Mommie Dearest

This was the bio book and pic of Christina Crawford the adopted daughter of the legendary actress, Joan Crawford, of their abusive and tormented relationship during her childhood. Isn’t that to some degree most child-parent relationships? As they say – It’s complicated

Of late the new Mama Bear Activist is a cross between a right wing crackpot and a Libertarian asshole who is pretending they are liberal but are actually what? Right wing crackpots. There is something about becoming a parent that turns normally well rounded individuals, regardless of politics, into crazed paranoid individuals.

The last Mother Jones had an interesting article if not theme over the issue of Identity Politics when it came to Mothers, the “Mama Bear” and the new activist Parent intent on changing school libraries, bathroom access, curriculum subjects and what Teachers can or more importantly cannot say to their precious little snowflakes. I also want to point out as I have many many times in the blog that many of these same Women are Anti Abortionist Activists and have strong ties to usually a religious front of some kind despite being often well educated and employed, not some stay at home June Cleaver type in the least. They are angry, well funded and organized and super Bitches.

When I think of the term “Mama Bear” a cuddly image does not come to mind. Bears are predatory and violent. They are often in search of food and have no concept of human nature as they are BEARS. How many times have you heard of a Bear that just said, “Ah no, I won’t maul this person to death, I am a good nice Bear!” Never. So it is not an image I would use to connote or define a caring parent. More a smothering killing kind. Charming, I know. Even Sarah Palin stayed away from that image and referred to herself as a Hockey Mom or a Pitbull with lipstick. I am not sure either is all that reverential when it comes to parenting, but I do believe some of that relates to another phrase regarding women, a Cougar, which is thought to be from Canada, which you can see from her porch also, that described older women who were attractive and single and were hockey fans. I think that one too we can safely now put to bed, pun intended.

There were Soccer Moms to describe an apparent voting block that were Mothers whose children played soccer. Today’s hip cool aspirant Mother now has her children pursue more elite sports, such as Fencing, Lacrosse and Field Hockey. I only hope no one discovers Curling as the new sport du jour. And to think it being an Equestrian was something out of reach but thanks to the Varsity Blues Scandal, Rowing and Sailing are now just everyday activities that anyone can afford! Mothers be they bears, cougars or pit bulls are clearly animals when it comes to their kids, they will attack, kill and do harm to anyone who is believed to be a threat to their children existence. The endless Moral Panics of the day, Satanic Cults to Stranger Danger gave way to Q’Anon and new paranoid beliefs that dominate the media, social or otherwise. I have always believed that the initial Q’Anon claim of human trafficking of children and harming babies came from a Woman and from her it expanded to a much more insidious and bizarre rhetoric that led to January 6th.

When I read about the most dedicated followers of fashion in this it is almost always Women who seem to be the most aggressive. Think Marjorie Taylor Greene as a the perfect prototype of believers. She is insane, she is not alone. Ashli Babbit killed at the insurrection another. There is this woman, Valerie Gilbert, profiled in the New York Times whose obsessive following of this bullshit has estranged her from most all of her family and friends. Again full on nuts. Think Yoga Moms and Anti Vaxxers have much in common? They do and in fact the New Age believers are largely women and in turn are the largest members of online cohorts that express similar insane beliefs and in turn propaganda. This article in Slate discusses the growth of this movement to the crazy.

The ubiquitous “Karen” is an example of this woman who is unhinged, who tears apart Target mask displays while then returning home to make cupcakes for the kids birthday only the reality is that during the pandemic even those small social gatherings were denied, Mommy turned online to find a new cult, group or associates that could affirm the anger and fear they felt while working now more than two jobs, as primary caregiver, Teacher, Wife and everything else. And of course Sex Worker as story after story of late has now focused on the fact that many Women do not want to have sex with their partners anymore and with that further strains a marriage. It may explain why many Women decided that being Gay is a better choice and in turn why many Women are fearing that this “Gay” issue may also harm what little thread they have left to maintain normality. If Jenny went Gay will I? And of course the idea that your partner is your best friend is absurd. As I sit here they are finding that people who only socialize and rely on their partner for social relevance has larger issues with depression. And with that meeting different and new people in even small manners enables better mental and physical help. Again this explains the Karen below me and her unhinged behavior in my home. This was not a way to reach out for help and she clearly needs it and my later encounter with her spouse only confirmed that they have a massive problem in their home and it is not me and my “heavy walking and construction.” It doesn’t excuse it it only explains it and no they will never apologize nor should they as I have no intention of accepting it. Why? I forgive those who mean something to me and have relevance in my life. Neighbors whose name I do not even know falls into the “you mean nothing to me” file.

But for many Women they take it all in and all of it matters, how they are seen by the community as a Mother, Worker and Wife. The numerous bullshit blogs sharing their fears and angsts over their children and life; Posts and books by the Glenndon Doyle crowd are all competing for the same audience over the same subject – being a “good Mother.” YIKES. And this comes from all women of all kinds and cultures. Here is a Muslim Mom waging war on public education, the need to maintain exclusivity versus inclusivity – or as we once called it – Segregation.

And of course the idea that it is Mothers who will bring change when it comes to Drugs, Guns and everything in between. Thanks to some of this nothing has changed but the “conversation” continues or we have now a serious problem that led to the Drug Wars and other criminal justice movements that have contributed to a rising tide of entrants into the criminal justice system. Three strikes you’re out and other that have made individuals permanent criminals. Being a professional victim and/or their advocates takes a toll. Just ask Polly Klass’s family.

The idea that parenthood and particularly motherhood bestows upon one a sense of privilege and entitlement is absurd. You choose. Note that word CHOICE as it is a choice and again that too is becoming further out of reach and one wonders why? Oh misery loves company.

I watched a father with his child in a stroller and the space he took up, the need to block the door, the register and the entire production with his child over ordering is something we all have experienced. The endless quotes by Women who seem to know what another Mother would do/think/act in a situation is consistent upon media. Listen to the podcast by the comedian Heather McDonald, Juicy Scoop, she makes sure at least once in an hour she discusses her two children or her own childhood. Funny? Not in the least? Interesting? Not in the least. Her male counterpart on his own, Cover to Cover, and Chris Franjola discusses his daughter in context of his life and how if affects his decision making process on what to do, but he is by far less focused on what it means to be a “Daddy.” He is better as an aggrieved male than an adoring one.

I watch the Housewives and with that I have preferred that now in most cases the Children are grown, I used to loathe the focus on their kids. No one was more annoying than Vicki of Orange County and her parenting. Over time the divorces removed that option and as they age out it has been far more interesting watching this idiotic women navigate their lives without a shield that Motherhood offers. And with that also more tragic as now you see them as they have no identity other than that. Sorry but the Women who are trying to have actual businesses, work and friends outside of the cohort become targets that do have elements of jealousy but of late of Racism. I cannot neglect to mention that many of them focus on men and in turn has led to bankruptcy, criminal charges, jail terms for themselves or family members. None of it turns out well when you aspire to be someone you want to be and not who you are. I note that in the end of Death of Salesman the comment at his funeral that Willy never knew who he truly was. We all need that lesson prior to that time but without a voice who is not connected to you by blood or marriage to offer that lesson, it is one lost.

The pandemic fired up more than temps, it fueled social isolation and a reliance upon the internet to bring the world to you, or did it? We have failed parents on many level with poorly funded schools, inadequately funded and in turn compensated care givers for those in need of any kind of care – adult or child. We have insufficient parental leave and we have truly failed in regards to schools providing health and particularly mental health care. This affects the poor and those of color in ways that affect generations both economically and socially.

Motherhood is a challenge, I get it I really do. But the reality is that it is a CHOICE and with that you decide how to raise, educate and love them. You do not have the right to ask me to do the same in the same way. As a former Teacher I can see why I no longer want to Teach as apparently in a roster of kids reaching over 100 I somehow should have lessons that manage to do just that, teach to reach 100 individuals in the most unilaterally equal way but yet not be equal as every kid is special and has those special needs. We call it in Education SPED and with that it is reference to children who are disabled, intellectually or physically. I had not been in a SPED room in a long time but was the other day. It broke my heart. One child was ill and should not be there and I insisted he be taken to the Nurse and sent home. There were kids with true mental coping skills and the Aide was there with Me and another Sub and she never stopped ranting and raving as the “Teacher” was a former aide whom she has worked with for years but now promoted to Teacher. Huh? Did he get a license or was he credentialed and decided to go back to Teaching (yes that happens many Teachers become Aides as it is a by far easier gig)? It was the most disorganized morning I have seen and with that the kids needed one on one care and learning. This was also at the “best” school in Jersey City, this I can assure you was not the best. I was so happy to move rooms the rest of the day it could not happen soon enough. The other Sub was a nice guy but utterly out of his depth and breadth and again a reason why we need Sub folders, training options, sign ons and other access to info that can assist kids. WHAT? Not happening. Schools are functioning as day cares and that is all. Mothers will see to it.

Crazy Times

Literally. Being away for a couple of days gave me a break from the news but then immediately I had a lot to catch up on. So this is a brief review of some of the insanity or is that inanity that defines the American way.

First up: The Kentucky Millionaire who built a bunker and it failed to do what he built to do – keep his family safe. One dead and the family now lives in an expensive RV for reasons unclear, but it is clear that being crazy is not defined to the unhoused. Oh wait…..

