By Anne Maheux — 2021
The amount of time teenagers spend on social media isn’t the only thing that matters. So does how they use it.
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CLEAR ALL
While many technology experts and scholars have concerns about the social, political and economic fallout from the spread of digital activities, they also tend to report that their own experience of digital life has been positive.
Many Native people have found innovative ways throughout the pandemic to continue sharing their culture despite physical distancing restrictions. Social media groups have provided some remedies, in ways that may continue after the pandemic wanes.
Anyone who's ever had the experience of feeling “grokked”—truly seen, known and understood by another—knows the experience at the heart of Circling, an open-source brand of communal conversation—some call it “relational yoga”—which is now practiced in over 60 communities in 45 states and 12...
Want to get more out of your relationships? Be bold and shrink your social circle.
Want to grow your well-being? Here are the skills you need.
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Your emotional health is key to a happy life.
It is significant that many churches that once eschewed technology are now using it regularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. Further theological reflection aside, what impacts will the ways we use technology now have on the church over the years to come?
Diversity can be a great strength, but it is susceptible to manipulation when not accompanied by community leaders from all backgrounds willing and able to bridge across difference.