kids

What happens when we don't teach our boys about sex.

 

 

By JAYSON GADDIS

My first sexual experience with another person was when my cousin taught me how to masturbate. Naturally, it felt good. But then he shamed and humiliated me, leaving a deep scar. This became my initial sexual imprint, and it has impacted my sexuality to this day.

Instead of learning, I went into hiding like most men run by shame. I listened to other peers who were equally immature and confused.

Before I sought out help, I was left adrift, aimlessly trying to be a man with this cosmic sword between my legs. No one ever taught me the profound power my cock could yield. That I could give life or destroy life with its power. My dad dropped the ball as did my culture.

I received ZERO training around sex or my body until age 34. None. Fortunately for me, I now have excellent mentors and friends who are helping me grow up my sexuality and dive into it’s headwaters with open arms.

To not teach children about the sacredness of their bodies and their sexuality is one of the CORE abandonments of our time.

This post is about the mess we are in around male sexuality. I am here to name it and simply put it in the open for all of us to see.

So how did we get into this mess?

I’m guessing there’s more to the story than this, but I’m naming one GIANT dynamic if not THE dynamic that got us here.

First, let’s acknowledge that some of us (not me) got an amazing, healthy, wise education around sex, our bodies, and our sexuality. If that’s you, congratulations! Seriously. Then, let’s acknowledge that there are a good number of people out there that believe we are teaching are kids plenty, even too much, about sex and sexuality (i.e. conservative religious groups).

Leaving it up to the Churches and schools to train our kids about their penises and vaginas and how to use them has gotten us where we are today, ashamed, avoiding, and hoping someone else will teach this complicated stuff for us. If those entities did a great job, we’d be seeing different results.

Because adults have been, by in large, too ashamed or limited in themselves, they have taught our boys a very watered down version of sex education. That’s the best case scenario. It’s either nothing at all, or a “birds and the bees” talk in middle school or high school, likely from a teacher who is filtering information because their hands are tied by a fearful administration.

Think about what you got in terms of sex ed. I got a health class in 8th grade (in Utah) and then my dad talked to me in High school about wearing a condom. That’s it. That’s all I got.

So, what did I do? I learned from peers (well before high school) who were equally as ashamed, misinformed, and confused.

I was completely and utterly abandoned, as was my father by his father and on and on. I get that it wasn’t my Dad’s fault. How could he teach me anything about sex given what was taught to him by a Dad who probably never even mentioned it? Generations of betrayal. Generations of neglect and looking the other way, hoping kids would “figure it out” or innocently thinking it would take care of itself.

So, when I think about my own son, I can see the doorway toward “letting him figure it out.” That door is wide open and would be easy for me to just drop the ball and keep the generations of abandonment alive.

But I won’t do that. No way. Not in my house. I won’t pass the buck to other adults and expect them to deliver. I also refuse to let other 4, 5, 6, 7 year old boys teach my son about his sacred body. I refuse to let another kid shaming him while he’s naked or hard core porn be his first sexual experience.

I will show up for my son. I’m scared and excited to teach him everything about his beautiful body and its power. I feel inspired to train him to use his penis responsibly. And guess what? My son is 3 years old and needs information now! He is exploring his body right now! Wait until middle school? I don’t think so.

Most of us men received little to no sexual training as boys. We simply learned from other boys. Our first sexual experiences were often either molestation (1 in six boys is sexually abused before age 16), experimentation with ourselves (some kind of masturbation, mostly to porn these days) or other boys (more than one-third of the sexual abuse of America’s children is committed by other minors).

As boys, in order to fit in, we were supposed to make fun of other boys when we were naked. If we were too “good” or too scared to do that, we got quiet and became bystanders hoping some adult would step up and set a boundary. When no one did, we remained silent because speaking up we might have faced ridicule or humiliation.

Anything that resembled being gay or too feminine, we shamed and humiliated in each other and called it “funny.” We were mostly taught that sex is great, but also bad and that masturbation is bad even though it feels good. Hmmm….Our choice? Posture and fake it trying to “be one of the guys,” or go underground with our sexuality and experiment in isolation.

Confused yet?

As teen boys, we taught each other to objectify women and keep score. We were either taught that w0men like strong men that are stoic and hide their vulnerability like any superhero in the movies, or maybe we took the gentleman’s path, (slightly more conservative but still damaging) where we are supposed to take care of women and be “clean” by never masturbating or succumbing to our animal desires, thus being a “good boy.”