Next: Sex Ed is Grooming. Okay this is now Q’Anon on steroids. I was sure that the original basis of much of this Q person was in fact a woman as she worked for the group behind the “chan” sites and then as the male personas picked up on the bizarre messaging and in turn grew their business from it, the Q thing sort of blossomed into this monolith that fueled much of the Trumptards. The fear of sex and information is a commonality in the South thanks to the Church. And that is the real reason behind the push to end abortion, there has never been a predominant interest in the life of children or these same whack jobs would be advocates for child care, maternity leave, health care and other post natal programs that promote life. It is about sex and the idea if you are fucking you will confine it to marriage and keep your sinning filth in the home. These are people who hate sex, and yes even I am bored with it but hey don’t let me stop you fucking! And with that fear that sex and intimacy is an effort, which they want no part of. Note that they are either breeding maniacs or have two kids which means they fucked themselves out. And I have never met a religious crackpot group that were not one or the other. Birth Control is sex control and sex is the predominant reason behind marriage. Trust me this is the real issue, fucking.

I have always found it interesting that many States take the forefront with regards to these issues, but Tennessee was always just ahead of the curve; however, they don’t get the news coverage on these culture firebrands as does Texas or Florida and I suspect it is because of Nashville. The state is very tied to that city for its income and with that the powers inside that city, while they may share their values fear the loss of money more, so with that much of the oppressive crazy shit is buried. When I lived there the issues surrounding sex abuse, largely in the schools was a major issue and with that the City Prosecutor rarely prosecuted said cases, blaming the Police for their poor investigation skills. But Nashville Schools were dumps and many times focus of investigation after investigation and little was ever done. Look at the timeline of the great reporter, Phil Williams, and his endless investigations in the school district and realize the problems there are serious and they do little more than cover it up. That is the South, hide, obscure and lie if you have to. Do as little as possible take as much credit as possible, that is their mantra. Mine is – What.ever.

Rounding to Third: Guns and more guns. After seeing Damon Wayans at Carolines a week ago where he brought a baseball bat to the stage with him a day later a comedy club in North Carolina found themselves closing early when a patron showed up with a shotgun; then a shooting at a mall in Indiana food court where the mythical good guy with a gun shot and killed the bad guy with a gun. (Some of this needs further investigation and I suspect as in all of these mass shootings, the truth is buried there) A shooting in Houston at an Apartment Complex left four dead; a shooting in a campground left three dead, one being only six; a woman dead after an altercation in a parking lot in Oklahoma; and more heinous facts regarding Uvalde continue to be released that again demonstrate how all of these shootings do not have the full information until investigations are completed. There is nothing in that particular story that has any good element in what.so.ever. And with that one of the few survivors of the Parkland shooting, meaning the shooter himself, is undergoing a sentencing trial which led one of the victims parents to scream out STOP and leave the courtroom. What is Justice in this case? That is not a decision anyone can make easily.

And lastly: I am exhausted with America right now. The endless one upmanship, the belittling and condescension that passes as an arrogant way of telling someone you are smarter and better than they are. I sat in Saratoga listening to the most boring people and I said little other than to remind them as I am on my own I have only myself to be responsible for and be concerned with. I am out to enjoy as a much of life as I can and with that do it as safely and as easily as I can. My conversations that once were as interesting as they were random have been relegated to largely message posts and those who serve me… the coffee person, the Front Desk Clerk, the Concierge at my building. These are not conversations they are more monologues and lectures where I either inform and attempt to have a teachable moment or be funny and witty without much of challenge or intellect. Even podcasts I am finding deeply redundant. Listen to Marc Maron WTF and it is him discussing his anxiety and frustrations about food and his family. In the beginning of the pandemic he lost his partner and his grief and pain coupled with the fear of the future were fascinating studies in how one copes and evolves when you are alone and working through it. I connected to that and much of his pain resonated, his humor not lost on one who feels much the same way, being over 55, being alone, having no kids and facing this odd future did make me laugh and cry. Today I get through maybe the first 5 minutes and unless he is speaking to someone I know and care about I wipe it out. The show with Nikki Glaser was both sad and funny as it was two neurotic comics who are successful and have good lives wax on about their eating disorders, their sexual confusion and fear of relationships. It should be a must listen for anyone going into the therapy business.

I had not known Ms. Glaser until FB Island where that thankfully is a delight of idiocy and moron supremacy that I need right now. So to listen to her comedy and in turn her own personal struggles I got much of what she said about sex and connection and how women view their sexuality and their intimacy tied to sex itself and men do not, they in fact disconnect from the two and immediately disengage once the act is complete. She insisted and I agree that women should not have sex until they are friends and familiar with the man and then have sex as they will find it by far more satisfying. She even feels girls should resort strictly to giving blow jobs or hand jobs if they feel compelled to offer sex to a boy as a means of building attraction. There is a big no from me on the sucking dick and fine with the hand job as it is utterly disease free and safe sex in every way. I am sorry but not getting oral cancer to suck a dick and the same goes for men, just finger bang or hand jobs or mutually masturbate. The era of sex is over and clearly we are going to have to start at square one to educate and inform and if you cannot love yourself you cannot love anyone else.

And with that Marc shared that he was in a friendship with a woman, and I recall this discussion at Red Bank when I saw him there, about wanting a “girl” friend who fucked him, had dinner with him (maybe not in that order) and then left and did not stay over, see him every day and remain monogamous in that type of arrangement. He is now in that that type of arrangement and he acknowledged that she is younger, he did not say how young but if she stays over she sleeps in another room. She has to be 30 as no woman over 35 would put up with that bullshit. Again it is challenging when you have no kids, no real baggage to find partners on the same page but even that would be stretch for me. I might do the dinner part, maybe even the fucking and would leave but I doubt that. I did that and hated it so I am over it. The reality is that while I was hit on by a man that night at the restaurant I and oddly Marc ate at after the show (although given his food issues that must have been interesting) I felt nothing, kissing this man, nothing. I wanted to go to my hotel room and sleep. I am not sure I will ever feel anything for a man again. So there you go folks note that again most of the Pro Life/Anti sex crew are all well into their 60s and cling to the past as a part of the problem. They still blame the Hippies! The observations I made at Saratoga with these couples in their 50s only made me feel relieved that I was not a part of this. I recall my ex husband and his theory that the Moon landing was a Conspiracy, the fame obsession aka the asspirational (intentional misspelling) that he carried with him. He is like many I meet, toting their fake or real Vuitton bags or wearing their Gucci shoes and the insatiable need to be “famous” be that on social media or just someone who matters. I have all of those things but rarely use them and feel compelled to let everyone know I have them, I get it. I really do. With that I seek respect and dignity and to speak and be spoken to in a manner that reflects that. And with that I am so grateful to not be married as I suspect I would be like one of the couples, parroting my Husband’s idiotic viewpoints and beliefs. I recall when I realized I had married a jerk I began to spend less time at home, and when he was there I wasn’t and so forth. My dog was the one thing that I truly loved during that time.

In my conversation with my Concierge yesterday he was shocked how few people actually speak to people professionally and they have college degrees! He is from Africa and migrated here years ago and was educated in his country but like many many Immigrants his degrees could not be substantiated as he was designated a refugee and this led him to working here. His story is not different than many despite the shortages of medical professionals, they are forced to return to school to get an American degree. Or what I call the most expensive piece of paper you will ever buy. I am sure that most if not many who possess a degree, myself included, have found it utterly useless and utterly a waste of time and money. Others and those are largely the graduates of “elite” Universities who are not any smarter but are better connected and in turn have better opportunities in which to work. The endless studies that profess that those with a degree earn more in a lifetime needs a little more detail there as it is based on Social Security data. And again women are fucked right there as many take time away from the workforce and may end up in work that will often pay less. This does not paint the full picture as it is frankly all theory as we know that flows in economics and trends dictate the pursuit of a degree but that degree may not be what the field you end up in and with that make even more so does degree and type matter? What school? What was the base salary? What profession? What was the network connection that enabled the gig, and so forth. The reality is that connections matter more and the doors are open via an alumni association or through a friend and family. So say Bob goes to University of Illinois and gets a Business Degree, with that where does he go to work out of school? What was his base salary? (Cause it ain’t what you think) If Bob was named Jane was that the same salary? How did he find said job? Recruited or applied? But that fact is shoved down our throats to the detriment of many who have expensive degrees and are Barista’s at Starbucks. Hence the union drive. We often equate worth with one’s financial stability. They are not the same.

We have no way of knowing details about anything unless we ask and we dig and we do neither. We talk at each other and not to or with each other. We are busy drawing our dividing lines and that seems to be with regards to how one votes. Funny I don’t have a problem with whom you vote for, I do if you do not read, listen to music, watch a movie, go on a trip and have a thought that isn’t your own.

So it appears that my story may be like this one. A tragic tale of someone at the brink of his life found dead and alone. At least I will have lived one.

Time for the "Talk"

For the better part of my professional life I tried to mentor both boys and girls with an emphasis on boys as they were the largest portion of discipline problems so I tried varying techniques, from giving them classroom management duties, to simply sharing food or just talking.  The just talking part truly works as they have few women they talk to on a simple social basis that is not connected to family or duty.  I in turn met amazing young men whom I hope have become amazing older men.  In turn I tried to be open to young girls about issues other than those that seem to dominate dialogues with female teachers and female students – part lecture, part mentor – it is not an easy role with girls at that 13-18 mark and they are in fact by far more challenging to connect to than their male peers.  That may be me as I gravitate to men as friends and as I am really in the asexual category – the Jo March type if one must (although we know that Alcott was trying to write about a woman who was not into men at all and may have found more companionship with another women, she was like her doppelgänger, a spinster.)

So when you are not married, not identifying with a sexual group and seem to travel alone no one know what to do with you and the past three years in Nashville really tested the mettle on what that meant to be identified only by one’s vagina or by one’s checkbook.  I guess I am more Aunt March than Jo in that respect but hey Meryl Streep bitches!

