In the middle of 2026, a childhood without mobile phones sounds impossible. A town in Ireland is doing it

Greystones is a small town on the coast of Ireland, more specifically in County Wicklow. 22,000 inhabitants, semi-detached houses, coastal landscapes, a railway network which allows you to reach Dublin in just over half an hour… A priori, it is the perfect town to enjoy a peaceful life just a stone’s throw from the bustling Irish capital, where companies such as Google or Apple. However, in recent years the town has been in the news for another, very different reason: his crusade against the use of smartphones among the children. His case shows that it is still possible to live a cell phone-free childhood. What has happened? That the small town of Greystones (Ireland) has strived to teach the world a lesson: to show that in 2026 it is possible to keep children away from mobile phones, Instagram, TikTok and the rest of social networks. We just need to join forces to change the sign of social pressure. The initiative is actually not new. Greystones launched their crusade in 2023when it already aroused the curiosity of the rest of the world. However, the unknown remained as to how the experience would turn out. Now we already know. Where does the idea come from? The debate around what age Children should start using mobile phones or social networks and the influence that these have on them is not new. It’s not a concern unique to Greystones, either. There however it happened something interesting during the pandemic. When students returned to classrooms after lockdown, Rachael Harper, headteacher at St Patrick’s School, found that some children were having trouble sleeping or struggling to concentrate. She wasn’t the only one to notice. Other colleagues confirmed that they perceived similar attitudes among their primary school students. What caused them? It didn’t take long for teachers to focus on the use of cell phones. They even encountered children who controlled their calories with apps. Eoghan Cleary, a teacher at another Greystones school, also found that his students admitted seeing violent content on the Internet. The sum of all these factors led several primary schools to send a survey to around 800 parents When asked about the topic: more than half acknowledged that they noticed their children were anxious. In some cases they had even sought professional help. It was enough for the city to decide to make a move. What exactly did he do? We mentioned it before: join forces. Eight primary schools in the Greystones and Delgany area came together to launch an initiative they named ‘It Takes a Village’ (‘It takes a whole village’). Its main tool was the ‘voluntary code without smartphones’, a community pact that basically encourages residents to prohibit children from using mobile phones during their primary education period. In practice this is equivalent to keeping young people away from networks and smartphones until they turn 12 and enter secondary school. The pact is of course voluntary, free and failing to comply with it does not result in fines, but the idea is that whoever signs it applies it both at school and at home. Were you that worried about the issue? It seems so. “As principal of St. Patricks Elementary School I have observed growing concern among parents and teachers,” Harper admitted in 2023 in a column opinion published in Guardian. “The level of anxiety of children in schools has grown steadily, since easy access to online and mobile content has become a threat to childhood. We felt the need to act. The process started with a realization: childhood is becoming increasingly shorter.” Has it worked? That was three years ago. Now we finally know how the initiative is working. Recently The New York Times dedicated an extensive report in which, among other issues, it confirms that the campaign has had a more than reasonable reception. They have supported her 70% of parents and above all it has penetrated the town, moving to businesses and politicians. He has even made his mark beyond Wicklow. Shortly after it was launched ‘Smartphone Free Chilhood’a citizen movement that advocates delaying children’s access to smartphones at least up to 14 years. How has he achieved it? In 2023, Harper herself insisted in that, if it really wanted to work, the initiative had to go beyond the classrooms. “It’s not about enforcing a code. It’s about building a strong network of services that helps children, families and teachers deal with anxiety-related challenges.” The report of The New York Times suggests that goal is also being achieved at Greystones. Beyond what parents do at home, the campaign is completed with training workshops and events such as phone-free beach parties. Even with the commitment of local businesses. For example, one store has offered to help children who need to locate their parents. Is it so important? Yes. And for a simple reason. The very name of the initiative (‘It takes a whole village’) makes it clear that, to succeed, the campaign must play with collective pressure. And it seems that he is achieving it. “In networks everything is collective. Addressing it jointly is the best option,” recognize Jennifer Whitmore, member of the Irish parliament and mother in Greystones. In other words: delaying a child’s access to mobile phones and social platforms is very easy when they are surrounded by other kids of the same age who also do not use them. “What Greystones demonstrates is that parents and communities are not powerless,” agree Clearly. Is it that dangerous? Harper insist in that the initiative is not based on “anti-technology stances” nor does it want to deny children the use of smartphones. The key lies rather in rethinking the times and what it means to have a mobile phone. “Our goal is to ensure that they are adequately prepared and emotionally capable to take on the responsibility that comes with having a smartphone when accessing secondary education”, claims before citing a UNESCO report that suggests it can take up to 20 minutes for a child to concentrate … Read more

