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Stranger Danger in the Digital Age – it’s much harder to spot

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Wherever the Children Are Online, is Also Where the Predators Are - FACT.

A grim reality unfortunately. I remember being taught about Stranger Danger and being told never to take sweets from someone I didn’t know. Then as I got older and ventured out in my late teens, my parents would talk to me about not getting in cars with people I didn’t know or if the driver had had a drink. Don’t take short cuts walking home, always stay on main, well-lit roads. Thankfully I took on board their advice and through a mixture of (mostly) sensible choices and luck, nothing bad happened to me.  

Fast forward to 2022 and that comes no way near the conversations we need to be having with our children now. AND they need to be starting the minute they start accessing the online world.  Not waiting until they’re 17 and heading out with their friends.

Kids get harassed, groomed and bullied online - FACT.

That is not to say every child will be, and hopefully as you are here now, you’ll be putting everything in your power in place to minimise that risk BUT every child who is online IS at risk of it happening.

As with all sensitive or worrying topics, this one also needs to be approached with calm and focus. If we as the parents are having panic attacks and reacting with hysteria then this will do nothing to calm our child and build a two-way relationship for future conversations, and there’s going to be a LOT of conversations!

Sexual predators can be much more variable online and easily disguised.

We can often think this term applies to someone who would try and meet up with a child for a sexual encounter. In the digital world though, this can also be people who ‘get off’ by engaging in sexualized conversations on text or email, or sending young people sexualized images and encouraging them to return something similar or take them into group conversations with other predators. We need to make sure our children are prepared for any of these scenarios.

Think of this – when it comes to TikTok, Snapchat, Roblox, Discord, Instagram and so on – who is a stranger? When you ‘feel’ like you know someone because you can see their photos, their pets, they talk about their likes and dislikes and are just so friendly?! Everyone looks and seems so nice. So, what do we do?

We need to teach our children how to identify a stranger (and potential danger) not by what they look like but by what they talk like online.

We need to educate them on how to spot potential risky people by the way they behave and interact online.

Here are a few examples you could talk through with them. Open up each one to learn more

What are your hobbies? Who’s your best friend? Do your parents annoy you? – mine do!

You’re so funny, pretty, cool etc, I wish I had a friend as funny as you. Some of the most dangerous people online are initially some of the nicest!

Let’s keep this between us – your other friends/family wouldn’t understand

Why you being mean? Why won’t you talk to me now? You’re making me really sad 🙁 

Hey – do you have a Venmo account? I’d like to send you some money for Christmas/birthday

Send me a nude photo or I’ll tell your parents something really bad about you.

After going through all of the above then make sure your child knows that they CAN walk away from any conversation online at ANYTIME for ANY REASON. They are in control.

We often spend a lot of time talking to our children about manners and alongside the P&Q’s that can include not interrupting people when they are talking and certainly not just walking off when someone is mid-way through saying something. But here is where we need to ensure our children know this is different online. Teach them to tap into their intuition or ‘gut instinct’ and use it. They are not being mean or rude by walking away. They are being sensible and smart!

How can Parents Protect Against Online Predators?

Too late! My child has already been contacted by a predator!

Take a breath and be grateful you have found out. Then:

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