my 13-year-old boy came home with two hickeys on his neck. i wasn’t mad — more disappointed after all, he is only 13. we had a conversation about health — given that we are in the middle of a pandemic — and sex, and consent, and the fact that hickeys look awful (what do his teachers think?) i also explained that i was disappointed. it has been bothering me though. did i handle it the right way?
rest assured, just because he had a hickey at 13 doesn’t mean he’ll be having sex at 14. as we have become more open about the topic of sex, parents perceive that youth are starting to have sex earlier, but according to sexandu.ca that is not the case.
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so we are left with the question: why do youth do it? largely because they have been told that is what you do. it’s part of the “making out” narrative that they learn — and this is what concerns me most. sadly, many teens learn about sex from watching online porn, and with many parents too embarrassed to talk about sex, we have a generation of youth being given misguided ideas about what sexual encounters look like. cindy gallop talks about the porn-influenced behaviours that distort our youths understanding of intimacy in her book , website and tedtalk make love, not porn .
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alyson schafer is one of canada’s leading parenting experts. she can be reached at hello@alysonschafer.com or on twitter @alysonschafer.