to think that the beach of your childhood was going to be how you remember it

For decades, coastal architecture was built on such a simple idea as wrongas if the beach of our childhood, the same one we retain in our memories, were going to remain intact forever. Matalascanas is the most recent reminder of a failure of origin: beaches are not everlasting decorations, they are borders that sooner or later are eaten by the ocean. A poorly thought out coast. In Matalascanasthe sea no longer advances in the abstract or in technical reports: it is literally entering the courtyardsdemolishes beach bars and turns boardwalks into twisted rubble. What for decades was a wide, stable beach has lost its protective sand, leaving homes and infrastructure exposed to increasingly stormy weather. more frequent and intense. Built in the sixties and seventies in a high natural erosion zonewithout studies of coastal dynamics and dune systems that acted as a barrier, urbanization embodies the clash between an architecture designed for a fixed sea and a coast that was always in motion. The storms of 2026 have done nothing more than accelerate an announced process for years, generating a feeling of abandonment and urgency in neighbors who see how emergency solutions arrive late and are never definitive. Exception turned into routine. What happened after Storm Francis was not an isolated episode, but rather the start of a sequence. Just weeks later, a new storm has once again placed water at the doors of houses, sweeping away beach bars and reopening unclosed wounds. Erosion is no longer a future threat but has become in a permanent stateaggravated by the lack of coordination between administrations and by provisional actions that barely buy time. In Matalascañas it is no longer discussed whether the sea will advance, but rather how much and at what pacewhile the natural balance that allowed the beach to recover after storms has been broken for two decades. Matalascañas Plug Science takes on the unthinkable. What neighbors experience as a local tragedy, science has been formulating for some time as a global dilemma. Studies in the UK in 2022 now they had warned that hundreds of thousands of coastal homes could be exposed or directly abandoned in a few decades, because protecting them will be economically and technically unfeasible. The message is uncomfortable, but quite clear: there will be communities that must retreat inland. The sea not only rises, it also erodes the beaches and raises the point from which the waves break, multiplying the impact of each storm and rendering many traditional defenses useless. Map of the Earth with a sea level rise of six meters depicted in red Beaches and economies at risk. On a planetary scale, the erosion of sandy beaches is advancing rapidly. uneven but persistent. A significant part of the world’s sandbanks is already receding and projections point to severe losses before mid-century. Tourism, frontline urbanization, ports, dams and dune destruction have eliminated natural reservoirs of sand that allowed the beaches to adapt. In regions highly dependent on coastal tourism, such as the Spanish Mediterranean, the disappearance of the beach is not only an environmental problem, but a direct threat to the economic and social fabric built around it. Barceloneta And the north, the same. Of course, it is not just a problem for Spain. In Scotland, for example, Montrose beach loses meters of sand every year at a rate that even exceeds scientific forecasts. Collapsed promenades, weakened dunes and historic golf courses devoured by the sea show that the problem does not distinguish latitudes. The proposed solutions, such as artificial regeneration with sand, are expensive and recurringa structural expense that is difficult to assume for indebted administrations. The question, again, stops being how to stop erosion and becomes how long can it be buy before the defenses give way. Shrinking cities. In large urban areas such as the same New Yorkthe rising sea threatens tens of thousands of homes in a context of serious housing shortage. I remembered a few months ago the new york times that there the withdrawal is no longer just coastal, but urban: buying houses, demolishing them and returning the land to the water becomes an adaptation strategywhile large protection projects advance slowly and force us to rethink the classic housing model. The coast stops being a place to grow and becomes a mobile border that determines the future of the city. Save house or beach. In the United States, the advance of the sea is of such magnitude that it has reactivated a legal conflict inherited from centuries: the beaches as a public good against the right to protect private property. The walls and breakwaters that save a house condemn the beach by disappearing, causing the call “coastal choke”. The consequence is a waterfall of judicial conflictswhere each individual defense accelerates the erosion of the environment and forces neighbors to follow the same path, until there is no sand left to defend. A “national” problem that aims to be global. Adapt without going out of your way. Of course, all kinds of solutions are being tried. I remembered a few months ago the Guardian the case of the Pacific coast of Colombia, where communities like Juanchaco face erosion from a different logic. Without major works or resources for a total withdrawal, they opt to internal displacementscommunity tourism and progressive adaptation. The sea carries away streets and houses, but the community responds by moving a few meters inland, reinventing its economy and preserving its cultural identity. It is a form of resistance that assumes physical loss without giving up territory. A solution that seems impossible in depending on which enclaves. Houses fall, value sinks. A few months ago it went viral a series of snapshots. Images of homes collapsing on the beaches of North Carolina seemed absurd until you understand their logic. Many were built at a safe distance from the sea, when architecture never imagined that the beaches would change, building on dunes that no longer exist. Accelerated erosion has turned those investments in trapped assetsdifficult to … Read more

