Never too Young: Educating Children about Sex
Discussing Sex with Young Children According to the
Center for Effective Parenting, "Children begin to develop an awareness of their own bodies and
an interest in sexuality at an early age. This is a normal process." Here are some things parents
might do to instill healthy ideas about sexuality in their young children:
Don't get upset with children for touching their own genitalia.
Young children have a great curiosity about their own bodies. It is quite normal for them to
touch and handle their own genitalia. Instead of punishing and shaming children for this normal
behavior, parents should treat it matter-of-factly. As children approach school age, they should
be taught that while touching one's private parts is not wrong, it is something that is to be done
in a private place and not around other people. -
Don't overreact if
you discover children "playing doctor" with each other. Young children
have a great curiosity about other people’s bodies. When children show each other their private
parts or even touch each other, it is not an automatic sign of anything more than curiosity. Adults
should treat it matter-of-factly and use it as a moment to teach children that private parts are
private and that behavior of this kind is not appropriate. Explain
what private parts are and what body privacy means. While children are young, parents
should teach their children that private parts are private and that nobody else should touch them.
This is also a good time to let children know that they should come to you or another trusted
adult if anyone does try to touch their private parts. Explain sex
differences. Preschool-age children are very curious about the differences between boys
and girls. Parents should explain these differences to their children.
Parents should explain that boys have a penis, scrotum, and testicles and girls have a vagina,
vulva, and clitoris. Discussing Sex with School-Age
Children As children get older, they will need and desire more detailed explanations
about sex. It is important to talk to children about sex before they are teens.
As mentioned before, if we begin discussing sex with our children while they are very young, it
will be much easier for parents to approach them when they are older. It will also help
children feel more comfortable coming to parents with questions they may have. Here are some
things parents can discuss with their grade-school-age children: Teach
that sex is natural. Parents should make sure their children know that sex is natural
and normal within a committed, loving, mature relationship, and not dirty or shameful. Parents
should not worry that such an explanation will promote promiscuity in their children.
In fact, children are less likely to listen to their parents if they try to make them feel
that sex is bad or dirty. Procreation. School-age
children are usually very curious about how babies are made. Parents should include in their
explanations how babies get inside their mother's bodies, how fertilization takes place when the
sperm and the ovum unite, and how babies grow inside their mothers. Explain how the process takes
place, using appropriate labels and language. Children also need to know that babies grow in the
mother's uterus, not her stomach, and that it takes about nine months for a baby to grow.
Parents should repeat this explanation often over the years. Children need to hear these things
many times before they develop a real understanding. Menstruation.
Girls need to learn about menstruation, preferably from their parents, before their first
period, which usually arrives anywhere between age 10 and 14, sometimes younger, sometimes older.
It can be a frightening experience for a young girl to begin bleeding and not know why. It can be
a frustrating experience to have all your child's friends start their periods when she is still
waiting for hers. It might help for moms or other adult, female relatives to share their
"first period" stories. Boys also need to know about menstruation, too. -
Masturbation. Boys and girls alike need to understand that masturbation is
natural and normal but it is something that should be done in privacy.
Share with them how you feel about it in a clear and straightforward manner.
Discussing Sex with Adolescents Adolescents are often difficult to talk to
about anything, but discussing sex will be easier if it has been a topic of conversation since they
were young. Here are some other ideas to help you speak with your adolescents:
Don't assume children already know about sex.Often, children this age know some
things about sex, but the information they have is usually not complete, or is erroneous. For
example, they might believe that a woman cannot get pregnant the first time she has sexual
intercourse, or have little understanding of sexually transmitted diseases.
Define oral sex and explain that oral sex is still sex.
This specific topic is often the most difficult for parents to approach with their children,
but a growing trend among even young teens is to participate in oral sex to avoid pregnancy.
It's never too late.It is never too late for parents to open
a discussion about sex with their children. Providing information when children are older is
much, much better than providing no information at all. -
Teach
that sexual intimacy has profound consequences. Parents should make sure that their
children know that sexual intimacy carries with it the risk of pregnancy, sexually transmitted
diseases, and emotional pain. Teach children that it's okay to say
"no" to sex until they're ready. Parents should make sure their children know
that they are responsible for their own bodies, and they should not do anything that they do not
feel completely comfortable about. Parents should explain that adolescents often face a lot of
pressure to have sex before they are ready, but that they should never let anyone pressure them
into doing something they do not want to do. -
Teach children
that sex is not the most important part of a loving relationship. Children need to
know that there are many parts of an intimate relationship that are much more important than sex,
such as commitment, mutual respect, compatibility, and love. -
Share your values about abstinence, birth control, and sexual partners.
Children need to know what their parents think about sexual issues, in addition to the facts.
While it may not always be apparent, we as parents provide the moral landscape for their decision
making. -
Be available to your children. Make sure you
let children know often that they can come to you with any problems, questions, or concerns, no matter what.
In a perfect world, in a perfect culture, coming from
perfectly adjusted and openly communicating families, talking about sex with our children would be
just another topic, like hygiene or sports. In our world, however, sex is not "just another topic,"
but with a little work and patience, we might be able to improve on past generations
(or at least hold our own). Other Resources
Here are a few resources for talking with your children about sex: It's So Amazing!:
A Book about Eggs, Sperm, Birth, Babies, and Families, by Robie H. Harris, illustrated
by Michael Emberley (for children ages 4 to 8) What's the Big Secret? Talking About Sex
with Boys and Girls, by Laurie Krasny Brown and Marc Brown (for children ages 4 to 8)
Where Did I Come From?, by Peter Mayle (for children ages 4 to 8) Your Body
Belongs to You, by Cornelia Maude Spelman and Teri Weidner (for children ages 4 to 8)
It's Not the Stork!: A Book About Girls, Boys, Babies, Bodies, Families and Friends
, by Robie H. Harris and Michael Emberly (for children ages 5 to 8) A Kid's
First Book About Sex, by Joani Blank and Marcia Quackenbush (for children ages 4 to 8)
Girls Are Girls and Boys Are Boys: So What's the Difference?, by Sol Gordon and
Vivien Cohen (for children ages 8 to 12) So That's How I Was Born!, by Robert
Brooks and Susan Perl (for children ages 4 to 8) How Babies Are Made, by Andrew C.
Andry and Steven Schepp (for children ages 4 to 8) How to Talk to Your Child About Sex: It's
Best to Start Early, but It's Never Too Late -- A Step-by-Step Guide for Parents,
by Richard Eyre and Linda Eyre. Everything You Never Wanted Your Kids to Know About Sex,
but Were Afraid They'd Ask: The Secrets to Surviving Your Child's Sexual Development from Birth
to the Teens, by Justin Richardson and Mark A. Schuster. It's OK to
Talk About Sex: A Guide for Parents of Newborns through Adolescence, by Jane Carney Schulze and Rolf Schulze.
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