A quiet crisis we don't talk about enough At a recent school meeting, a therapist asked a group of parents to name a few apps their children use. Then a few games. Then some popular YouTubers. The room fell silent. One parent could name them all. The rest? Not a single hand. Some laughed nervously. Others looked down. It wasn't ignorance. It was distance. That moment stayed with me. Not because of the silence, but because of what it reveals. We've handed our children a digital world we barely understand. A world that shapes how they think, who they admire, what they believe is "normal". A world where they're growing up, often without us. Jakub's post, which sparked this reflection, was both honest and gentle. He didn't mock anyone. He simply described what he saw. And the comments that followed were full of the same quiet concern: parents who feel lost, or late, or unsure how to begin. Some admitted they only knew Facebook. Not a single game. Not a sin...