As  a woman of “a certain age,” a “spinster” an “old maid” I find it hard to find the tribe that accepts the “lone woman.” Funny we are still suspect despite the fact the vagina is closed for business so what we are after exactly must be something to do with an old shoe and children or woods and candy houses.    Yes women are evil, cunning, duplicitous and we are after youth and vitality so watch out Dorothy or a house will fall on your head.  Or worse we are just ignored entirely.

Funny that I am not brain dead and have depth and wealth of experience that has nothing to do with my checkbook as the power of observation and history is how we have the present but hey I live very much in the now with my eyes on the road ahead and a glance in the rear view mirror to remind me where I just was is worth a road trip if so inclined.   And I miss kids and being in school and I want to get back to Teaching albeit temporary to have those meaningful moments and exchanges that rewarded me and in turn enabled me to grow and learn even in my dotage.

We have a concierge desk here in my building and they vary in demographics the same way the city outside my door does but most are male and in my exchanges I am always amazed that age is rarely a factor in distinguishing differences among men and I realized that regardless of age, men seem to feel safer being a prototype or if one must a stereotype and it was from reading Peggy Ornstein’s article in The Atlantic about her new book, Boys and Sex, that enabled the light bulb above my head to alight.

In Nashville I tried to mentor young Ethan for reasons that to this day make no sense, perfect sense and some sense when you put this entire story in perspective. The lack of meaningful work, the social isolation, the feeling I was hostage to Vanderbilt and my dental work and the process of aging without family really hit home so I make no apologies for doing right or doing anything to befriend and love this young man as one would a son.  What I did not know was that his duplicity was not about issues that I was comfortable with, sexuality, but in fact religion and faith that was ultra conservative and radical in its beliefs.  As a result a boy I loved was a boy I became afraid of.  I was afraid of the children in Nashville for not the same reason but in the same way as I have never experienced such damage and destruction that these children demonstrate in their behavior and largely due to both poverty and religion as a supposed balm to compensate for all that they lack in life.

As a result I hated every minute living there and dread going back and the snow storm enabled a 24 hour delay and I welcomed it as another opportunity to find peace and worth by just being here.   In my exchanges from my new Yoga instructor to the boys and the desk and those at my coffee shop I have a sense of positive energy and perspective that makes me relieved to know that both men and women are out there with a sense of self and a sense of community.

I am looking forward to reading Ms. Ornstein’s book as I have long thought men and boys don’t know women as simply women, those who are are not tied to them via the vagina through birth or sex but there to be friends, mentors, colleagues or leaders, that neither want them for monetary gain or status but as people and fellow humans on life’s road.  We have done a real shitty job when it comes to equality in finding and establishing friendships across gender and age. We need a new lesson plan when it comes to teaching both genders about sex and sexuality.

One of my recent conversations with a young concierge was about sexual assault and the current crop of famous or infamous charges and trials that include R. Kelly, Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby, Jeffrey Epstein and Michael Jackson.   In the case of the latter he feels that the boys,  now men, were lying as they did not exhibit qualities or behaviors of those who have been raped.  Well is that because men exhibit different behaviors, take on different qualities after assault or are you speaking from a place of personal experience, knowledge or is there a “type” or “way” one behaves regardless of gender after being assaulted?   He refused to believe any Michael Jackson parallels despite the fact that R. Kelly had not been convicted of assault in 2008, Jeffrey Epstein had been charged with Prostitution versus assault, Bill Cosby had been only convicted after a mistrial the first time and Weinstein has not gone to trial nor made it to court in the past and there are many others who regardless of fame have not been charged with sexual crimes as it is one area of criminal justice where we have a serious matter of failure with regards to investigation and in turn convictions. And to assume that anyone who has been assaulted acts in a “way” that would somehow be a flag or scarlet letter to let those around you know that you have been harmed is rather unfair and again marks one to be remembered for the worse thing that happened to you be you and adult or a child.  There are ways to recover not forget but live and thrive in life if the type of support and help are available and accessible in which to do so.  But as one who knows you don’t recover ever and your relationships are affected but not all become hookers, drug addicts, crazy, etc.   I watched the light bulb on his head go on when he realized I might be speaking from personal experience and while I agree that we can see Michael Jackson differently we are no different than any Jury who finds those innocent who are likely guilty or more importantly those guilty who are innocent.  We have streets full of the former and jails full of the latter so the real issue is how to believe, to hear and to trust that we have all the information needed to make the right decision about an other’s life even outside a court of law.

But then again some people don’t want to believe regardless we have to believe “our truths” which in the ever increasing narcissism of America no one exemplifies that more than Trump; Trump is the perpetual man-child from the temper tantrums to the pouting face to the calling of names he represents all that nature versus nurture shows how a man of privilege becomes a man of denial.  From sexual assault to high crimes and misdemeanors we have what we have now and we are all now in the courtroom in which to believe or not the truths as they are presented as facts.

How we learn about ourselves, our gender, our roles in society are tied to nurture.  We have the families or more importantly the lack thereof in some cases to aid in determining our place in the larger picture.  We have stereotypes and prototypes that are models and guides in which to follow or to ignore or use to our advantage.  No two snowflakes are alike and that metaphor applies to all of us. We have a real problem in America with regards to the two most obvious factors in nature – sex and race – as they are observable and in turn we use what we see to judge and to assign, a type of conviction if you must qualities and characteristics that we have learned to apply.  It makes it easier and in turn requires less work and commitment to actually know people, learn about them, have awkward conversations, honest conversations and even fun ones as they all take work and that shit is hard!

All sex is oral. Try talking to someone you don’t want to fuck with or fuck, not of the same gender, race or age or sexuality about this topic.  Bet you can’t won’t or don’t have time.  Change that to race and it is no less awkward.  We don’t like to heavy lift that is America and what makes us great.   We get others to do it for us.

A Beginner’s Guide

Of late I have looked back on my sexual encounters, the bulk of which fell into short term ones and is one night stands and relationships with finite end dates in the months not years.  My marriage was certainly sexless as I repeated my parents down to the age difference between us (8 years he my junior) but short of separate rooms.  I did not not love my ex husband I just did not love him.  I can count on one had men I truly loved and in turn I am not even sure that I “loved” them but the idea of them and in my way of love that only I know and understand.  So even in love we define personally and individually as we do our sexuality.

I ended my interest, not desire in sex after the incident in 2012.  I had a couple of minor sexual encounters that fell short of full on intercourse and it was then I realized I was done for good.  Age, illness and simply being tired of the bullshit was enough for me to pack that kit and put it in the closet, right next to the bag of sex aids and toys I use to masturbate and self gratify frequently.  I often say a day without an orgasm is a bad day.   I have a rich fantasy life that enables me to find pleasure in scenarios and encounters that I would not pursue in my real life which is why its called fantasy.  I do not need pornography or erotica to stimulate me and I don’t even use real life individuals, famous or otherwise.  I like my sex as nameless as it is private and personal for it is about me.

But living in Nashville I have laughed that in my 60 years on the planet I have never heard of more sexual scandals and incidents of assault and abuse then I have in fiction or non.  This the buckle of the belt are intensely obsessed with sex.  It may also explain the other stories that have abounded from all the surrounding Southern states with sex scandals and sagas as they attempt to stave it off by stopping abortion and soon I suspect birth control.  They are sure that is the FEAR they need to discourage any more of these behaviors.  Yeah sure, whatever.  I truly believe that is the primary reason the whole save the baby thing is secondary or why not have paid family leave, better education, medical care for all families? Oh wait its about fucking first and foremost.

When I read the below article in the Guardian I knew there was truth to this as most young people I know are marrying off at a fast clip and those not are obsessed with finding a partner.  They are afraid to be alone and few know how to have a fulfilling sex life without it being either/or.  And by that I mean sexual assault, exploitation or some type of commitment for life.  This is why we have a real problem, we have failed to provide healthy sex education and in turn communication with regards to sexual satisfaction and pleasure.  It also explains again the obsession with Homosexuality as without clear communication and understanding you have another set of laws and hate bills in the pipelines to discourage anyone from fucking anyone that may not be conventional in the American provincial concept of family.  We love families to be largely white, working class, with three children who go to Church and leave everyone else alone.

Fear baby fear rules Americans and their politics.  The decline in birth rates also means that there will be fewer white people and we cannot have that!

I miss fucking someone who is cognizant, aware of their sexuality, unafraid and willing to commit to a functional healthy partnership.  I have had few men willing if able to do so and when they did the timing was off or even I did not know how to handle such dynamic.  And funny now that I am it is off the table for me.   We are fucked and not in a good way.

The truth about sex: we are not getting enough
Sex and intimacy: a user’s guide

In a world that seems so at ease with sex, you’d think we were having it all the time. Think again

Rose George
Guardian
Sat 18 May 2019

We owe a lot to the sex lives of Greeks. Ancient Greece gave us the origins of the names and concepts for homosexuality, homophobia and nymphomania, as well as narcissism and pederasty. The Romans talked freely to each other in toilets and were equally community-minded when it came to sex, with a reputation for lasciviousness and orgies. Georgians, we believe, were smutty, and Victorians were prudes and hypocrites. (All of these are partial truths.) We like to use sex as a mirror of an era, and to make judgments accordingly. What then, are we to make of us right now?

This is the most sex-positive age ever, right? We are liberal and comfortable with sex like no other people have ever been. Our magazines publish articles on how to get on better with your clitoris. Porn is freely available (and accessed by teenagers). Erotic books are bestsellers, however badly written. TV broadcasts shows in which the contestants are naked, or have sex in a box, or make a sex tape on camera. If sexual choice were a shop, it would be a hypermarket, with dizzyingly long aisles of every possibility: straight, gay, bi, trans, poly, fluid, each with its own culture and each widely accepted.

