I was nervous about having The Talk with my daughter even before she was born. I thought about how my parents handled it, and I wanted to try something different. My first education on the birds and the bees came from the Charlie Brown encylopedia. I vaguely remember Charlie and Lucy pointing to a diagram of a baby in the womb.
When I was in the fifth or sixth grade, my school passed out a pamplet about menstruation. It was written by Kotex, and the main characters were three girls who were pen pals. They spent the entire time writing about how their bodies were changing as they navigated puberty. I showed it to my mom, and she asked me to read it and come to her with any questions. I didn’t really have any. Charlie Brown and the Kotex Girls were pretty thorough. Or at least I thought they were.
I also remember my dad trying to talk to me. We were watching an episode of The Facts of Life, and Tootie and Jeff were contemplating sex. My dad looked at me and said, “You know you shouldn’t be doing that, right?”
My response: “They love each other and are talking about marriage. Isn’t that what they’re supposed to do?” Plus, I was 11 and Tootie was 19 or 20. She seemed like an old woman to me. My dad got flustered and changed the subject.
Although everything turned out fine for me, I want a more open relationship with my daughters. I read about the things that are happening with kids these days, and the landscape is so different from when I was a girl. To me, it’s downright frightening at times. Keeping communications open with them is critical.
My first talk with Mini Me was when she was five. She had just taken a bath, and I was helping her into her PJs. We talked about what made girls different from boys and how those parts are private. I told her no one should try to touch her priviate parts, and if they did, she should go to a teacher and to me right away.
She nodded, and then proceeded to ask me about our next’s days itinerary. Every so often, I would broach the subject again and pepper in new information. We talked about strangers, what to do if she were lost, and I reminded her every time that there was nothing that she couldn’t ask me.
She took me up on my offer two years later. We were on our way home from a birthday party, and I was beat. The radio station that usually plays popular music and home loan commercials decided to run a series of Planned Parenthood ads that day. Mini Me picked up on the subject matter before I could change the station.
“Can teenagers get pregnant?” she asked.
“Um, yes.” I said.
“Were you pregnant in high school?”
“No,” I said.
“Why not?”
“Huh?” I wasn’t really sure where she was going with this.
“How is it that some girls get pregnant in high school, but you didn’t?”
“Um, I didn’t spend time with boys in a way that I could get pregnant.” I was dodging, but I just wasn’t ready.
“Spend time like how? You mean like eating lunch?”
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Yeah, l shudder to think what she might learn if her dad and I inform her first. But, he's VERY squeamish, so this will be up to me.
Those drawings ARE scary! There weren't any in the Charlie Brown book, but I remember them from high school health class. Eek!I agree that how you handle depends on the kid. The direct approach would have given my tender hearted girl nightmares.
If it worked, then hey, that's all that matters! I often say that motherhood is not one size fits all. There are many paths to get the job done.
My mother is a nurse and while I remember in vivid detail the "you're going to get your period" talk, I can't remember anything about the birds and the bees. Maybe I blocked it out? We had lots of medical books around I there were way too many pics of STDs to even think of doing something foolish. Ew. My daughter is 1-1/2 and I'm already thinking about it, better they learn it from us than someone else. BTW, I'm doing the #31writenow too, I'm trying to read as many new blogs as I can. Nice to "meet" you
I guess now's as good a time as any to start thinking about that. My daughter is 18 months old, and although I'm still wondering about potty training, puberty is around the proverbial corner. I honestly think that it depends on the child. I was a prudish kid, whereas my mother was blunt. I liked to read, so she gave me books. I'd say 90% of my sex ed came from books because I was squeamish about talking. I learned pretty well; the sterile drawings of genital warts and herpes kept me out of a LOT of trouble!
So yeah my mom was of the ratchet kind and the talk she gave me at age 9 was terrifying. It was nothing about the birds & the bees. It was raw and uncut. Yeah…It kept my dress down and pants up. Yeah I did do things but NOBODY got my goodies. My first time was awesome. I have no regrets about the person I was with. He was my first boyfriend and we was together on & off for 5 years. No regrets. So I guess I can say thank you mommy, for giving me the ratchetness instead of rainbows and unicorns. lol.