
You should never feel
uncomfortable about talking to your children about sex and relationships
because the more they know the better for their future. In the same vein, there
is also nothing comfortable about leaving your children unprepared for the real
world.
We often believe that talking to
the kids about sex and intimacy is exposing them to immorality rather than
letting them know its importance and break the innocence that they are already
known via the power of technology. I learned recently a young girl stabbed her
older husband to death in the northern part of Nigeria a few months ago.
I believe as parents we can do better
in making sure our kids are not left behind, growing up unprepared for what the
world is going to throw at them will leave them feeling we never care. Feeding
them with enough information will give them the zeal to want to learn from you
as a mother for a girl child or as a father for a boy child.
When they are lied to or
overprotected they seem to want to know what is behind bringing the panties
down. Avoiding sensible information about sex in an open discussion with your
child about consent, menstruation, puberty stage, and emotional well-being
denies them the skills of making informed decisions or choices.
This I will call a rope to a
thread on slippery ground, for they stand greater chances of being taken
advantage of by someone intentionally playing on their ignorance. Below is
written advice from scholars of teaching your kids about sex published
on krisvallotton.com.
Celebrate sexuality.
It’s God’s idea, and He talks
about it throughout the Bible. He’s not nervous about sex and He made it to be
beautiful and desirable. In Proverbs 5:18-19 it says, “Let your wife be a
fountain of blessing for you. Rejoice in the wife of your youth. She is a
loving deer, a graceful doe. Let her breasts satisfy you always. May you always
be captivated by her love.” That’s in the book of Proverbs—the book of the
Bible known for sharing wisdom! Isn’t God’s heart for sex beautiful? Sex is
something that should be celebrated, not hidden.
2. Teach them the power of
sacrifice.
The goal of a healthy sexual
culture is not to get rid of the desire for sex, but rather to manage the
appetite for it. We must stop using shame to do this. Teach your kids that
saying no to temptation now means saying yes to a better future. The value of
their virginity is in the battle it took to keep it. It gives them something
valuable, that they’ve had to sacrifice and fight for, to give away to the one
they love on their honeymoon night.
3. Teach them to manage their
desires from a young age.
This principle begins when
they’re young! Think about how your kids cry out for candy bars. We can teach
them to manage this desire by telling them they need to wait until after dinner
to have candy.
This trains them in gratification
delay so that when they’re older they’ve already learned how to wait for good
things. We can’t always get what we want when we want it, and every child needs
to learn this lesson from a young age. It will only help as they manage their
sexual appetite when they’re older.
4. Don’t punish them for purity.
We can’t create a positive by
enforcing a bunch of negatives. In other words, we can’t just motivate our kids
into purity by saying “Don’t have sex because you could get pregnant!” Rather,
release and empower your children into fighting for their purity.
Paint a picture and give them a
vision of the importance of waiting so that they’re motivated by a strong “yes”
to something beautiful, instead of a weak “no” to the temptation that’s
motivated by fear. Instead of motivating by punishment and shame, help them
make a battle plan, and always support them in keeping to it. And here’s the
kicker—if they fail, God can restore anything, even your child’s sexuality.
5. Create a safe place for them
to talk about sex.
Have age-appropriate
conversations with your children about sex throughout their lives, so that you
don’t just constrict communication to “a talk” but rather a normal part of your
family culture.
The principle of the first
mention comes in here. It says that when we hear about a subject for the first
time, it becomes the foundation by which we determine what we believe about
that subject. Everything else we are told about it is then weighed against the
foundational core values we learned. In other words, the first time we hear
about a subject it creates lenses that we will continue to have any time we
look at that subject. Let’s be the kind of parents who create the lenses and
perspectives that our kids view sex through.
Let’s instill kingdom virtues in
them by talking about God’s value for sex. If it is difficult for you to talk
to your kids about sex, practice with your spouse. Get comfortable with it so
that you don’t project awkwardness or shame when you begin to have these
conversations.
The more we shy away from this
vital information from our kids, the more danger we should be looking out for.
Having said that it is high time we work on who, where an when we allow our
kids to visit families and friends for holiday or passing a night. Though it is
popularly known that the girl child is commonly known for been molested, I want
to let you know that boy children are also in the same predicament by so-called
aunties and friends. We often yell at our kids rather than teaching them.
It is important to discuss sex
with them and be very positive about it, letting them know what is good about
sex will keep their mind positive and knowing why sex is worth waiting for and
guide them about its moral and when it is appropriate to give it a trial.
Though this may be challenging for most parents because we probably didn't grow
up in a healthy sexual culture.
Today I want to encourage you to
break that pattern and begin a new culture with your family! I pray that you
would have supernatural wisdom and be equipped with arrows of purity and
morality. I pray that you would know how to bring light where there is
darkness, and I break shame off of you and your home in Jesus’ name.
I release a joy over you and a
celebration over sexuality, that you would carry God’s heart on this subject. I
have learned to engage my son Oluwatobiloba and daughter Adekunmi in a sex
discussion in other to better their lives. These two will turn 18 in a couple
of days, I wouldn't want the world to teach them both what I failed to do as a
mother. Until next week but please sit your teenagers down this weekend and
talk about sex with them without yelling, shouting, or cursing as typical
African parents.
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