[b]Video games not necessarily turning kids' brains to mush
It's summer vacation. The kids have acres of time to fill. So, of course, they're in the basement playing some video game that involves either weapons or skateboards.
Who can doubt that their minds are turning into chipped beef on toast as they sit in the dim light, their educations and social lives leaking away? As a conscientious baby boomer parent, I feel a gravitational pull to say these words: "Turn that off and read a book!"
Ref. https://www.usatoday.com/tech/columnist/kev… deo-games_x.htm
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"With most video games, at every point you have to make decisions," |
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"And whatever the benefits of reading, you are not making decisions," Johnson says. "You are following someone else's decisions." |
*laugh*, yeah I understand what you are saying KN. I use video games to reduce stress at time too. Sometimes we need that release mechanism to blow off steam. It used to be we just went out and killed a Woolly Mammoth for the gatherers, but we can't do that any more… so video games has taken the place of that. And I mean that quite literally. We are hunters, it's in our DNA, the fact that we can't is leading to frustrations I think.