In this sex-positive version of reality, we have been unleashed from the bonds of church and religion, and suffocating family expectation; we are free, and we’re enjoying being easy. And society’s greater liberalism is matched by better scientific understanding of sex and the body parts that we use for it. This has been helped by the scientific gaze finally turning to the 51% of the population that it had mostly ignored, so that we know now that the clitoris, though smaller than the penis, has way more nerve endings. Despite what every Hollywood and TV scriptwriter believes, we may finally be accepting that more than 30% of women will not orgasm with penetration alone.

Millennials are having less sex than their parents; young people, we are told, are in a ‘sex drought’

Sex and power have come together to positive effect elsewhere, with the last couple of years of the #MeToo movement. The use of power by men to get sex is as old as the Roman hills, and it is still endemic – along with appallingly low prosecution rates for rape – but something in that balance of power may have shifted, and for the good.

In the age of iPhones, people are equipped with cameras no matter where they go. They can capture the most picture perfect moment at any time. It also means …

Except. A paper in a recent issue of the British Medical Journal summed up the findings of three huge national surveys into sexual attitudes, called Natsal, the latest of which was in 2012. Natsal is British in focus, but some of its findings are reflected globally: worldwide, we are having less sex less frequently and are more upset about it. In Britain, most of the decline in sexual frequency is in people aged over 25 and in long-term relationships. In the US, the over-50s reported the largest decline in how often they had sex, though Finnish middle-aged men reported they were getting sex more frequently. In Japan, the most sexual inactivity was in young single people. Millennials are having less sex than their parents; young people, we are told, are in a “sex drought”.

Some other disquieting facts: girls as young as nine are now having surgery to modify their vulvas, and rates of labiaplasty are increasing 45% year-on-year. There is now a labiaplasty known as the “Barbie”, which does what it says and reduces female genitalia to doll-like smooth uniformity. That must be because alongside all the sex positivity is another message: you are inadequate and wrong. Hairless, labia-free female bodies; porn-hard erections; dizzying sexual possibility. If you don’t want to eat guacamole off your bisexual lover while multiple-orgasming in at least three different positions, but only on a Thursday, what’s wrong with you?

Meanwhile, when the couples therapist Esther Perel did a Ted talk in 2013 on “the secret to desire in a long-term relationship”, it was watched 17m times on Ted and YouTube. All these numbers and facts point to a gap between the public, digital version of sex and the reality: that we are not getting enough of it and that when we do get it, it’s not satisfying.

Our sexual landscape may look like the promised land, but not everyone wants to travel there. This may be down to the way our relationships have changed. Marriage used to be more straightforward: an economic arrangement with clear, though not fair, expectations. For women, security, a home and children and the right not to be raped by the nearest powerful man, or at least a lesser probability of that happening. For men, succession. Now, Perel says: “We want our partner to still give us all these things, but in addition I want you to be my best friend and my trusted confidant and my passionate lover to boot, and we live twice as long.”

In the age of iPhones, people are equipped with cameras no matter where they go. They can capture the most picture perfect moment at any time. It also means …

In their paper, the BMJ authors were careful to skewer expected conclusions. Pornography was too easy to blame, and in fact a US study showed that declines in sexual frequency were greatest among those who didn’t watch it. If we are in a state of anxious disconnect between public sex and our private activities, then it is to be expected: we’re knackered. Middle-aged women reported exhaustion as one of the main reasons they were having less sex. Having children later in life, as we now tend to do, leaves those in middle life with small children and ageing parents and full-time jobs, all at once. No wonder they see a bed and want only to sleep in it.

Some of these figures could be because now that sex is primetime and ubiquitous, we feel more able to be honest about how much – or how little – we’re actually getting. But the researchers also noted that rates began to drop in 2007 and 2008. In 2007, the iPhone was launched, and in 2008, the world collapsed into recession. Anxiety, stress and exhaustion have led millions of people to be prescribed antidepressants (one in six Britons in 2017) – which are designed to combat those things but also dull libido. It is a heady package. “Should frequency of sexual contact serve as a barometer for more general human connectedness,” wrote the BMJ authors, “then the decline might be signalling a disquieting trend.”

Many species appear to have purely reproductive sex. That we don’t, that we have an erotic life too, is a bonus and a blessing. But it is also the source of dismay, dissatisfaction, puzzlement, frustration, mystery, worry, delight and obsession.

There may be a clearer lens being pointed at our sexual workings and wants, but our worries, fears and wonder about sex will outlive us all.

Say Yes

That is the word to the dress, to the request to marry, to the demand for sex when it comes to the communication skills between men and women. Men complain that women want to talk about their feelings and women complain that men don’t share theirs.  This argument is as old as time and as I am as old as time I am pretty much done with it all.

I wrote my post yesterday, Not Me, because I am sick of the MeToo movement and in turn am fairly certain it will go the way of those that have preceded it so thankfully I did not invest in a pin, a ribbon, a bracelet or anything that indicates I cared for a moment knowing that it will go nowhere sooner that later.  The real problem is that no clear leadership emerges with a distinct face and voice willing to take the heat, the hate and the reality of the challenges of fronting a significant demand for change that is not just legal but a moral one.  You know like the Civil Rights Movement.

Then today I open up the New York Times and sure enough I may be done with MeToo but it not with me.  I have Peggy Orenstein’s book and loved it as I have taught girls over the years and only once early in my career did a young girl share with me her first sexual experience.  After it was over I chose to ask her if she had told anyone this story and she had not.  Under the law I was to report it to my Principal and I knew immediately that Gloria Izard-Baldwin was the last person I would share it with.  She was a Bitch and an Idiot and I did not know her other than those impressions so that would put me at risk.  (Hey if one thing I can assess people and I actually now act on them at the time I debated but yep I was right. It was the times I failed to do so I was nearly killed so once again never second guessing myself again.)  I left the end of the school year and in turn Gloria was given a vote of confidence the next year and packed her kit to go to retirement or wherever bad Principals go.  She was the first in a long line of them and frankly this issue is not something that needs a chain of command and here in Nashville this horror story is one I have seen on a continual loop here so nothing changes.

But what I did tell her to do was go home take her Mother aside and without emotion tell her what she told me and then to come to me and tell me the next day the result of that exchange.  Her Mother called the Police but whatever her Mother decided to do I supported and in turn I told her that she must also respect that decision. It worked out but from that point on I made sure I told Students to never share with me anything that they felt was a violation of the law as I was/am obligated to pass it on.  They did not know it meant the Principal and if they were a moron it went no further but it took me out of that loop and that frankly was what mattered.  I had to sleep at night.

When I read this opinion piece I was not shocked I was relieved. It again proved that I was right when I said that without conversation there is no trust and without trust there is no sex, consensual or otherwise.  Again the man with the robe that flies open is and idiot but the man who throws a woman down and refuses to listen to her and coerces her is a rapist. They are two different animals. And they are, however, both animals, not men.


It’s Not That Men Don’t Know What Consent Is

They often understand that what they’re doing is wrong — then they do it anyway.

By Peggy Orenstein
The New York Times Opinion
Ms. Orenstein is writing a book about young men, masculinity, emotional intimacy and sex.

Feb. 23, 2019

“Think of a bear.”

Shafia Zaloom, a health teacher in San Francisco, stood in front of her 10th grade sex ed class. It was the first day of the spring term and “bear,” at least when it was spelled that way, was not what the students expected to discuss.

Once their ursine images were firmly in place, Ms. Zaloom asked for descriptions. One student had pictured a grizzly; another was thinking about a black bear cub; there were polar bears and gummy bears. Personally, I had imagined Yogi. The point, Ms. Zaloom said, is that in a sexual situation, you can’t make assumptions.

I think about those bears every time yet another allegation of sexual misconduct against yet another powerful man becomes public. Nearly all of those men deny coercion or aggression or insist that the encounters were “100 percent consensual.”

But rarely do they define what, precisely, they mean by that. Did they discuss, with an enthusiastic partner, which erotic acts to indulge in together? Or were they satisfied that whatever they initiated was fine as long as she didn’t say no? Did they consider passionate kissing a tacit contract for something else? Was forced sex — say, the pushing down of a partner’s head — fair game because lots of guys do it? Did they consider sex with underlings acceptable, or a fair swap for career advancement, in which case they were apparently thinking of koalas, which are not actually bears at all?

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The truth is, men are not the most reliable arbiters of whether sex was consensual. Consider: When Nicole Bedera, a doctoral candidate in sociology at the University of Michigan, interviewed male college students in 2015, each could articulate at least a rudimentary definition of the concept: the idea that both parties wanted to be doing what they were doing. Most also endorsed the current “yes means yes” standard, which requires active, conscious, continuous and freely given agreement by all parties engaging in sexual activity. Yet when asked to describe their own most recent encounters in both a hookup and in a relationship, even men who claimed to practice affirmative consent often had not.

When they realized that their actions conflicted with that benchmark, though, they expanded their definition of consent rather than question their conduct. Their ideas of “yes” were so elastic that for some they encompassed behavior that met the legal criteria for assault — such as the guy who had coerced his girlfriend into anal sex (she had said, “I don’t want to, but I guess I’ll let you”). She then made it clear that he should stop. “He did, eventually,” Ms. Bedera told me, “and he seemed aware of how upset she was, but he found a way to rationalize it: He was angry with her for refusing him because he thought a real man shouldn’t have had to beg for sex.”

Despite all evidence to the contrary, we still want to believe that men who are accused of sexual assault are all “monsters.” True, some of them may be monsters we know — our employers, our clergymen, our favorite celebrities, our politicians, our Supreme Court justices — but they are “monsters” nonetheless.

