GetDeAddicted

GetDeAddicted LLC

Get De-Addicted is a digital wellness podcast focused on smartphone addiction, screen time reduction, and mindful technology use. Learn the science behind dopamine loops, infinite scrolling, notifications, and social media overuse. Each episode shares practical digital detox strategies to improve focus, productivity, mental clarity, and attention in an always-connected world. Designed for kids, teens, parents, and professionals who want healthier screen habits.

  1. 11시간 전

    Social Media and Teen Anxiety: The Real Reason Mental Health Has Collapsed Since 2010

    Why have teen anxiety, depression, self-harm, and suicide rates exploded since roughly 2010? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we examine the overwhelming evidence linking the rise of smartphones and social media to one of the most alarming mental health crises in modern history — and unpack the psychological mechanisms quietly hurting an entire generation. We explore how peer validation loops, quantified social feedback (likes, follows, views, streaks), and 24/7 social comparison have transformed adolescence into a high-stakes performance with no off-switch. Drawing on research from Jonathan Haidt, Jean Twenge, and leading adolescent psychologists, we show how social media doesn't just reflect teen insecurities — it manufactures and amplifies them. In this episode we cover: The post-2010 collapse in teen mental health — and the data that points straight to smartphonesHow quantified feedback (likes, views, follower counts) hijacks the adolescent need for belongingThe neuroscience of social comparison and why it's especially damaging during pubertyWhy girls and boys experience social media harm in different — but equally serious — waysThe role of filters, beauty algorithms, and curated feeds in body image and self-esteem declineHow "fear of missing out" (FOMO) and online drama keep teen nervous systems on high alertWhat Jonathan Haidt's The Anxious Generation reveals about the great rewiring of childhoodEvidence-based steps parents, schools, and teens can take to push backThis is essential listening for parents, educators, therapists, teens, and anyone who wants to understand — and reverse — the teen mental health crisis. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, mental health, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.

    10분
  2. 1일 전

    Why Kids Are Losing Interest in School: The Hidden Role of Smartphones and Instant Gratification

    Why do so many kids today say school is "boring"? Why are teachers reporting plummeting attention spans, declining motivation, and students who simply can't sit with a challenging problem? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we explore the collision between two completely opposite reward systems — the slow, delayed-gratification world of school, and the instant-gratification world that smartphones, games, and short-form video have trained kids' brains to expect. School is built on a model that requires patience, effort, and delayed reward: study now, get the grade later; practice now, master the skill later; struggle now, understand later. Screens, on the other hand, deliver hits of dopamine within seconds — every swipe, every notification, every video. Once a child's brain is conditioned to expect instant rewards, the natural pace of learning starts to feel unbearable. In this episode we cover: The neuroscience of delayed vs. instant gratification — and why one builds the brain while the other erodes itHow smartphones have rewired children's tolerance for boredom, effort, and difficultyWhy teachers are reporting a dramatic drop in focus, persistence, and intrinsic motivationThe link between heavy screen use, declining test scores, and falling reading levelsHow dopamine dysregulation makes deep learning, reading, and math feel "impossible"The hidden role of phones in the global classroom attention crisisPractical strategies for parents and educators to rebuild focus, patience, and love of learningBacked by research from neuroscientists, educators, and developmental psychologists, this is essential listening for parents, teachers, school leaders, and anyone who cares about the future of education. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, attention, learning, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.