Ariadne Artiles opens an album from her childhood to celebrate her birthday… and she was already pointing out ways as a model

Ariadne Artiles is celebrating and has taken advantage this special day to share your most personal album of memories. “Walking through some of the best moments of my childhood, today I celebrate the 43rd birthday of the older girl that I am and I hope to continue being for the rest of my life,” she wrote on her social networks. “I grew up believing that I could solve all the world’s problems and, although maturity gives you a harsh blow of reality, I am glad to see that I’m still that girl who believes that nothing is impossiblethat everything can be achieved if one desires it intensely,” he confesses. © ariadneartiles © ariadneartiles The author of mother life He has sent a message full of meaning to all his followers encouraging them to create “the life you want and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.” “And, above all, may we never stop being the children we were. Don’t let anything or anyone steal our hope,” writes the model in a post that has received countless beautiful messages. “Thank you for the congratulations and so many expressions of affection and to all of you who accompany me along the way, family, friends “Thank you, because you make me very happy”, concludes this text that has been accompanied by some of his favorite photos. © ariadneartiles © ariadneartiles Their first ‘posed’ When you see all these images, it is clear that Ariadne pointed out ways from a very young age. This is how she posed in front of the camera, exuding self-confidence and self-confidence both in a bikini and with the most striking outfits, like this pink outfit with white polka dot and ruffle pants. Who was going to tell this young girl that it would end? fulfilling your dream and becoming an important model who would work in numerous national and international campaigns. © ariadneartiles © ariadneartiles Unforgettable moments with his parents and sister It’s endearing how, looking back, Ariadne remembers some of the moments when she was happiest. And in many of them were, of course, their parents and his little sister, Aida. On many occasions, the top Canary Islander has dedicated precious words to her parents, ensuring that she is the daughter of “a wonderful father“and that he was lucky “to enjoy him in every way and to have him constantly present in my life.” © ariadneartiles About her mother, Ariadne always has words of admiration every time she congratulates her on her birthday. “Since this day there has been no one who has not felt you close, sometimes too close, but that’s how we mothers are… Thank you for so much. I have always chosen you as a travel companion. I could literally go with anyone, but you will always be my best plan. With you time flies,” he once wrote. © ariadneartiles Ariadne adores her sister, whom she affectionately refers to as “my first baby“. “Nothing made me more excited than having a little sister to take care of, pamper and protect. Today I see my daughter Ari with her sisters and it is the perfect reflection of all those years that we lived together, hand in hand, so many memories, so much to tell… Aidita, as we call her at home, was my glass baby, with porcelain skin and a doll’s face, but more trash and brute than any. “It took me half my life to understand that I was not their mother, but I found out and I had no choice but to take a step back because neither brothers nor children can be protected for life, you have to let them fly,” he reflected. © ariadneartiles Your family, your engine The model has had a very happy birthday both personally and professionally. Although she is a tireless worker, she has always been clear that her family is her top priority. For more than 14 years he has maintained a consolidated relationship with the businessman José María García Fraile, son of the legendary journalist José María Garcíawhich always tries to stay in the background away from the spotlight. © Getty Images Together they have formed a dream family with their three princesses: Ariwho came into the world on December 31, 2017, and the twins Mary and Julietwho were born on April 16, 2021. Last year, Ariadne talked about how she managed to live between Gran Canaria and Madrid and confessed that the most difficult thing about being a mother is making peace, although she recognized that she is truly privileged. “I have worked hard to achieve it and I am lucky that they have a great father. “I have given myself the gift of being able to have them with me as much as I want and not taking them to daycare or school out of necessity,” he said. © ariadneartiles Precisely in mother life She is open-hearted and honest about her daily life with her three daughters, acknowledging that “Being a mother is a roller coaster, but it is worth it again and again“. Her girls are her greatest joy and they always surprise her with their occurrences. © ariadneartiles The model has instilled in them her healthy lifestyle habits and his great passions since very little. She makes the most of every minute she spends with her daughters and it is common to see her doing some of your favorite family plans: painting, reading, doing yoga, cooking, playing on the beach…

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