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Intimate conversations: How to talk to your kids about sex

Monday, November 3, 2008
Intimate conversations: How to talk to your kids about sex
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Tami Hollendonner remembers the extent of her sex education as a Catholic teen in the 1970s. "My mom and dad never told me about the birds and the bees. There was no talk about birth control or why not to have sex," says the 42-year-old mother of two from Darien, Illinois. "The message was that you didn't do it. It was pounded into you-God said you didn't do it, so you didn't."

Now the parent of a 13-year-old son and 6-year-old daughter, Hollendonner wants to make sure her children learn a different message about sex and sexuality. She wants them to wait until they're mature enough to have sex, but she also wants them to understand that sex is beautiful with a person you love. She wants them to feel free to ask her about anything, to share anything, and to always know she's there for them no matter what mistakes they might make.

"I think parents should educate like crazy and eliminate the Catholic guilt part of it," she says. "And when kids want to talk about it, drop everything and talk."

But talking about sex and sexuality isn't easy for many parents. It's a buried landmine where morality and hormones can collide without warning and where the repercussions of a single act can be lifelong. As parents guide their teens through issues of sexuality, many find the process as difficult as their children do, especially in a society that makes kids feel like everyone's "doing it."

In fact, everyone's not doing it, but the statistics are still frightening for most parents. Fourteen percent of 13- to 16-year-olds are sexually active, according to a recent survey by Princeton Survey Research Associates, with that number rising to 41 percent for 15- and 16-year-olds.

In response to these realities, some parents and educators have focused on abstinence and just saying no. Others have emphasized talking to teens about the beauty of sexuality and the benefits of waiting until marriage to share this gift. Some experts advocate educating children about the physical dangers of teen sex-unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases-while others recommend parents talk about the emotional dangers of teen sex and the lifelong scars that can result.

But when it comes right down to it, some parents would prefer not to talk to their children about sexuality at all.

Let's talk about sex
"There's a lot of fear and dread about sex. I tell parents it's OK to respect sex because it is a power and it can be misused, but the misuse is usually from a deeper issue," says Bob Bartlett, author of Growing Toward Intimacy (Good Ground Press). "Sex is very much like a bottle of wine. You can open it and share it over dinner with your family, or you can drink the whole bottle, get in your car and drive, and end up harming somebody."

Helping teens learn to handle their sexuality responsibly begins with conversations from the time children are very young. The Princeton survey showed that 70 percent of teens have gotten a lot or some information about sex and sexual relationships from their parents, but many are still gleaning information-often inaccurate-from friends and the media.

"If parents don't address sexuality and if there's not education from the school or church, then there's a vacuum that the media or peers will fill. If the messages from parents aren't clear enough, then the bad messages have the upper hand," says Tom Lickona, co-author of Sex, Love, and You: Making the Right Decisions (Ave Maria Press). "Unless parents talk to their kids about the sacredness of their bodies and self-respect, kids will be eaten alive by the media."

Parents and educators sometimes make the mistake of limiting sex education discussions to the act of intercourse, but they should also focus on sexual activity within the context of sexuality, intimacy, and self-respect, says Father John Heagle, co-author of Tender Fires: The Spiritual Promise of Sexuality (Crossroads).

For Catholic parents and teens, discussions should also include the message that sex is a gift from God, who asks them to commit to a chaste lifestyle, with reverence in relationships and an understanding of the joy of waiting for their future spouse to share that special relationship.

"A lot of these moral teachings a generation or two ago weren't presented in this positive way. There was an emphasis on the "don'ts' and not the "why,'" Lickona says. "As parents and teachers, we need to give kids a larger vision-not just to wait until marriage, but why, which is to express and deepen the couple's love and to create new life."

One way parents can do that is by modeling a healthy relationship and talking about the fact that people in good marriages find sex pleasurable. And while sex is innately pleasurable, it's important to have some self-discipline and learn that it's best done in the context of marriage.

"Just say no" is not enough
Teaching teens to exercise self-control and embrace a chaste lifestyle in today's highly sexualized society requires more than rigid rules. It's not just saying no, it's talking about what teens are saying yes to-that choosing chastity helps you find a partner who values you for who you are, takes the pressure off while you discover who you are, and protects you emotionally and physically until you have the maturity for this type of relationship.

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Waiting

People don't get married right out of high school or before anymore. In all but a few trades a college degree has become a necessity to make a decent living. A Bachelor's Degree is today's high school diploma. Even then students will be advised to go for their Masters. Many professions require it. This means postponing marriage into one's mid-20's or later. The guy in the article talks about wondering why he was still a virgin at 18. Add 5 to 10 years to that. A lot of women, Catholics included, will question a man's sexual orientation if he's still a virgin at 27. If he's also looking for a virgin he may stay one for life. Even Trads have this problem among other Trads. Trad virgin guys want Trad virgin gals who will be Harriet to their Ozzy. Very slim pickings. Add abstaining from masturbation and chastity becomes less likely. None of this is talked about. It's like the Church still thinks it's 1960. Unless someone is going to marry by 23 the chances of them waiting for their first sexual experience are slim. Modern life moves marriage and full adulthood at least ten years past where our human development says we're ready to go. Our times are out of sync with our bodies. Abstaining is more difficult for young adults today than it was for their grandparents. Even then it didn't happen as much as people say. A lot of good Catholic marriages started with a pregnant bride. The difference was that they could get married, they didn't have to wait.

