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The teens are not all right.
Young people are more bored than ever before βΒ and social media, apps meant for entertainment and engagement, is one of the culprits.
Santiago Gonzalez-Winthrop, 16, told Yahoo News that he used to be βexcitedβ to go home after school and do homework. Now, heβs chronically bored, βwatching the clock count byβ in class or dreading his familyβs digital βdetox days,β on which he craves his cell phone.
Screen time, he said, is his crutch for boredom, scrolling through Instagram, TikTok or other social media apps to see what his friends are up to.
But that leads to late-night doomscrolling that affects his sleep.
βI donβt even remember what Iβm seeing, honestly,β he admitted.
βAs soon as Iβm off my phone, I feel horrible, like, ashamed.β
Citing survey data from the organization Monitoring the Future, Yahoo News reported that boredom is on the rise among tweens and teens.
According to the stats, 45% of high school seniors responded that they βagreedβ or βmostly agreedβ with the statement βI am often boredβ in 2021, while 21% of eighth and 10th graders agreed. From 2014 data, those figures are up 37% for 12th graders and more than 13% for eighth graders and high school sophomores.
While those numbers were reported amid the COVID-19 pandemic, they spiked again in 2023, according to Yahoo News.
Kent Toussaint, a marriage and family therapist and Teen Therapy Centerβs founder and clinical director, told Yahoo News that the reported βboredomβ is just the βintoleranceβ of it.
βA lot of that is due to the constant screen use and having that ability to avoid boredom with the screen,β he explained.
βBoredom is the seed of creativity, but when people are avoiding boredom all the time, they never need to create, learn a skill, do art or go out and make friends.β
Thatβs why experts recommend letting kids be bored.
Dr. Carl Marci, a psychiatrist and author, told HuffPost that, after being bored for a while, his children will βstart to creatively solve their problems or distract themselves with social interaction or play,β which allows them to be curious and imaginative.
Constant access to personal devices and screens βΒ which feature βcontent designed primarily to capture a childβs attention and engage them as long as possibleβ β teach kids that βthey donβt have to ever be bored,β he added.
Smartphones, it seems, have killed curiosity βΒ a phenomenon that expands well beyond high school classrooms.
NYU Stern School of Business professor Jonathan Haidt, the author of βThe Anxious Generation,β recently told Business Insider that Gen Zβs scrolling habits have affected their ability to work
They βnever have a moment to reflect, they donβt have time to mull things over, they donβt have time to be creative,β he said, adding that the young generation has also altered their attention spans.
βThe decimation of human attention around the world might even be a bigger cost to humanity than the mental health and mental illness epidemic,β he said.