Cyber child abuse

Bill Fletcher, Jr.
Bill Fletcher, Jr.

Cyber child abuse

By Bill Fletcher, Jr. NNPA Columnist

I was strolling down a very busy Broadway in New York City a couple of weeks ago.  It was a very nice Saturday and it seemed like everyone was out walking and shopping.  In front of me was a woman and her very young child (maybe 3-or 4-years-old).  The woman was completely entranced by her cell phone.  She was texting away.  Her daughter was walking a few steps behind her and was meandering around.  My wife and I found this very unsettling.  So, too, did two young men who were approaching us.  They looked at each other and got ready to say something to the young mother.  My wife beat them to the punch, telling the woman that she needed to pay attention to her child because someone could simply grab the child since the mother appeared completely oblivious to the surroundings.  The mother grunted –  there is no other way to describe it – and yelled to her child to stay with her.  As we crossed the street I looked behind me and noticed that, while the daughter was closer to her mother, the mother was back at texting.

This all reminded me of an episode from Star Trek:  The Next Generation, where members of the crew discover this toy that completely captivates them to the point that they can do nothing but play with it.

On another recent day, I saw a mother and her child walking to school with the mother texting away, ignoring the child altogether. Let me be clear.  I use my cell phone regularly. But what I am seeing is not simply the usage of cell phones.  Rather, it is the cell replacing real human contact. It is the cell as a narcotic.  The woman in NYC had completely lost focus.  Her child could have vanished in a nano-second and she would not have noticed.

Yet, there is another aspect to this.  When I was a child and with my parents, my parents would talk with me.  I do not mean that I was the center of every conversation, but we spoke about all sorts of things.  If a parent is focused on that cell –  and  dollars to donuts they are not cutting deals for some hedge fund or handling major issues in their organizations – they cannot pay attention to the questions that the child might be asking or might wish to ask.

Let me put it even more directly in case I have been too subtle:  what is so important in that cell phone that one feels comfortable ignoring a child?

About Carma Henry 24690 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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