    11분
  3. 2일 전

    Gaming, Reels & Reward Conditioning: How Apps Hijack the Brain's Dopamine System

    Why can't kids — or adults — stop scrolling TikTok, Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, or that "just one more round" video game? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we pull back the curtain on the science of reward conditioning and reveal how modern apps and games are engineered to create hyper-reactive dopamine systems that make natural rewards feel boring by comparison. Drawing on decades of behavioral neuroscience, we explore variable reinforcement — the same mechanism that makes slot machines so addictive — and supernormal stimuli, the artificially exaggerated rewards that hijack instincts the brain evolved over millions of years. From loot boxes and streaks to infinite scroll and algorithmic feeds, today's most popular apps aren't just entertaining: they're behavioral training programs. In this episode we cover: The neuroscience of dopamine: motivation, reward prediction, and cravingHow variable reinforcement schedules drive compulsive behavior (and why your brain can't resist)What "supernormal stimuli" are and why Reels, Shorts, and TikTok exploit them so effectivelyHow gaming mechanics like loot boxes, streaks, XP, and randomized rewards condition young brainsWhy short-form video may be uniquely damaging to attention, patience, and motivationThe link between heavy short-form video use and anhedonia, brain fog, and "TikTok brain"Evidence-based strategies to reset dopamine sensitivity and reclaim attentionThis is essential listening for parents, teens, educators, gamers, and anyone who has ever wondered why their phone feels impossible to put down. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, dopamine, attention, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.

    11분
  4. 3일 전

    Are Smartphones Disrupting Puberty? The Emerging Science on Phones, Hormones & Sleep

    Could your child's smartphone be quietly disrupting their hormones? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we dive into the emerging science connecting smartphone use, blue light exposure, and major disruptions to puberty, sleep, and the broader endocrine system. Hormones are the body's chemical messengers — controlling everything from growth and mood to reproduction, metabolism, and the sleep-wake cycle. New research suggests that the late-night scrolling, constant blue light exposure, and chronic overstimulation that come with smartphones may be interfering with melatonin production, cortisol rhythms, and the delicate hormonal cascade that powers adolescent development. In this episode we cover: How blue light from screens suppresses melatonin and delays sleep onsetThe link between poor sleep, elevated cortisol, and stunted growth, mood, and recoveryWhat emerging studies reveal about smartphone use and earlier or disrupted pubertyHow chronic stress signaling from notifications and social media affects the HPA axisThe connection between screen time, weight gain, insulin resistance, and metabolic healthWhy teen girls and boys may experience hormonal disruption differentlyEvidence-based steps families can take to protect circadian rhythms and endocrine healthDrawing on research from endocrinologists, sleep scientists, and pediatric specialists, this is essential listening for parents, teens, healthcare professionals, and anyone curious about the long-term biological impact of life with a smartphone. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, hormones, brain development, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.

    9분
  5. 4일 전

    Early Screens and Emotional Regulation: Why Tablets Are Stunting Your Child's Coping Skills

    Is handing your child a phone or tablet to calm them down quietly making things worse? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we explore one of the most overlooked harms of early screen use — the loss of emotional regulation skills that children are supposed to build in their first decade of life. When screens become digital pacifiers, kids don't just get distracted from their feelings — they miss the crucial reps needed to develop frustration tolerance, patience, self-soothing, and the internal capacity to sit with uncomfortable emotions. Over time, this can show up as bigger meltdowns, shorter fuses, anxiety, and difficulty handling boredom, disappointment, or transitions. In this episode we cover: Why emotional regulation is a learned skill — and how it's built moment by momentThe neuroscience of co-regulation: how kids borrow calm from caregivers before developing their ownHow screens short-circuit the "discomfort → coping → growth" cycleThe link between early screen soothing and rising rates of childhood anxiety and meltdownsWhy frustration tolerance is one of the strongest predictors of long-term successWhat recent studies reveal about toddlers who are regularly handed devices to calm downPractical, realistic alternatives for car rides, restaurants, waiting rooms, and tough moments at homeThis is essential listening for parents, caregivers, teachers, therapists, and anyone who wants to raise emotionally resilient kids in a world full of screens. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, brain development, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.

    10분
  6. 5일 전

    The Hidden Cost of Screen Time in Early Childhood (0–8 Years): What Every Parent Needs to Know

    What is screen time really doing to babies, toddlers, and young children? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we expose the silent cognitive damage that can happen between birth and age 8 — the most critical window for brain development in a child's entire life. While most conversations about phone addiction focus on teens, the youngest children may be the most vulnerable of all. We unpack how early screen exposure disrupts language acquisition, weakens imaginative play, shortens attention spans, and quietly undermines the foundational cognitive architecture kids need to thrive in school and life. In this episode we cover: Why the first 8 years are the most rapid period of brain growth — and why it mattersHow screens displace the "serve and return" interactions babies need for language developmentThe research linking early screen time to speech delays, weaker vocabulary, and reduced empathyWhy unstructured, imaginative play is essential for executive function — and how screens steal itThe American Academy of Pediatrics, WHO, and CDC guidelines for screen time by ageHow "educational" apps and shows often deliver far less learning than parents are toldPractical, low-guilt strategies to protect young minds without going screen-free overnightDrawing on research from developmental psychologists, pediatricians, and leading neuroscientists, this is essential listening for parents of young children, grandparents, early childhood educators, and pediatric professionals. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on screens, brain development, and raising healthy kids in the digital age.