A “good guy” can’t possibly have committed assault, regardless of the mental gymnastics he has to engage in to convince himself of that (“20 minutes of action,” anyone?). Even men who admit to keeping sex slaves in conflict zones will claim they did not commit rape — it’s that other guy, that “monster” over there, that “bad guy” who did. In fact, one of the traits rapists have been found to reliably share is that they don’t believe they are the problem.

In my own interviews with high school and college students conducted over the past two years, young men that I like enormously — friendly, thoughtful, bright, engaging young men — have “sort of” raped girls, have pushed women’s heads down to get oral sex, have taken a Snapchat video of a prom date performing oral sex and sent it to the baseball team. They all described themselves as “good guys.” But the fact is, a “really good guy” can do a really bad thing.

Young men’s ability to understand sexual refusal has been shown to be remarkably sophisticated and subtle, regardless of whether the word “no” is actually uttered; that renders dubious the common defense that they “can’t tell” or “aren’t mind readers.” What’s more, where “yes” is concerned, guys seem downright clairvoyant: They routinely over-perceive a woman’s interest in having sex with them, even more so if the men have been drinking.

In 2016, for instance, researchers at Confi, an online resource dedicated to women’s health issues, asked 1,200 college students and recent graduates nationwide what they would “expect to happen next” if they went home with someone whom they’d met and danced with at a party. Forty-five percent of the men considered vaginal intercourse “likely”; only 30 percent of the women did. The figures were similarly skewed for oral sex. Additionally, one in four men believed women “usually have to be convinced” in order for sex to happen (only about a tenth of the women agreed).

Not only are those perception gaps a setup for assault, but also for men’s subsequent denials of responsibility and, quite possibly, claims of false accusation. According to the same survey, men found the actions of a “tipsy” guy “much more acceptable” than a sober one, meaning they let themselves off the hook for potential sexual aggression, even as female assault victims who drink are blamed.

Sometimes, boys I talk to acknowledge having willfully crossed lines. One college sophomore had repeatedly ignored his partner’s hesitation during a hookup, despite his own professed scrupulousness about consent.

“I suppose there was something in the back of my head that I wasn’t fully listening to,” he admitted. “I guess when you’ve been flirting with someone the whole evening and you feel close to what you’ve been wanting to happen, it’s difficult to put on the brakes. And — I don’t know. I was enjoying myself. I was having what in the moment was a positive sexual experience. I think I just wanted to. Which is scary.”

And that may be the crux of it. Young men still too often learn to prioritize their pleasure over women’s feelings, to interpret a partner’s behavior through the lens of their own wishes. Their claims of “miscommunication,” Ms. Bedera concluded in her research on college men, may actually be part of “an expectation that they control both partners’ narratives about desire and consent.”

All of which would indicate that in these high-profile cases, women’s accusations are inherently more credible than male denial, regardless of how vehement that denial may be. It also means that despite the new standards that have been put in place and despite all the editorials and news articles and calls for change, we are still not doing what needs to be done: fully educating boys not only about the importance of consensual, ethical, mutually pleasurable sexuality, but about the ways their own sense of entitlement may blind them to those values, leading them to cause harm, whether or not they choose to see it.

Time for the "Talk"

I don’t ever recall that pronouncement in my house as Sex with a capital “S” was never actually discussed but constantly in debate.  The physiological and biological components came from my Catholic School of all places in 6th Grade.  I recall the detail to this day and in fact appropriated the very thing only adding my extra special fear factor, a sort of cross between Reefer Madness, Trainspotting and Sid and Nancy style element.  I figure throw in drugs and disease when all else fails showing kids pictures of diseased lungs, dicks and vaginas will do the trick.

But what I was always honest.   I said repeatedly that unless you can name all the body parts on both sexes with the appropriate medical name, can successfully masturbate oneself to orgasm and know what that is and go to a Doctor and have that discussion about protecting oneself from unwanted pregnancy and disease then sex is not for you.  I think that frankly applies to adults as well.

Today having my coffee I read the NYT Magazine on how young people are learning about sex via porn.   Then I nearly threw it promptly up.   Just another reason why I need to get out of education.

Now in Seattle the subject was taught and opened the door for questions.  In some classes where I subbed/taught there was an open dialog but it was also then I realized that the kids were seeing porn as the questions and beliefs were almost delusional so I quit doing it.  What I also found was I noted a racial component to it as well as cultural one with few Muslim families partaking as well as Latino as they are often Catholic so there was that faith based issue that let the kids opt out.  So when you have largely poor kids who are most often the faces of color they have perspectives on sex you realize that there are many issues largely religious that here in Nashville is even more disturbing as sex education is only relegated to abstinence.  And in turn so it may explain the heavy sexualized behavior I see exhibited among that particular cohort. But this when I began to question my own attitudes towards race as it was predominately black kids who acted in this manor and yet in Seattle it was only white kids who were compelled to be verbal regarding sex.  I cannot recall any innuendo or commentary from any black kids ever in Seattle but that doesn’t mean it did not happen it is just that my recollections are on those kids who I recall and they happened to be white.   And that is when I realized that this is cultural not racial.  But it is still something I struggle with as it is something I have never witnessed ever regardless like I have here.

I have zero problem with porn if two consenting adults use it as erotica or as a way of experimenting. But that requires communication and consent.  And as I have said of late there seems to be a problem with both when it comes to sex in current day.   From watching one shower to watching one masturbate it seems that this is a plot in a bad porn film down to massages and of course stupid dialog in which to accompany it.  Some of it I believe was the situation with Aziz Ansari and even James Franco but had elevated to new heights with Charlie Rose, Matt Lauer and the rapist in chief, Harvey Weinstein.   The creepy factor was added with the faux seductions, the isolation and of course the recriminations that followed for women who refused to cooperate.  And again we have no idea how many did and now are sure that they will be exposed.  This week the suicide of Rose McGowan’s former Agent perhaps lends to that issue.

I am pretty much over fucking for sport or for pleasure.  Living in the two faced town of Nashville I neither trust nor respect anyone enough to open my door for anyone, let alone a sexual encounter. The sheer level of illiteracy here is enough to go fuck no.  You need to be able to read and in turn talk to express yourself to find common ground when it comes to sexual pleasure.  At this point I wonder if books like The Joy of Sex to The Happy Hooker have ever been viewed here as the “dirty”  paperbacks that one perused for knowledge and/or amusement.  People really are stupid here and that affair by the Mayor only proves my point.  Come on a former Ethics Officer fucks a bodyguard, who is a City Police Officer hired at your request?  Bitch please!

Btu this article is worth reading if you are a parent or not. If you are sexually active or not. If you just realize how fucked we are when it comes to the problems we face with regards to sex.   Come on.. just not on my face.

What
Teenagers Are
Learning From Online Porn


American adolescents watch much more pornography than their parents know — and it’s shaping their ideas about pleasure, power and intimacy. Can they be taught to see it more critically?

By MAGGIE JONES
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE
FEB. 7, 2018

Drew was 8 years old when he was flipping through TV channels at home and landed on “Girls Gone Wild.” A few years later, he came across HBO’s late-night soft-core pornography. Then in ninth grade, he found online porn sites on his phone. The videos were good for getting off, he said, but also sources for ideas for future sex positions with future girlfriends. From porn, he learned that guys need to be buff and dominant in bed, doing things like flipping girls over on their stomach during sex. Girls moan a lot and are turned on by pretty much everything a confident guy does. One particular porn scene stuck with him: A woman was bored by a man who approached sex gently but became ecstatic with a far more aggressive guy.

But around 10th grade, it began bothering Drew, an honor-roll student who loves baseball and writing rap lyrics and still confides in his mom, that porn influenced how he thought about girls at school. Were their breasts, he wondered, like the ones in porn? Would girls look at him the way women do in porn when they had sex? Would they give him blow jobs and do the other stuff he saw?

Drew, who asked me to use one of his nicknames, was a junior when I first met him in late 2016, and he told me some of this one Thursday afternoon, as we sat in a small conference room with several other high school boys, eating chips and drinking soda and waiting for an after-school program to begin. Next to Drew was Q., who asked me to identify him by the first initial of his nickname. He was 15, a good student and a baseball fan, too, and pretty perplexed about how porn translated into real life. Q. hadn’t had sex — he liked older, out-of-reach girls, and the last time he had a girlfriend was in sixth grade, and they just fooled around a bit. So he wasn’t exactly in a good position to ask girls directly what they liked. But as he told me over several conversations, it wasn’t just porn but rough images on Snapchat, Facebook and other social media that confused him. Like the GIF he saw of a man pushing a woman against a wall with a girl commenting: “I want a guy like this.” And the one Drew mentioned of the “pain room” in “Fifty Shades of Grey” with a caption by a girl: “This is awesome!”

Watching porn also heightened Q.’s performance anxiety. “You are looking at an adult,” he told me. “The guys are built and dominant and have a big penis, and they last a long time.” And if you don’t do it like the guys in porn, Drew added, “you fear she’s not going to like you.”

Leaning back in his chair, Drew said some girls acted as if they wanted some thug rather than a smart, sensitive guy. But was it true desire? Was it posturing? Was it what girls thought they were supposed to want? Neither Q. nor Drew knew. A couple of seats away, a sophomore who had been quiet until then added that maybe the girls didn’t know either. “I think social media makes girls think they want something,” he said, noting he hadn’t seen porn more than a handful of times and disliked it. “But I think some of the girls are afraid.”

‘There’s nowhere else to learn about sex — and porn stars know what they are doing.’

“It gets in your head,” Q. said. “If this girl wants it, then maybe the majority of girls want it.” He’d heard about the importance of consent in sex, but it felt pretty abstract, and it didn’t seem as if it would always be realistic in the heat of the moment. Out of nowhere was he supposed to say: Can I pull your hair? Or could he try something and see how a girl responded? He knew that there were certain things — “big things, like sex toys or anal” — that he would not try without asking.

