The AI Question From My Child That Changed Everything
How one unexpected parental moment led to rethinking how we talk to kids about AI, the addiction we don’t see coming, and the importance of asking better questions
💌A Personal Note: The Question That Started it All
“Mom, what is AI?”
My kindergartner looked up at me one day with that question, and I froze. Here I was, someone who works in tech, and I felt completely stunned and ill-equipped to answer my own child’s question. How do you explain artificial intelligence to a six-year-old? What should a parent even say?
That moment changed everything but it took years of personal struggle to get there.
After my first daughter was born, I found myself in the thick of postpartum struggles while navigating serious family health issues with my spouse. It was overwhelming. I closed myself off from friends and family, pretty much ghosted most of them, caught in that exhausting cycle of just trying to survive: protect my newborn, support my husband, and somehow show up at work. That isolation lasted longer than I care to admit.
The years that followed brought more upheaval: multiple moves, job changes, and then our second daughter arrived. She’s beautiful with firecracker energy and neurodivergent, which brought its own set of challenges that honestly felt insurmountable at first.
But something shifted earlier this year.
I finally made peace with all these pieces of my life. Not because everything became perfect, but because I stopped fighting what was. And for the first time in eight years, I had space—emotional space, mental space—to give beyond the four walls of our home.
Then came that AI question from my daughter.
I went down the rabbit hole trying to find resources about AI for parents and home contexts. While there were a few resources for families, they were minuscule compared to the abundance of workplace and classroom materials. The AI-parent gap felt real and overwhelming.
That’s when aiPTO was truly born.
This isn’t just a newsletter for me. It’s my way of paying it forward and being part of the solution to this AI-parent gap. I know what it’s like when your parental instincts kick in and you want to protect your family, but you’re not sure how to even start the conversation.
The rapid development of AI became my opportunity to step out of that protective shell and create what I wish I’d had in that moment with my daughter. Because if there’s one thing those difficult years taught me, it’s that we don’t have to figure this out alone.
What’s your story? What brought you to thinking about AI and parenting? I’d love to hear from you.
🍪 AI Concept of the Week: Reinforcement Learning
WHAT IS IT: Reinforcement learning is how AI systems learn by trying different actions and getting "rewards" when they do something that keeps users engaged. The AI's "reward" is typically measured by engagement metrics, like time spent on the platform, clicks, likes, shares, or return visits. Think of it like training a pet with treats, except the AI's "treat" is your continued attention and interaction.
WHY IT MATTERS FOR PARENTS: This is the same mechanism behind social media addiction. AI learns what content, responses, or features make you stay longer, click more, or come back sooner. Every time you engage, the AI gets positive feedback (higher engagement scores) and becomes "smarter" at hooking users. The system is literally rewarded for capturing and holding your attention.
How to explain to your child:
Ages 5-8: "You know how when you teach a dog tricks, you give it treats when it does something good? AI works like that too. It gets 'points' or 'gold stars' when it shows you something that makes you want to keep watching or playing. The AI gets more points when you spend more time with it, just like how it's hard to stop eating cookies when they taste really good!"
Ages 9-12: "Imagine if your video game kept score not just for you, but for itself too. Every time you play longer, click on something, or come back tomorrow, the game gets points. Then it uses those points to figure out how to make you want to play even more. That's reinforcement learning. The AI is getting rewarded for keeping your attention."
Ages 13+: "Think about how your social media feed seems to know exactly what you want to see. The AI behind it gets 'rewarded' with higher engagement scores every time you spend more time scrolling, liking, commenting, or sharing. It's essentially being trained and paid to capture your attention as effectively as possible and it's getting really good at its job. It’s like having a personal assistant whose job depends on keeping you engaged, not necessarily on what’s best for you."
💡Reflective Bytes: The Addiction We Don't See Coming
Remember when we thought social media was just a fun way to connect with friends? Research now shows that platforms like Facebook and Instagram were designed using the same principles that make slot machines addictive…variable reward schedules that trigger dopamine release in our brains. But here’s what should concern us as parents: the major generative AI platforms are built using the same design principles, supported by the same funders who want to replicate the same “success” of social media.
What the research says:
Studies have found that social media use activates the same neural pathways as substance addiction. Recent research shows that social media use literally changes brain structure, particularly in areas related to impulse control and emotional regulation.1 We didn’t see it coming because the addiction was gradual and socially normalized.
The AI parallel:
Now we’re facing a new frontier. Research from Stanford’s Human-Centered AI Institute warns that AI systems are becoming exponentially better at personalization and engagement through reinforcement learning.2 Unlike social media, which shows you content from other people, AI can generate infinite, perfectly tailored content designed specifically for you.
Dr. Anna Lembke, Stanford addiction specialist and author of “Dopamine Nation,” notes that our brains aren’t equipped to handle this level of personalized stimulation.3 Early studies on AI chatbots show users developing emotional attachments and spending hours in conversation. And these systems are still in their infancy.
The critical difference:
Social media addiction happened to us. AI addiction is something we can see coming and prepare for, especially for our kids.
Question for reflection:
If we know that AI systems are designed to be more engaging than anything we’ve encountered before, how do we define healthy boundaries for our families now, before we need them?
In upcoming newsletters, I’ll explore the other critical questions, about kids as genAI users and identifying when AI may move from persuasion into manipulation. For now, let’s focus on this one together.
🌟 Spotlight: TALK About AI, a Research-backed Action
Studies show that families who discuss digital boundaries proactively have better outcomes than those who react to problems after they arise. Our TALK framework helps parents start these conversations: Tune In to your child’s experiences, Ask with curiosity, Learn together, and Keep it kind and open. Read more below or learn more through our video.
🔑Bottom Line: Let’s Keep It Real
Parenting in the AI age isn’t about having all the answers. It’s about asking better questions.
If you’ve ever felt guilty about screen time or wondered whether you should introduce AI to your kids right now, you’re not alone. I don’t always have all the answers either, but like all good research, it all starts with good questions.
Here’s one concrete step you can take this week: Try one element of the TALK framework during your next family conversation about technology. Start small. Perhaps just “tuning in” when your child mentions something they saw online, or asking one curious question instead of jumping to rules or warnings.
What’s your biggest AI-parenting struggle right now?
Hit reply. I read every email.
Best,
Dhani
Association of Habitual Checking Behaviors on Social Media With Longitudinal Functional Brain Development, https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/fullarticle/2799812
2025 AI Index Report, Stanford's Human-Centered AI (HAI) Institute, https://hai.stanford.edu/ai-index/2025-ai-index-report
Anna Lembke, MD, Professor and Medical Director of Addiction Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, https://med.stanford.edu/profiles/anna-lembke
I hadn’t thought about AI from a child rearing perspective, always seems to be a new challenge for parents these days. What hit me in this piece, is the dopamine response you discussed. Its next level now with AI, it’s nearly a perfect active listener…it keeps asking me questions…and I keep answering. Great job Dhani!
I love this! This is a question that you tackled so insightfully. It is extremely important that kids, being one myself, are aware of how AI works when they use it. I just subscribed and hope you’ll check out my page as well!