    10분
  7. 6일 전

    How Screen Time Changes a Teen's Brain | Synaptic Pruning, Dopamine & Overstimulation Explained

    What happens inside a teenager's brain when they spend hours a day on a smartphone? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we go deep into the neuroscience of adolescent brain development — and reveal how excessive screen time may be quietly rewiring which neural pathways survive into adulthood. We unpack synaptic pruning, the brain's "use it or lose it" process that peaks during adolescence, and explore how the activities a young person repeats during these critical years literally shape the architecture of their adult mind. You'll learn how chronic overstimulation from notifications, short-form video, and endless scrolling can strengthen reward-seeking circuits while weakening the pathways tied to focus, patience, empathy, and deep thinking. In this episode we cover: What synaptic pruning is and why ages 10–25 are a critical windowHow dopamine, novelty, and variable rewards train the teenage brainThe science of overstimulation — and why "boredom" is essential for healthy brain growthHow screen time competes with sleep, exercise, and face-to-face interaction (the activities the brain needs most)What recent neuroimaging studies reveal about heavy smartphone usersPractical steps to protect developing neural pathways without going fully off-gridBacked by research from leading neuroscientists and developmental psychologists, this is essential listening for parents, educators, therapists, and anyone curious about how modern technology is reshaping the next generation's minds. 🎧 Part of our Phone Addiction series — subscribe for new episodes on digital wellness, attention, and raising healthy kids in the smartphone age.

    8분
  8. 5월 26일

    Why Smartphones Are Dangerous for Kids Under 14 | The Hidden Risks Every Parent Must Know

    Are smartphones harming your child's developing brain? In this episode of the Phone Addiction podcast, we break down why giving a smartphone to a child under 14 may be one of the most consequential decisions a parent can make. We dive into the science behind adolescent brain development, the link between early smartphone use and rising rates of anxiety, depression, sleep deprivation, and attention problems, and how social media algorithms are designed to hijack young minds. Drawing on research from Jonathan Haidt's The Anxious Generation, Jean Twenge, and leading neuroscientists, we explore why ages 10–14 are a critical window — and what's really happening to kids who get phones too soon. You'll learn: Why the prefrontal cortex makes under-14s especially vulnerable to addictionThe connection between smartphone ownership and teen mental health declineHow dopamine loops, infinite scroll, and notifications rewire young brainsWhat "phone-free childhood" movements (like Wait Until 8th) recommendPractical alternatives: dumb phones, delayed access, and family tech agreementsWhether you're a parent, teacher, grandparent, or teen yourself, this episode gives you the evidence and tools to make smarter decisions about kids and screens. 🎧 Subscribe for new episodes on phone addiction, digital wellness, and reclaiming attention in the smartphone age. Keywords to weave in (already included above): phone addiction, smartphone addiction, kids and screens, screen time, teen mental health, anxious generation, Jonathan Haidt, social media and teens, phone-free childhood, Wait Until 8th, digital wellness, parenting in the digital age. Tip for Spotify: keep the first 1–2 sentences punchy — they're what shows in previews and search snippets. Want me to draft a shorter version (under 200 characters) for the episode subtitle field too?

    8분

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Get De-Addicted is a digital wellness podcast focused on smartphone addiction, screen time reduction, and mindful technology use. Learn the science behind dopamine loops, infinite scrolling, notifications, and social media overuse. Each episode shares practical digital detox strategies to improve focus, productivity, mental clarity, and attention in an always-connected world. Designed for kids, teens, parents, and professionals who want healthier screen habits.