A super quick read with real characters. A glimpse of life in NYC, what is it like to follow in successful parents footsteps, the hardships of divorce, the difficulties of landing that first job and all the other angst that goes along at 20 years old. Really well done.

  • Georgia Pellegrini: Girl Hunter: Revolutionizing the Way We Eat, One Hunt at a Time

    Georgia Pellegrini: Girl Hunter: Revolutionizing the Way We Eat, One Hunt at a Time
    Girl Hunter is about a woman chef who fulfills her desire to really get back to the roots of cooking, killing what you eat. Pellegrini takes us through grouse hunts in the south to a weekend of hunts in England. As much as I appreciated her efforts and what she did, the book was just the same thing over and over. I wanted more. Each hunt, although different, was the same story each chapter. Conceptually, an interesting journey.

  • Bill Clegg: Ninety Days: A Memoir of Recovery

    Bill Clegg: Ninety Days: A Memoir of Recovery
    If you don't believe addiction is a disease, read this book. Keeping clean is the ability to just get through each day without suffering a setback. The separation between the head, knowing that you shouldn't and the desire is powerful. A terrible disease....and that is exactly what it is, a disease.

  • Alexis Maybank and Alexandra Wilkis Wilson: By Invitation Only: How We Built Gilt and Changed the Way Millions Shop

    Alexis Maybank and Alexandra Wilkis Wilson: By Invitation Only: How We Built Gilt and Changed the Way Millions Shop
    Really well done. Every entrepreneur should read it. They lay out exactly how they want from an idea to a multi-million dollar company and all the heartache, sweat and hard work that goes in between. Bravo.

  • Suzanne Collins: The Hunger Games

    Suzanne Collins: The Hunger Games
    Had to read this book after seeing the movie. The book is a quick read and well written. I saw the movie first so I thought they did a really good job of taking the book to the screen. I found the movie much more disturbing than the book. In the book, as always, you get better insight into what is going through the main characters head and perhaps that is why I didn't find it as upsetting. The main character is totally disturbed with the times they are living in which includes the Hunger Games that she has been picked to play in. Definitely finishing the trilogy.

  • Lauren Groff: Arcadia

    Lauren Groff: Arcadia
    This is the 3rd book that I have read of Groffs. She is an incredible writer with an interesting perspective and insight into people. Arcadia is set in upstate NY at a communal farm, true hippies. We get to meet all the characters through the eyes of a young child, Bit. As the years go by Arcadia falls apart and Bit has to live in the real world. I really loved the book. Amazing cast of interesting complex characters.

  • Rosie Alison: The Very Thought of You: A Novel

    Rosie Alison: The Very Thought of You: A Novel
    During WWII, in London, many children were displaced around the countryside. We learn about a mixture of characters who have been lost, loved and betrayed by relationships. War does strange things and this story is a small glimpse into just a few people and how that war affected them for years to come. Great first novel.

  • Jessica Maria Tuccelli: Glow: A Novel

    Jessica Maria Tuccelli: Glow: A Novel
    Unbelievable writing for a first time novelist. We follow 6 generations of a family who begins in slavery. In all honesty, I had a hard time following the book. It is dense and you seriously need to follow every sentence. Not that easy for me.

  • Chad Harbach: The Art of Fielding: A Novel

    Chad Harbach: The Art of Fielding: A Novel
    First novelist that was rejected by every publishing house until one young up and coming kid saw something in this book. Not quite sure why nobody saw anything in this book before as so much crap gets published. A great story that takes place on a college campus in Wisconsin all centered around the game of baseball. Really well written about a group of interesting characters with many flaws but manage to move forward in their lives. Really liked it.

  • Grace McCleen: The Land of Decoration: A Novel

    Grace McCleen: The Land of Decoration: A Novel
    UK writers first novel. An incredible book about a widowed father and his daughter who are religious zealots in a factory town. Faith works in strange ways. Really enjoyed the book. A real gem of a book that subtly speaks volumes about one aspect of society. A winner.

  • Liz Moore: Heft: A Novel

    Liz Moore: Heft: A Novel
    the opening pages made me just laugh. quirky book about two peoples lives that intersect at the beginning and the end yet are always present in each of their individual stories. a tremendously overweight man who never leaves his house and a woman who met him in her youth. we follow their lives and the people who come into them. a book about lonely people and although it is sad there is something endearing about the book. really enjoyed it.

  • Julie Orringer: The Invisible Bridge (Vintage Contemporaries)

    Julie Orringer: The Invisible Bridge (Vintage Contemporaries)
    I loved this book...cried at parts and cried at the end. We follow a Hungarian family, but mostly one of the sons, as he begins his education in Paris pre-WWII until the war ends. A beautifully written saga of a Jewish family living through terrible times. Bravo!

  • Amor Towles: Rules of Civility: A Novel

    Amor Towles: Rules of Civility: A Novel
    Set in NYC in 1930 we follow a young woman through her career and life. Definitely a woman before her time. Really enjoyed the book. Katherine Hepburn could have played the lead!

  • Gail Simmons: Talking with My Mouth Full: My Life as a Professional Eater

    Gail Simmons: Talking with My Mouth Full: My Life as a Professional Eater
    Loved it. If you love food and the industry that has sprouted across the globe, read it!