“I would just do it,” said another boy, in jeans and a sweatshirt. When I asked what he meant, he said anal sex. He assumed that girls like it, because the women in porn do.

“I would never do something that looked uncomfortable,” Drew said, jumping back into the conversation. “I might say, ‘I’ve seen this in porn — do you want to try it?’ ”

It was almost 4 p.m., and the boys started to gather their backpacks to head to a class known as Porn Literacy. The course, with the official title The Truth About Pornography: A Pornography-Literacy Curriculum for High School Students Designed to Reduce Sexual and Dating Violence, is a recent addition to Start Strong, a peer-leadership program for teenagers headquartered in Boston’s South End and funded by the city’s public-health agency. About two dozen selected high school students attend every year, most of them black or Latino, along with a few Asian students, from Boston public high schools, including the city’s competitive exam schools, and a couple of parochial schools. During most of the year, the teenagers learn about healthy relationships, dating violence and L.G.B.T. issues, often through group discussions, role-playing and other exercises.

But for around two hours each week, for five weeks, the students — sophomores, juniors and seniors — take part in Porn Literacy, which aims to make them savvier, more critical consumers of porn by examining how gender, sexuality, aggression, consent, race, queer sex, relationships and body images are portrayed (or, in the case of consent, not portrayed) in porn.

On average, boys are around 13, and girls are around 14, when they first see pornography, says Bryant Paul, an associate professor at Indiana University’s Media School and the author of studies on porn content and adolescent and adult viewing habits. In a 2008 University of New Hampshire survey, 93 percent of male college students and 62 percent of female students said they saw online porn before they were 18. Many females, in particular, weren’t seeking it out. Thirty-five percent of males said they had watched it 10 or more times during adolescence.

Porn Literacy, which began in 2016 and is the focus of a pilot study, was created in part by Emily Rothman, an associate professor at Boston University’s School of Public Health who has conducted several studies on dating violence, as well as on porn use by adolescents. She told me that the curriculum isn’t designed to scare kids into believing porn is addictive, or that it will ruin their lives and relationships and warp their libidos. Instead it is grounded in the reality that most adolescents do see porn and takes the approach that teaching them to analyze its messages is far more effective than simply wishing our children could live in a porn-free world.

Imagine that you are a 14-year-old today. A friend might show you a short porn clip on his phone during the bus ride to school or after soccer practice. A pornographic GIF appears on Snapchat. Or you mistype the word “fishing” and end up with a bunch of links to “fisting” videos. Like most 14-year-olds, you haven’t had sex, but you’re curious, so maybe you start searching and land on one of the many porn sites that work much like YouTube — XVideos.com, Xnxx.com, BongaCams.com, all of them among the 100 most-frequented websites in the world, according to Alexa Top Sites. Or you find Pornhub, the most popular of the group, with 80 million visitors a day and more traffic than Pinterest, Tumblr or PayPal. The mainstream websites aren’t verifying your age, and your phone allows you to watch porn away from the scrutinizing eyes of adults. If you still have parental-control filters, you probably have ways around them.
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Besides, there’s a decent chance your parents don’t think you are watching porn. Preliminary analysis of data from a 2016 Indiana University survey of more than 600 pairs of children and their parents reveals a parental naïveté gap: Half as many parents thought their 14- and 18-year-olds had seen porn as had in fact watched it. And depending on the sex act, parents underestimated what their kids saw by as much as 10 times.

What teenagers see on Pornhub depends partly on algorithms and the clips they’ve clicked on in the past. Along with stacks of videos on the opening page, there are several dozen categories (“teen,” “anal,” “blonde,” “girl on girl,” “ebony,” “milf”) that can take them to more than six million videos. The clips tend to be short, low on production value, free and, though Pornhub tries to prevent it, sometimes pirated from paid sites. Many of the heterosexual videos are shot from the male point of view, as if the man were holding the camera while he has sex with a woman whose main job, via oral sex, intercourse or anal sex, is to make him orgasm. Plot lines are thin to nonexistent as the camera zooms in for up-close shots of genitals and penetration that are repetitive, pounding and — though perhaps not through the eyes of a 14-year-old — banal. (There are alternative narratives in L.G.B.T. and feminist porn, and studies show that for gay and bisexual youth, porn can provide affirmation that they are not alone in their sexual desires.)

We don’t have many specifics on what kids actually view, in large part because it’s extremely difficult to get federal funding for research on children and pornography. A few years ago, frustrated by the dearth of large, recent United States studies, Rashida Jones, Jill Bauer and Ronna Gradus, creators of the 2017 Netflix documentary series “Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On,” about technology and porn, paired with several foundations and philanthropists to fund a national survey about porn viewing, sexual attitudes and behaviors. As part of the survey, led by Debby Herbenick, a professor at the Indiana University School of Public Health and director of the university’s Center for Sexual Health Promotion, along with her colleague Bryant Paul, 614 teenagers ages 14 to 18 reported what their experiences were with porn. In preliminary data analysis from the study (Herbenick is submitting an academic paper for publication this year), of the roughly 300 who did watch porn, one-quarter of the girls and 36 percent of the boys said they had seen videos of men ejaculating on women’s faces (known as “facials”), Paul says. Almost one-third of both sexes saw B.D.S.M. (bondage, domination, sadism, masochism), and 26 percent of males and 20 percent of females watched videos with double penetration, described in the study as one or more penises or objects in a woman’s anus and/or in her vagina. Also, 31 percent of boys said they had seen “gang bangs,” or group sex, and “rough oral sex” (a man aggressively thrusting his penis in and out of a mouth); less than half as many girls had.

It’s hard to know if, and how, this translates into behavior. While some studies show that a small number of teenagers who watch higher rates of porn engage in earlier sex, as well as in gender stereotyping and in sexual relationships that are less affectionate than their peers’, these findings only indicate correlations, not cause and effect. But surveys do suggest that the kinds of sex some teenagers have may be shifting. The percentage of 18-to-24-year-old women who reported trying anal sex rose to 40 percent in 2009 from 16 percent in 1992, according to the largest survey on American sexual behavior in decades, co-authored by Herbenick and published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine. In data from that same survey, 20 percent of 18-to-19 year old females had tried anal sex; about 6 percent of 14-to-17-year-old females had. And in a 2016 Swedish study of nearly 400 16-year-old girls, the percentage of girls who had tried anal sex doubled if they watched pornography. Like other studies about sex and porn, it only showed a correlation, and girls who are more sexually curious may also be drawn to porn. In addition, some girls may view anal sex as a “safer” alternative to vaginal sex, as there’s little risk of pregnancy.

The Indiana University national survey of teenagers asked about other sex behaviors as well. Though the data have not been fully analyzed, preliminary findings suggest that of the teenagers who had had sex, around one-sixth of boys said they had ejaculated on someone’s face or choked a sex partner. The survey didn’t define choking, but the high school and college-age students I spoke to referred to it as anything from placing a hand gently on a partner’s neck to squeezing it.

We don’t have longitudinal data on the frequency of ejaculating on a girl’s face or choking among American teenagers to know whether either practice is more common now. And, as David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, told me, fewer teenagers have early sex than in the past (in a recent study, 24 percent of American ninth graders had sex; in 1995 about 37 percent had), and arrests of teenagers for sexual assault are also down. But you don’t have to believe that porn leads to sexual assault or that it’s creating a generation of brutal men to wonder how it helps shape how teenagers talk and think about sex and, by extension, their ideas about masculinity, femininity, intimacy and power.

Over the year in which I spoke to dozens of older teenagers at Start Strong and around the country, many said that both porn and mainstream media — everything from the TV show “Family Guy” (which references choking and anal sex) to Nicki Minaj’s song “Truffle Butter” (with an apparent allusion to anal sex followed by vaginal sex) to the lyrics in Rihanna’s “S&M” (“Sticks and stones may break my bones, but chains and whips excite me”) — made anal and rough sex seem almost commonplace. Drew told me he got the sense that girls wanted to be dominated not only from reading a few pages of “Fifty Shades of Grey” but also from watching the movie “Mr. & Mrs. Smith,” with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie. “She’s on the table, and she’s getting pounded by him. That’s all I’ve seen growing up.”

These images confound many teenagers about the kinds of sex they want or think they should have. In part, that’s because they aren’t always sure what is fake and what is real in porn. Though some told me that porn was fantasy or exaggerated, others said that porn wasn’t real only insofar as it wasn’t typically two lovers having sex on film. Some of those same teenagers assumed the portrayal of how sex and pleasure worked was largely accurate. That seems to be in keeping with a 2016 survey of 1,001 11-to-16-year-olds in Britain. Of the roughly half who had seen pornography, 53 percent of boys and 39 percent of girls said it was “realistic.” And in the recent Indiana University national survey, only one in six boys and one in four girls believed that women in online porn were not actually experiencing pleasure: As one suburban high school senior boy told me recently, “I’ve never seen a girl in porn who doesn’t look like she’s having a good time.”

It’s not surprising, then, that some adolescents use porn as a how-to guide. In a study that Rothman carried out in 2016 of 72 high schoolers ages 16 and 17, teenagers reported that porn was their primary source for information about sex — more than friends, siblings, schools or parents.

“There’s nowhere else to learn about sex,” the suburban boy told me. “And porn stars know what they are doing.” His words reflect a paradox about sex and pornography in this country. Even as smartphones have made it easier for teenagers to watch porn, sex education in the United States — where abstinence-based sex education remains the norm — is meager. Massachusetts is among 26 states that do not mandate sex ed. And a mere 13 require that the material be medically and scientifically accurate. After some gains by the Obama administration to promote more comprehensive sex ed, which includes pregnancy prevention, discussions of anatomy, birth control, disease prevention, abstinence and healthy relationships, the Trump administration did not include the program in its proposed 2018 budget; it also has requested increased funding for abstinence education. Easy-to-access online porn fills the vacuum, making porn the de facto sex educator for American youth.

