Adolescence
is fraught with tension for kids and parents alike. Teens want to make
their own decisions and parents fear the results. Sex is an especially
emotional issue. So emotional that we parents sometimes shy away from
talking about it. But society doesn’t. Our “pop culture” promotes sex
as the activity that everyone’s doing and everyone’s enjoying. Our kids
need to know that abstaining from sex is not only possible, it’s
preferable. And we parents are just the ones to tell them.
Something as simple as a newspaper advice column can be a conversation starter. Here’s some information you’ll want to cover.
WINNING THE DATING GAME
Talk about these points before dating begins. If the game is already underway, call time-out for a brief discussion.
·
The best time to cover pre-marital sex is before the opportunity
presents itself. If your child hasn’t made a conscious decision to
abstain, in the heat of the moment animal instinct will replace sound
judgment.
· Temptation strengthens when visited often. Just as a
diabetic is likely to give in to that chocolate eclair if he goes to
the bakery every day, a couple will find sex difficult to resist if
they spend half their evening cuddled up in the car.
· Everyone has
the right to say yes to some activities and no to others. Both girls
and guys should know that kissing someone doesn’t mean they intend, or
are obligated, to do anything more.
· Boys and girls must be taught that no means just that.
· Paying for a date doesn’t entitle a guy, or a girl, to any form of payback.
·
Teens need to understand that love should result in a general feeling
of well-being. If the overriding emotion in a relationship is negative,
it’s not love.
· Physical abuse in any form is not to be tolerated. Teach your kids, “one strike and he or she is out.”
·
Be aware that children who have been sexually abused sometimes become
promiscuous in adolescence. We’ll never know how many teen pregnancies
are reactions to sexual child abuse.
SERIOUS SEXUAL CONSEQUENCES
Pregnancy
is the most obvious consequence to having sex. But the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS) records more than 25 infectious
organisms transmitted primarily through sexual activity. Girls are
biologically more susceptible than boys. The HHS reports, “Each year an
estimated 15 million new sexually transmitted infections occur in the
U.S. and nearly 4 million teenagers are infected with a sexually
transmitted disease (STD).”
In
1995 the HHS reported STDs accounted for 87% of the top ten infections
most frequently reported to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention from state health departments. The most common STDs are
chlamydia, gonorrhea, AIDS, syphilis, and hepatitis B.
STDs
can exist, symptom-free, for years. Chlamydia, the most common STD, can
be treated with antibiotics once diagnosed but according to the HHS,
85% of the women and up to 50% of the men who have chlamydia are
symptom-free. Left untreated, females can develop pelvic inflammatory
disease, which can result in permanent damage to the reproductive
organs and infertility. In males the disease can lead to genital warts,
a pre-cursor to penal cancer.
Many
teens think that oral sex isn’t sex. So what do the last three letters
of the term oral sex mean? The dictionary describes sex as, “the
phenomena of life concerned with sexual desire”—seems straightforward
enough. STDs, which increase the risk of contracting AIDS, can be
transmitted through oral sex.
We
hear a lot about “safe sex” but there’s no such thing. The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention’s Treatment Guidelines for doctors state
that to avoid the spread of STDs, patients should abstain from oral,
vaginal, or anal sex. The American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists agree that the only 100% sure way to avoid STDs and
pregnancy is to abstain from sex.
Clearly
our bodies weren’t designed for multiple partners and our kids need to
know it. Because sexual activity exposes participants to all of the
partner’s previous companions, sexually active teens may end up with
more than they bargained for.
Take
your child for a drive and pretend, if you must, that you’re not
embarrassed to talk about these important subjects. Ask questions.
Listen. Talk. Your effort will make a difference.
Online Help
*
The American Academy of Pediatric Psychiatry’s “Talking to Your Kids
About Sex” offers helpful tips on giving age-appropriate information at www.aacap.org/publications/factsfam/62.htm.
*
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention publish informative
statistics and information in “Tracking the Hidden Epidemics” at www.cdc.gov/nchstp/dstd/Stats_Trends/Trends2000.pdf.
* Facts and information on why abstinence is best is available at www.abstinence.net.
* The Oklahoma Family Policy Council has information on their KEEP program (Kids Eagerly Endorsing Purity) at www.okfamilypc.org/KEEP.
Denise Springer’s book, “Confident Parenting in Frightening Times: How to Safeguard Your Kids from Cradle to College,” may be ordered by mail.