This story discusses sexual assault.
Since becoming a mother for the first time 18 months ago, I have learned some of the biggest lessons of my life. All of a sudden you are responsible for a precious little human that relies on your decision making to keep them safe at all times.
Over the past few months I have been seeing an interesting debate evolve both online and in my social circles. The question at hand: Should we let our kids go to sleepovers?
Listen to Help I Have A Teenager! On this episode, a parent is concerned about putting her daughter in a position she might be uncomfortable with, after she was invited to a backyard sleepover with boys and girls. Post continues after audio.
Call it naivety or call it a knee jerk reaction wanting to believe the best in the world, but my immediate thought was, “How ridiculous! Kids should be allowed to have sleepovers - what’s the big deal?!”
And then I sat with it for a moment.
As I read more, I realised that parents across the world weren’t making the decision to stop their kids from going to a sleepover to be a killjoy but rather it was coming from a place of fear. Trawling through Reddit I saw story after story of people recounting their experiences with sleepovers where they experienced abuse.
“What if there is literally anyone else in the house? An older sibling? A family friend? A neighbour? Someone working on something in the house? Something so inconsequential the parents may not even mention it to you, but these people could all be predators. Also, even people you like and trust can be sexual predators. So I would prefer my kid to have the sleepovers, not be at them,” wrote one user.
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