Many of today’s parents grew up in an era when mentioning the word sex was taboo at home. If you dared to, you would receive a brief clinical talk on the biology of ‘where babies came from’ – Conversation closed! Your parents’ body language and discomfort lead you to intuitively discern that you should never bring ‘that’ topic up again.
So with that message seared into our brains it’s important to be mindful of the ‘baggage’ that we bring along into conversations about sexuality with our own children. Young children will talk about sex as frankly as they would about what they had for lunch at pre-school. We need to shove aside that baggage, take our children’s lead and launch into it (at age appropriate levels of course).
But how do we assist a generation of boys to grasp the notion that rape jokes are part of a destructive cultural mindset that undermines, demeans and objectifies women and ultimately harms boys too?”
Here is a brief look at the TV and gaming diet our boys are fed:
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Thats not a Futurama pic but a fan art never in the pg rated show
I was shocked when sitting in a uni class, when all us girls shared our experiences at school with one of those rape avoidance guys that comes in and speaks to you. we all laughed because we all thought we had the same person. anyway, when we asked the boys what there schools had done, all of them replied 'nothing'. NONE of them had been taught about rape or sexual assault or about boundaries. we were all, needless to say, horrified.
we all talk about rape jokes being inappropriate etc. but i think by the time boys (and girls) are using them, the meaning of the word is pretty well understood. the point im trying to make, and that was obvious in the midst of that class, was that its not up to women to have to have to defend themselves. why couldnt the boys schools teach them the 'no means no' stuff early? and then the rape avoidance guys wouldnt have to be going to every school in the area.