Technology accelerates childhood experience and decision-making while children developmentally need slower time to integrate learning and form identity.
Laozi speaks of time with paradoxical understanding: rushing creates fatigue, while waiting creates readiness. Modern technology compresses childhood into an accelerated timeline. Children encounter social complexity, decision-making, and information density at speeds their developing brains struggle to integrate. A second-grader navigates peer drama instantly visible on screens; a teenager makes permanent public statements before their prefrontal cortex matures. Yet the response cannot simply be "slow everything down," as technology itself carries unavoidable momentum. Taoist wisdom suggests instead creating deliberate pockets of deceleration within an accelerated world. Establishing device-free times isn't restrictive but restorative—it allows the nervous system to settle and integrate experience. The debate benefits from recognizing this deeper truth: children need time moving at different speeds, and technology's constant acceleration without intentional counterbalance exhausts developing minds. Creating rhythm, not rigidity, addresses the temporal injury.
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