Pink refuses to let her young daughter use this common thing everyone uses – for one smart reason
Prev Article Next Article
Pink appears to be the coolest mom, and you may expect her to be overly lenient with her children, allowing them to absorb life lessons through their cellphones.
She, on the other hand, is not that type of parent and comes into the category of famous parents that limit or prohibit cellphone use.
Willow Sage (born June 2011) and Jameson Moon (born December 2016) are her two children with her husband Carey Hart, a professional motocross and motorcycle racer.
Pink, 43, stated to Carson Daly on The Today Show in February 2022 that she will not allow Willow, then ten years old, to use a cellphone.
“There’s a light side and a shadow side to technology in general for adults, as well. For kids, I’m not there yet. I have a 10-year-old who does not have a phone, although she pointed out to me yesterday, ‘You know most of the kids in my class have a phone.’ That doesn’t move my needle. I don’t care.”
Nonetheless, she recognizes the advantages of technology.”As parents, we can’t be dinosaurs; we have to sort of embrace and go with it,” she remarked. Pink believes in attachment parenting, which emphasizes close bonding with a kid.
Cover Me in Sunshine, a collaboration with Willow, was released in February 2021 by The Lady Marmalade vocalist. The lovely vocals of the mother-daughter duet harmonizing in the chorus are a fantastic example of her decision not to use technology as a babysitter.
The powerhouse vocalist, who appeared on the cover of People in 2018 with her two young children, stated in the interview that as a little kid, she didn’t have to form deep bonds with her parents, who both worked full-time.
Without technology to distract her, she reflects warmly on the bonds she made with her brother and with life. “My brother and I rode bikes to school and played in woods all day. Lots of rescuing animals, tree climbing, sports, gymnastics. I had a good childhood.”
She continued, “Yeah, I believe in affection. I believe in needs being met and faith being implemented, and I believe in letting your kids know they can count on you, and that you’ll be there. My parents obviously did not believe in that and I worked out okay. I always tell Willow, ‘I’m going to teach you the rules so that you’ll know how and when to break them.’”
Leave a Reply