If we were gay, or wondered if we were gay, we had no where safe to turn to, no one to ask, no place to explore in a safe way. So, again we isolated and felt shame and guilt. Then we might have played along with the straight boys thus adding more self-abandonment and confusion.

Then we found oursevles in an oversexualized culture where women’s bodies were everywhere for us to gawk at including in video games, TV, magazines, and even in men’s sports. We went to college where our sex drive was through the roof and we sprayed it around like a fire-hose with no supervision and little consequence. Or we were so confused, we shut down and got quiet. If we wanted to be “one of the guys” we tried to get laid a lot and talked a big game, thinking that might win us friends. If we didn’t take that path, we stayed a quiet bystander letting our brothers off the hook over and over as they objectified and used women over and over again while we isolated and went inward for answers.

Pile on more confusion….

Of course, then we became adult men (whatever that means), and even though we have the power to seek out a therapist or professional to get help with the confusion and power between our legs, we didn’t. Either because we didn’t even know it was an option, or because we might have faced silent judgment or ridicule from our peers–more shame and humiliation, all part of the gender straightjacket.

Now that we are officially confused and ashamed about our penis and sex, and live in a culture that supports our dis-embodiment, we paradoxically find comfort in our isolation and disconnection. It’s the new norm. We mask over any whisper of shame or fear so we can fit in with the guys and then we hope to meet a cool woman that likes us despite our insecurities.

Then in our isolation, while no one is looking and with the door locked, we finally find relief in our sexually confused state–porn. It’s quick, easy, cheap, with an endless variety where we don’t have to deal with the complexities of interpersonal relationship dynamics. We can stay alone and keep it locked away in our inner sanctum. It even gives us temporarily relief from the stress in our lives and gives the illusion of keeping our shame at bay.

Whew.

Once again, the boy code has conditioned us into a little, tiny corner where we remain angry, alone, confused, and isolated. Our conditioning is a trap. Be a certain way, and don’t act outside the box. If you do, we will humiliate you. Don’t speak up or intervene, b/c that too is gay, weak, or feminine. So, stay put, stay a bystander, stay in your box.

So this is where we are today

Like it or not, the state of male sexuality in this culture (and probably the world) is that of a sick, neglected, and deeply abandoned child, and we can see the wake of it everywhere in our lives. The way boys treat girls, the way men treat women. The way boys treat boys. The bullying and shame, coercion, and intimidation to be a certain way sexually. The gay jokes, the “small penis” jokes, the “pussy” jokes, the rape, misogyny,misandry,  the violence, Matthew ShepardPenn StateSteubenville Rape, The Catholic Church, and the shame and self-hatred toward our own bodies.

All taught by who? Boys.

That’s right. We adults have put boys in charge of teaching other boys about the most sacred parts of their bodies. Boys are teaching other boys about sexuality in this culture. And because adults are unable or unwilling to step up, this is the mess we are in.

Wow.

So, this is on the table for us to examine and see clearly. How about we pause and take this all in.

Breathe.

The next question for me is “okay, what do I do about it?

In my own home, I will take on the responsibility to teach and train my son about his penis, his body, and his sexuality with unwavering respect and love.

In terms of the global problem, the questions are rolling in. From single moms to new dad’s like me.

How are you dealing with your own confused sexuality and how will you/are you teaching your son about it? Because wherever you are ashamed and stuck, you will block your son from learning and embodying a healthy sexuality.

Read this awesome breakdown The Healthy Sex Talk–Teaching Kids Consent Ages 1-21

I am teaching him about his sacred body. Where I’m stuck, I’m getting help, hiring mentors, going to classes and learning about how to appropriately (factoring in age and brain development) and truthfully talk to my son about his body and his sexuality. And, if enough parents ask, I’ll probably offer tele-classes or write more on the subject. I’m open to suggestions.

Please share below how you are navigating this critical terrain.

 

 

This post was originally published on The Good Men Project here and has been republished with full permission.

Jayson Gaddis is a relationship psychotherapist devoted to helping people awaken through relationship and intimacy. He’s a husband and part-time stay-at-home Dad getting schooled by his two kids. You can find him at JaysonGaddis.com and Deepening Relationships

How are you approaching raising boys? Do you think the past generations have let men down?