One Thursday afternoon, about a dozen teenagers sat in a semicircle of North Face zip-ups, Jordans, combat boots, big hoop earrings and the slumped shoulders of late afternoon. It was the third week of Porn Literacy, and everyone already knew the rules: You don’t have to have watched porn to attend; no yucking someone else’s yum — no disparaging a student’s sexual tastes or sexuality. And avoid sharing personal stories about sex in class. Nicole Daley and Jess Alder, who wrote the curriculum with Emily Rothman and led most of the exercises and discussion, are in their 30s, warm and easygoing. Daley, who until last month was the director of Start Strong, played the slightly more serious favorite-aunt role, while Alder, who runs Start Strong’s classes for teenagers, was the goofier, ask-me-anything big sister. Rothman also attended most of the classes, offering information about pornography studies and explaining to them, for example, that there is no scientific evidence that porn is addictive, but that people can become compulsive about it.

In the first class, Daley led an exercise in which the group defined porn terms (B.D.S.M., kink, soft-core, hard-core), so that, as she put it, “everyone is on the same page” and “you can avoid clicking on things you don’t want to see.” The students also “values voted” — agreeing or disagreeing about whether the legal viewing age of 18 for porn is too high, if working in the porn industry is a good way to make money and if pornography should be illegal. Later, Daley held up images of a 1940s pinup girl, a Japanese geisha and Kim Kardashian, to talk about how cultural values about beauty and bodies change over time. In future classes, they would talk about types of intimacy not depicted in porn and nonsexist pickup lines. Finally, Daley would offer a lesson about sexting and sexting laws and the risks of so-called revenge porn (in which, say, a teenager circulates a naked selfie of an ex without consent). And to the teenagers’ surprise, they learned that receiving or sending consensual naked photos, even to your boyfriend or girlfriend, can be against the law if the person in the photo is a minor.

Now, in the third week of class, Daley’s goal was to undercut porn’s allure for teenagers by exposing the underbelly of the business. “When you understand it’s not just two people on the screen but an industry,” she told me, “it’s not as sexy.”

To that end, Daley started class by detailing a midlevel female performer’s salary (taken from the 2008 documentary “The Price of Pleasure”): “Blow job: $300,” Daley read from a list. “Anal: $1,000. Double penetration: $1,200. Gang bang: $1,300 for three guys. $100 for each additional guy.”

“Wow,” Drew muttered. “That makes it nasty now.”

“That’s nothing for being penetrated on camera,” another boy said.

Then, as if they had been given a green light to ask about a world that grown-ups rarely acknowledge, they began peppering Daley, Rothman and Alder with questions.

“How much do men get paid?” one girl asked. It is the one of the few professions in which men are paid less, Rothman explained, but they also typically have longer careers. How long do women stay in their jobs? On average, six to 18 months. How do guys get erections if they aren’t turned on? Often Viagra, Rothman offered, and sometimes a “fluffer,” as an offscreen human stimulator is known.

Daley then asked the teenagers to pretend they were contestants on a reality-TV show, in which they had to decide if they were willing to participate in certain challenges (your parents might be watching) and for how much money. In one scenario, she said, you would kneel on the ground while someone poured a goopy substance over your face. In another, you’d lick a spoon that had touched fecal matter. The kids debated the fecal-matter challenge — most wouldn’t to do it for less than $2 million. One wanted to know if the goop smelled. “Can we find out what it is?” asked another.

Then Daley explained that each was in fact a simulation of a porn act. The goopy substance was what’s called a “baker’s dozen,” in which 13 men ejaculate on a woman’s face, breasts and mouth.

“What?” a girl named Tiffany protested.

The second scenario — licking the spoon with fecal matter — was from a porn act known as A.T.M., in which a man puts his penis in a woman’s anus and then immediately follows by sticking it in her mouth.

“No way,” a 15-year-old boy said. “Can’t you wash in between?”

Nope, Daley said.

“We don’t question it when we see it in porn, right?” Daley went on. “There’s no judgment here, but some of you guys are squeamish about it.”

“I never knew any of this,” Drew said, sounding a bit glum.

Daley went on to detail a 2010 study that coded incidents of aggression in best-selling 2004 and 2005 porn videos. She noted that 88 percent of scenes showed verbal or physical aggression, mostly spanking, slapping and gagging. (A more recent content analysis of more than 6,000 mainstream online heterosexual porn scenes by Bryant Paul and his colleagues defined aggression specifically as any purposeful action appearing to cause physical or psychological harm to another person and found that 33 percent of scenes met that criteria. In each study, women were on the receiving end of the aggression more than 90 percent of the time.)

“Do you think,” Daley said, standing in front of the students, “watching porn leads to violence against women? There’s no right or wrong here. It’s a debate.”

Kyrah, a 10th-grade feminist with an athlete’s compact body and a tendency to speak her opinions, didn’t hesitate. “In porn they glamorize calling women a slut or a whore, and younger kids think this is how it is. Or when they have those weird porn scenes and the woman is saying, ‘Stop touching me,’ and then she ends up enjoying it!”

‘I’ve never seen a girl in porn who doesn’t look like she’s having a good time.’

Tiffany, her best friend, snapped her fingers in approval.

“Yes and no,” one guy interjected. “When a man is choking a woman in porn, people know it is not real, and they aren’t supposed to do it, because it’s violence.” He was the same teenager who told me he would just “do” anal sex without asking a girl, because the women in porn like it.

Pornography didn’t create the narrative that male pleasure should be first and foremost. But that idea is certainly reinforced by “a male-dominated porn industry shot through a male lens,” as Cindy Gallop puts it. Gallop is the creator of an online platform called MakeLoveNotPorn, where users can submit videos of their sexual encounters — which she describes as “real world,” consensual sex with “good values” — and pay to watch videos of others.

For years, Gallop has been a one-woman laboratory witnessing how easy-to-access mainstream porn influences sex. Now in her 50s, she has spent more than a decade dating 20-something men. She finds them through “cougar” dating sites — where older women connect with younger men — and her main criterion is that they are “nice.” Even so, she told me, during sex with these significantly younger nice men, she repeatedly encounters porn memes: facials, “jackhammering” intercourse, more frequent requests for anal sex and men who seem less focused on female orgasms than men were when she was younger. Gallop takes it upon herself to “re-educate,” as she half-jokingly puts it, men raised on porn. Some people, of course, do enjoy these acts. But speaking of teenagers in particular, she told me she worries that hard-core porn leads many girls to think, for example, that “all boys love coming on girls’ faces, and all girls love having their faces come on. And therefore, girls feel they must let boys come on their face and pretend to like it.”

Though none of the boys I spoke to at Start Strong told me they had ejaculated on a girl’s face, Gallop’s words reminded me of conversations I had with some older high-schoolers in various cities. One senior said that ejaculating on a woman’s face was in a majority of porn scenes he had watched, and that he had done it with a girlfriend. “I brought it up, or she would say, ‘Come on my face.’ It was an aspect I liked — and she did, too.”

Another noted that the act is “talked about a lot” among guys, but said that “a girl’s got to be down with it” before he’d ever consider doing it. “There is something that’s appealing for guys. The dominance and intimacy and that whole opportunity for eye contact. Guys are obsessed with their come displayed on a girl.”

Many girls at Start Strong were decidedly less enthusiastic. One senior told me a boyfriend asked to ejaculate on her face; she said no. And during a conversation I had with three girls, one senior wondered aloud: “What if you don’t want a facial? What are you supposed to do? Friends say a boy cleans it with a napkin. A lot of girls my age like facials.” But a few moments later, she reversed course. “I actually don’t think they like it. They do it because their partner likes it.” Next to her, a sophomore added that when older girls talk among themselves, many say it’s gross. “But they say you gotta do what you gotta do.” And if you don’t, the first girl added, “then someone else will.”

These are not new power dynamics between girls and boys. In a 2014 British study about anal sex and teenagers, girls expressed a similar lack of sexual agency and experienced physical pain. In the survey, of 130 heterosexual teenagers age 16 to 18, teenagers often said they believed porn was a motivating factor for why males wanted anal sex. And among the guys who reported trying it, many said friends encouraged them, or they felt competitive with other guys to do it. At the same time, a majority of girls who had tried anal sex said they didn’t actually want to; their partners persuaded or coerced them. Some males took a “try it and see” approach, as researchers called it, attempting to put their finger or penis in a girl’s anus and hoping she didn’t stop them. Sometimes, one teenager reported, you “just keep going till they just get fed up and let you do it anyway.” Both boys and girls blamed the girls for pain they felt during anal sex and some told researchers the girls needed to “relax” more or “get used to it.” Only one girl said she enjoyed it, and only a few boys did. Teenagers may not know that even while porn makes it seem commonplace, in the 2009 national survey of American sex habits, most men and women who tried anal sex didn’t make it a regular part of their sex lives. And in another study, by Indiana University’s Debby Herbenick and others in 2015, about 70 percent of women who had anal sex said they experienced pain.

Drew had firsthand experience with what he had seen in porn not translating into actual pleasure. The first time he had sex, he thought he was supposed to exert some physical control over his girlfriend. But the whole thing felt awkward, too rough and n
At one point during sex, Drew’s girlfriend at the time, who was a year older and more experienced, asked him to put his hand around her neck during sex. He did it, without squeezing, and though it didn’t exactly bother him, it felt uncomfortable. Drew never asked if she got the idea from porn, but it made him wonder. Had she also picked up other ways of acting? “Like, how do you really know a girl has had a good time?” he said one afternoon, musing aloud while sitting with some friends before Porn Literacy class. “My girlfriend said she had a good time,” he went on. “She was moaning. But that’s the thing: Is it fake moaning?”