Bad Assumptions

While this demonstrates some realistic concerns, there are some seriously bad assumptions in this comment. I am paraphrasing the above.

1. "People get married so they can have sex, because their biological clock is ticking." Bad reason for marriage, bad reason for sex.

2. "People have to wait to get married until after school." Nope, they don't. While there are struggles, it is possible. There are also struggles with remaining single during school.

3. "Virgins want to marry virgins." People want to marry people they love.

4. "You'll never find anyone if you are an old virgin." That's just an outright lie. "People will think you are gay." So. That's their problem, not mine. (Did you read the article?)

5. "It's harder now than for our parents." Only if you believe that "everyone is doing it" and that seems important to you. I will grant that we are overcome with the message in our culture and that does not make it easy. Physical urges were not easier to overcome back then.

6. "A lot of good Catholic marriages started with a Catholic bride." Don't confuse what became a good Catholic marriage with a rocky start. We are all weak - thank goodness for forgiveness and the grace of God.

How can I speak with authority on this? I married my wife at age 28 and she was my first sexual encounter. We went to graduate schools in different cities and still managed. I gladly spoke about my virginity with friends. Surprisingly, many shared that they were waiting too, but were embarrassed to let others know. Out marriage is stronger because we waited to marry (seven years). We decided to marry when the time was right (before we completed school). We both happened to have waited for the right person, but we would have accepted each other in love regardless.

my points

I'm happy for you and your wife but I stand by my points. Of course not all people are the same but waiting until 28 as you did is very difficult for most.

Time to be honest

LifeSiteNews, a conservative Catholic website, did an article about an Evangelical one titled, "The Case for Early Marriage". http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2009/aug/09081004.html The author Mark Regnerus makes the case for a return to early marriage as the only way to expect abstinence before marriage.

"Expecting young people to wait through a large portion of their reproductive years for sex is unrealistic and a case of "battling our creator's reproductive designs".

He points out that Catholics used to encourage young people to marry but now encourage them to delay until after college. A Catholic priest, Fr. Michael P. Orsi, agrees in his essay, "A Case for Earlier Marriage".

"While many sit wringing their hands over the seeming demise of marriage as an institution and the concomitant breakdown in sexual ethics, none are willing to state the most obvious reason-it is being delayed too long."

Omitted is the effect early marriage would have on women's education and careers, but Evangelicals and the Church see that as part of the problem.

So it's time to be honest Catholics. Would you want your kids to get married right out of high school if it meant they were more likely to have their first sexual experience on their wedding night or would you want them to go to college and be realistic that they wouldn't?

I choose the later. Your choice.

Megan Sweas's picture

Marriage debate

Interesting this conversation is starting now on this story. Be sure to check out our September young adult issue with a Sounding Board arguing for earlier marriages, "Don't wait for marriage," along with reader response, and "First comes love...," a feature on young couples' paths to marriage today. Both stories address these issues. I'll be interested in reading your responses to them as well.

Debate

Early marriage is one of the main predictors of divorce. It will be an interesting article.

talking to teens about sex

Great resources are Jason Evert's book Theology of Her Body/ Theology of His Body that is for teens and is about $12. It is based on Pope John Paul's theology of the Body writings. It is awesome speaks to teens where they are and bases waiting and purity on biblical principles. Jason also has pamphlet $3 each that are called Pure Manhood, Pure womanhood, and Pure Love that all are amazing and written on this same catholic and biblical basis re dating and pruity and God's plan for sexuality in marriage.

How to talk to your kids about sex

I very much appreciated this article as I am a mother who's children will soon need answers.
I would however, like more information on advice for masterbation and teens. I have had various responces when asking my church. Most quite harsh and has made me question if my family is in the right faith. I understand about addiction and the commandment of adultry, but is there no understanding way of talking to your children about it when it's discovered?
Thank You.

Baffled Mom

P.S. To " A Catholic Mom" who posted a comment. I read the whole article and from what I read, that was exactly the point they are trying to teach these kids. Knowing is half the battle...

Talking to your kids about sex

As a Catholic parent, shouldn't you be teaching your kids (and sharing the message with others) of waiting til marriage to have sex, not just someone you "love". Anyone can say they love someone and vice versa.
It's so evident that many people teach this to their kids (the wrong message).
Whatever happened to the Sacrament of Marriage? This is why so many kids (and adults) get pregnant, have abortions, contract diseases, get emotionally hurt for life and when they're not "feeling" the "love" anymore the cycle continues in the next relationship then what's left for the husband/wife. That's why there's so much divorce the spouses never waited for marriage, so there's no real respect. I'm so glad I know better than this.
The gift of sex was created by God for married people, not before.
A Catholic Mom

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