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Top Comments

Smarty Pants 12 years ago

Not having had children myself, I may be manifestly unqualified to comment on some aspects of this post. For example, I have no clue on the specifics of how I would teach a son to explore his penis, at any age.

But I do agree with just about everything Jayson says in terms of who's to blame for us women inheriting a generation of men who are cut off and warped emotionally. (Sex robots are already here!)

It is a systemic and entrenched issue.

It's exciting to find it put so openly and in layman's language, and by a bloke. I've suspected it for years, and had my concerns glancingly validated by feminist texts and discussions with a few game blokes. But this is an honest and direct summary of precisely why men have so many of the relationship-skill shortages that we love to moan about.

As women (and mothers), we probably hold a lot more power than we think we do to influence how the men in our society relate to themselves and to women. (Hell, women have made it to prime minister and governor general - can't we talk to our boys about sex?)

If we're honest with ourselves and we find that we really are not afraid (or suspicious) of men who hug each other, cry openly, and want emotionally connected sexual relationships, then let's get started in equipping our boys with the skills and support they need to build healthy functioning relationships.

For that sphere over which we women have far less control - which is the sphere of male influence on other males - I heartily endorse Jayson's manifesto and ask, why don't we pin this on the door of every football club in town?

Props for the clarion call, Jayson.


Desert Girl 12 years ago

Does anyone else feel a bit icky from this article?

"I won’t pass the buck to other adults... I also refuse to let other 4, 5, 6, 7 year old boys teach my son about his sacred body. I refuse to let another kid shaming him while he’s naked or hard core porn be his first sexual experience...I’m scared and excited to teach him everything about his beautiful body and its power... My son is 3 years old and needs information now! He is exploring his body right now! Wait until middle school? I don’t think so.."

If my husband was teaching our 5 year old son to play with his penis, I would be very very worried.

theoriginalpinny 12 years ago

Desert Girl, the whole point of the article is that you don't just teach them to 'play' with their penis. I have a three year old who I overheard in the back of the car last week telling his seven year old sister "my penis is getting fat" This was after a particularly racuous round of joke telling and hysterical laughter. Kids need to be aware and have a good understanding of their bodies, including their sexual organs. Yes they can be used for 'playing' ie pleasure, but there is so much for that they are for and they need to treat their bodies, and those of others, with respect. That is what I got out of this article and in light of what I heard last week, it was perfectly timed!!

mummak 12 years ago

I also don't think it's about 'teaching' your kid to play with his penis. It's about pride and ownership of their body. I firmly believe in empowering children about their bodies and not making touching disgusting or wrong.

I have a two year old boy and the other week after bath time I was dressing him in the lounge when he started touching his penis and giggling. Inside my whole world was falling apart lol but I just told him calmly that if he wants to do that then he needs to go in the bathroom by himself and do it and that no else is ever allowed to do that to him. So he just got up and went into our bathroom for five minutes. :/

As a parent you have a great opportunity to allow your kids to be proud of their bodies and to not find them shameful. After all, aren't little kids made so perfect anyway?

Desert Girl 12 years ago

Body pride etc may have been the intention of the article, but the use of words like sexual training and experience when discussing the penis of a 3 year old is excessive and, I think, misguided. I think it is over-parenting and, I have to say, a little bit icky. Yes, teaching kids about sexuality and bodies is very important, but I think we need to be mindful of the extremes particularly when dealing with really young kids. Fixations from parents on anything (sex, eating, weight, sport, etc) can often lead to the kids feeling inadequate down the track because of the amount of time/energy given by the parent and, I think, the writer hiring mentors, going to classes, asking for help (for a 3 year old) is excessive.

BTW, if you are wanting your 2 year old son to be comfortable and relaxed about his body, why send him away to another room if he is touching his penis?

mummak 12 years ago

I sent him to the bathroom because even though we want to teach our child body pride, its also important to teach them what is and isn't appropriate. It is appropriate for him to touch his penis, jst not in a public space. It was an opportunity to explain to him that while its ok in our house or our bathroom, it isn't ok to masturbate in front of people in public etc. I'm sorry if I didn't explain this in my first reply, I was in a hurry.

I agree that we shouldn't be pushing our kids into sexual activity or teaching them things that's is inappropriate for their age but if they start to discover themselves, it shouldn't be discouraged.

Hope that all made sense!