Calm Counterculture to the Noise.

Girls deserve the time and space to build identity, resilience, and self-worth offline before the world begins to weigh in.


The Analog Mom is a calm counterculture to the noise- especially the social media mayhem surrounding today’s teens and children. Rooted in presence, trust and real-world connection, our mission is to support parents who want to raise grounded, confident kids without letting algorithms shape their identity, worth and voice.  

At its core, The Analog Mom is about choosing conversation over comparison, self-awareness over scrolling, and resilience over validation. It champions boundaries with technology, intentional family rhythms, and offline spaces where teens can think, feel, fail, and grow safely. This is parenting that protects mental health, nurtures independence, and models what healthy connection actually looks like.

Teens don’t need more screens telling them who to be—they need steady adults, open dinner tables, creative outlets, and the freedom to develop a strong inner compass. In a digital world that profits from attention and anxiety, The Analog Mom encourages and teaches parents how to choose clarity, confidence, and calm.


Latest News

Big Tech critics hail ‘Big Tobacco moment’ in landmark social media verdict

For critics of tech companies like Meta and Google, Wednesday’s verdict in the social media addiction trial has been literally years in the making.

Parents, child safety experts and some lawmakers said the finding of liability was a long-overdue moment of accountability.

Social media bans and digital curfews to be trialled on UK teenagers

A recent industry study underscores the urgency of concise, audience-centric delivery. We break down tactics to sustain engagement and combat screen fatigue.

Social media can put young people in danger, U.S. surgeon general warns

Social media can present a real risk to the mental health of children and teenagers because of the ways their brains are affected by the amount of time they spend using it, the U.S. surgeon general warns in a new advisory released Tuesday.