Yes. I think parents are remarkably unaware. We know this from studies. There's an organization in the United States called Common Sense Media that has conducted a lot of studies into this area. What they find is that parents routinely underestimate their children's social media use and exposure to content that they would never allow.
That's a problem. There is this gigantic gap between what is happening in children's lives and what parents think is happening in their lives, which speaks to deeper issues maybe. But in terms of social media by itself, generally speaking, parents are not using these media and don't necessarily understand how their children are using them.
So, what I say to teenagers and even younger children is that we kind of think about mentoring as older, experienced people teaching younger people, and I think it has to be inverted. I really think that young children, as young as 10, 11, and 12, should be mentoring adults. They should be saying, “Hey, let me show you this”, because once you can have that conversation it becomes a much more routine and intimate way of talking about things. It doesn't become something you only talk about when it's a problem.