By JC Bowman
The line between online and offline has blurred. The way we scroll, post, react, and connect shapes our relationships, confidence, and communities.
In essence, your digital life is your real life. That’s why cyber ethics matter. Consider these questions: “Am I using this for connection—or just out of habit?” “Is this adding to my day—or taking away from it?”
These aren’t trivial questions. They’re the difference between living intentionally and being driven by algorithms.
The truth is simple: what we consume, we become. Curate your feeds, choose voices that inspire, and as NIH News in Health advises, “Connect carefully.” What you allow into your digital space impacts your mental and emotional well-being.
Balance doesn’t require perfection—just purpose:
- Create phone-free windows (meals, after school, before bed).
- Choose conversation over passive scrolling.
- Model healthy habits, especially for the next generation.
In Rutherford County, young people in our community are leading the conversation. On April 25, the “Shadows and Screens” Youth Art Exhibit will be held at Trellis & Vine in Smyrna. Hosted by Wired Human and Carpe Artista Arts Academy, this powerful event showcases student-created artwork that reveals the real impact of social media—comparison, anxiety, loneliness, and the search for identity. “These pieces aren’t just art—they’re the honest voices of young people,” according to Tammy Sharp, Rutherford County School Board Member.
From 2:00–8:00 p.m., the Youth Art Exhibit will feature:
- – Student art that reveals the truth behind the screen
- – Live music from local youth
- – Open conversations on digital wellbeing
- – The launch of a youth-led movement in Rutherford County
This isn’t just an exhibit, a call to awareness. Be the change you want to see online. Log off with intention, log on with purpose, and most importantly—show up in real life. Because in the end, the goal isn’t to disconnect from technology. It’s to reconnect with each other.
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JC Bowman is the Executive Director of Professional Educators of Tennessee, a non-partisan teacher association headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided that the author and the association are properly cited. For more information on this subject or any education issue please contact Professional Educators of Tennessee. To schedule an interview please contact info@proedtn.org or 1-800-471-4867.

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