By LISA MITCHELL
Parents, there’s something you need to know.
Teaching your kids about sex isn’t just about one lone conversation. The ‘sex talk’ – where you explain about the birds and the bees before the age of ten – is just the beginning of a conversation that will continue for almost a decade.
There’s that initial talk that’s innocent and sweet and starts off something like, “When a man and a woman love each other….” and you can bank on the fact they are going to have lots of questions. The questions will become harder and harder until one day, the questions just stop.
And the questions are replaced with silence, closed doors, whispered conversations and the old ‘freeze out’ for mum and dad.
That’s when you know it’s time for an even more difficult sex talk. I didn’t quite volunteer to be the one to have this particular conversation but because both my husband and I were reluctant to take on the job, we decided which of us would initiate it with a game of Paper Scissors Rock.
I lost.
dating adviceJust as an FYI, you should know that this post is sponsored by Nissan Pathfinder. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100% authentic and written in their own words.
I tried to start the conversation at home a few times but he was just mortified by my attempts and he managed to flee. Teenage boys really are good at mumbling excuses as they exit a room, aren’t they?
Top Comments
Is that what the sec talk is meant to be? The extent of reproduction talk I was given by my mum is when I got my period and she taught me how to use a pad and that it will happen every month. Nothing on sex at all. I thought that was normal but apparently not.
I'd say if you have good communication techniques with your children on all issues, right from a young age, that things will be easier.