![]() Which, weirdly, isn’t really that many messages. That works out to 257 messages/day or, if we assume that she sleeps for 8 hours, 16 messages/hour for every waking hour of the previous month. If we do the math, it’s pretty impressive: 7046 messages x 94.8 means that she sent and received 6,681 messages in 26 days. ![]() This is with 4 days left in our monthly plan schedule too: Where this gets more amazing to me is when I looked at the total message count. And in the last 26 days? Well, turns out we really aren’t using our phones to text at the same rate. The stats don’t lie: We’re sharing a data plan so I can see what she’s doing. We discuss it, we talk about healthy boundaries, we talk about being present at meals, during discussions, while driving to and from places, and so on, and she assures me that she really isn’t using her phone that much and that she texts “pretty much the same amount you do”.Įnter the MyAT&T app, which offers an easy way to learn more about your cellphone usage. But just like most children of her generation, she’s rarely without her ubiquitous iPhone in her hand, texting and using the device seemingly at every turn. She’s in a long-term and long-distance relationship with a boy who’s across the country, so of course they rely on modern communication to stay in touch. My 19yo daughter and I have somewhat of a running argument about cellphone usage. ![]()
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