gramirez wrote:
DW_a_mom wrote:
gramirez wrote:
DW_a_mom wrote:
Of course, my kids have no interest in media that breaches their innocence too early. Gotta love that.
You don't have to be interested in it to be exposed to it. It's
everywhere.
It can be avoided or, if not, ignored.
So your kids have never seen a TV commercial for birth control, erectile dysfunction, PMS, or even tampons?
Ignorable, yes. Avoidable, no. Maybe 20 years ago, but certainly not these days.
Not often, given that they rarely choose to watch anything other than PBS or Disney, and when they do, if they have a question, we answer it. There is no loss of innocence in knowing that women give birth to babies and that every month a woman's body gets ready for that. And most little boys discover that a certain body part will "pop up" at a very young age, and so get told a basic explanation of why, as well. It's science. I'm talking details on what men and women do in the privacy of their bedrooms, safe sex, and the nuances of relationships - THAT they aren't interested in (beyond knowing that it generally involves being naked). And they have been taught by us what certain terms mean - kids are natural mimics, and most parents will eventually hear their precious little one say something shocking. But the fact they say it doesn't mean they know what lies behind it. As soon as we give them a simple definition, they turn bright red and NEVER use the word again, which leaves me hoping there aren't still parents who just wash out kids mouths with soap.
I guess you and I have different definitions on what "the talk" means. To me, it means filling in details they may not be aware they need to know yet, after a lifetime of answering the questions that arise daily. Hopefully, parents haven't stopped talking and haven't started assuming that just because kids see it, they know it, because my conversations with my kids over the years have made it quite clear that they do not.
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I remembered last night that quite a few of these discussions come up when the kids are trying to figure out when things they type in internet games violate the word filters. My son, for example, could not figure out why a character dressed up as Santa would not be allowed to say, "ho ho ho." Too funny, isn't it?
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Mom to an amazing young adult AS son, plus an also amazing non-AS daughter. Most likely part of the "Broader Autism Phenotype" (some traits).
Last edited by DW_a_mom on 13 Feb 2010, 6:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.