Even if you know porn isn’t realistic, it still sets up expectations, one senior told me. In porn, he said, “the clothes are off, and the girl goes down on the guy, he gets hard and he starts having sex with her. It’s all very simple and well lit.” Before he had sex, porn had supplied his images of oral sex, including scenes in which a woman is on her knees as a man stands over her. At one point, he thought that’s how it might go one day when he had sex. But when he talked with his girlfriend, they realized they didn’t want to re-enact that power dynamic.

I spent a couple of hours on a Wednesday afternoon at Start Strong with a senior girl who took the first Porn Literacy class in the summer of 2016. Looking back over the last several years of middle and high school, A., who asked me to identify her by the first initial of her middle name, said she wished she had had someplace — home, school, a community sex-ed program — to learn about sex. Instead, she learned about it from porn. She saw it for the first time by accident, after a group of sixth-grade boys cajoled her to look at tube8.com, which she didn’t know was a porn site. She was fascinated. She had never seen a penis before, “not a drawing of one, nothing.” A few years later, she searched online for porn again after listening to girls in the high school locker room talk about masturbation. A.’s parents, whom she describes as conservative about sex, hadn’t talked to her about female anatomy or sex, and her school didn’t offer any sex education before ninth grade; even then, it focused mostly on the dangers — sexually transmitted infections and diseases and pregnancy.

Aside from some private schools and innovative community programs, relatively few sex-ed classes in middle and high school delve in detail into anatomy (female, especially), intimacy, healthy relationships, sexual diversity. Even more rare are discussions of female desire and pleasure. Porn taught A. the basics of masturbation. And porn served as her study guide when she was 16 and was the first among her friends to have sex. She clicked through videos to watch women giving oral sex. She focused on how they moved during sex and listened to how they moaned. She began shaving her vulva (“I’ve never seen anyone in porn have sex with hair on it”).

Porn is “not all bad,” said A., who was frank and funny, with a slew of advanced-placement classes on her transcript and a self-assured manner that impresses adults. “I got my sexual ways from porn, and I like the way I am.” But what she learned from porn had downsides too. Because she assumed women’s pleasure in porn was real, when she first had intercourse and didn’t have an orgasm, she figured that was just how it went.

For A., it wasn’t enough to know that porn was fake sex. She wanted to understand how real sex worked. Rothman and her team did consult a sex educator while they were writing the Porn Literacy curriculum but decided to include only some basic information about safe sex. It came in the form of a “Porn Jeopardy” game during one class. The teenagers, clustered in teams, chose from four categories: S.T.D./S.T.I.s, Birth Control, Teen Violence/Sexual Assault and Porn on the Brain.

“S.T.I.s/S.T.D.s for $300,” one student called out.

“Why is lubrication important for sex?” Alder asked.

“What’s lubrication?” Drew asked.

“It’s lube,” another teenager said, in an attempt to explain.

‘If you don’t do it like the guys in porn, you fear she’s not going to like you.’

“Is lubrication only the little tube-y things?” a girl with long black hair asked. “Or can it be natural?”

“I never learned this before,” Drew announced to the class after it was mentioned that lubrication decreased friction, increased pleasure and could reduce the risk of tearing and therefore of S.T.I.s and S.T.D.s. Drew’s only sliver of sex ed was in sixth grade with the school gym teacher, who sweated as he talked about sex, “and it was all about it being bad and we shouldn’t do it.”

As if to rectify that, Alder offered a quick anatomy lesson, drawing a vulva on the whiteboard and pointing out the clitoris, the vagina, the urethra. “This is called a vulva,” she said. Alder repeated the word slowly and loudly, as if instructing the students in a foreign language. It was both for humor and to normalize a word that some of them may have been hearing for the first time. “This is the clitoris,” Alder went on. “This is where women get most pleasure. Most women do not have a G spot. If you want to know how to give a woman pleasure, it’s the clitoris.”

“Let’s move on,” Rothman said quietly. Alder had just inched across a line in which anatomy rested on one side and female desire and pleasure on the other. It was a reminder that as controversial as it is to teach kids about pornography, it can be more taboo to teach them how their bodies work sexually. “The class is about critically analyzing sexually explicit media,” Rothman told me later, “not how to have sex. We want to stay in our narrow lane and not be seen as promoting anything parents are uncomfortable with.” Daley added: “I wish it were different, but we have to be aware of the limitations of where we are as a society.”

Porn education is such new territory that no one knows the best practices, what material should be included and where to teach it. (Few people are optimistic that it will be taught anytime soon in public schools.) Several years ago, L. Kris Gowen, a sexuality educator and author of the 2017 book “Sexual Decisions: The Ultimate Teen Guide,” wrote extensive guidelines for teaching teenagers to critique “sexually explicit media” (she avoided the more provocative term “porn literacy”). Even though Oregon, where Gowen lives, has one of the most comprehensive sex-ed programs in the country, Gowen said that teachers felt unequipped to talk about porn. And though the guidelines have been circulated at education conferences and made publicly available, Gowen doesn’t know of a single educator who has implemented them. In part, she says, people may be waiting for a better sense of what’s effective. But also, many schools and teachers are nervous about anything that risks them being “accused of promoting porn.”

The most recent sex-education guidelines from the World Health Organization’s European office note that educators should include discussions about the influence of pornography on sexuality starting with late elementary school and through high school. The guidelines don’t, however, provide specific ideas on how to have those conversations.

In Britain, nonprofit organizations and a teachers’ union, along with members of Parliament, have recommended that schools include discussions about the influence of porn on how children view sex and relationships. Magdalena Mattebo, a researcher at Uppsala University in Sweden who studies pornography and adolescents, would like porn literacy mandated in her country. “We are a little lost in how to handle this,” Mattebo told me.

More than 300 schools, youth and community groups and government agencies in Australia and New Zealand use components of a porn-education resource called “In the Picture” that includes statistics, studies and exercises primarily for teenagers. It was created by Maree Crabbe, an expert on sexual violence and pornography education, who lives near Melbourne, Australia. As she put it during a United States training program for educators and social workers that I attended in 2016: “We want to be positive about sex, positive about masturbation and critical of pornography.” One key component of the program is often neglected in porn literacy: providing training to help parents understand and talk about these issues.

Last year, a feminist porn producer, Erika Lust, in consultation with sex educators, created a porn-education website for parents. The Porn Conversation links to research and articles and provides practical tips for parents, including talking to kids about the ways mainstream porn doesn’t represent typical bodies or mutually satisfying sex and avoiding accusatory questions about why your kid is watching porn and who showed it to them. “We can’t just say, ‘I don’t like mainstream porn because it’s chauvinistic,’ ” says Lust, whose films feature female-centered pleasure. “We have given our children technology, so we need to teach them how to handle it.” But she takes it a step further by suggesting that parents of middle- and high-schoolers talk to their teenagers about “healthy porn,” which she says includes showing female desire and pleasure and being made under fair working conditions. I asked Lust if she would steer her daughters in that direction when they are older (they are 7 and 10). “I would recommend good sites to my daughters at age 15, when I think they are mature enough. We are so curious to find out about sex. People have doubts and insecurities about themselves sexually. ‘Is it O.K. that I like that, or this?’ I think porn can be a good thing to have as an outlet. I’m not scared by explicit sex per se. I’m afraid of the bad values.”

Tristan Taormino, another feminist porn filmmaker and author, speaks frequently on college campuses and produces explicit sex-ed videos for adults. “The party line is we don’t want teenagers watching our videos,” she says, noting they are rated XXX. “But do I wish teenagers had access to some of the elements of it?” In addition to seeing consent, she said, “they would see people talking to each other, and they’d see a lot of warm-up. We show lube, we show sex toys.”

That may be more than most parents, even of older teenagers, can bear. But even if parents decided to help their teenagers find these sites, not only is it illegal to show any kind of porn — good or bad — to anyone under 18, but, really, do teenagers want their parents to do so? And which ones would parents recommend for teenagers? “Unlike organic food, there’s no coding system for ethical or feminist porn,” Crabbe notes. “They might use condoms and dental dams and still convey the same gender and aggression dynamics.” Also, “good porn” isn’t typically free or nearly as accessible as the millions of videos streaming on mainstream sites.

Al Vernacchio, a nationally known sexuality educator who teaches progressive sex ed at a private Quaker school outside Philadelphia, believes the better solution is to make porn literacy part of the larger umbrella of comprehensive sex education. Vernacchio, who is the author of the 2014 book “For Goodness Sex: Changing the Way We Talk to Teens About Sexuality, Values, and Health,” is one of those rare teenage-sex educators who talks directly to his high school students about sexual pleasure and mutuality, along with the ingredients for healthy relationships. The problem with porn “is not just that it often shows misogynistic, unhealthy representations of relationships,” Vernacchio says. “You can’t learn relationship skills from porn, and if you are looking for pleasure and connection, porn can’t teach you how to have those.”

Crabbe notes one effective way to get young men to take fewer lessons from porn: “Tell them if you want to be a lazy, selfish lover, look at porn. If you want to be a lover where your partner says, ‘That was great,’ you won’t learn it from porn.” And parents should want their teenagers to be generous lovers, Cindy Gallop argues. “Our parents bring us up to have good manners, a work ethic. But nobody brings us up to behave well in bed.”

To prepare his students to be comfortable and respectful in sexual situations, Vernacchio shows photos, not just drawings, of genitalia to his high-schoolers. “Most people are having sex with real people, not porn stars, and real bodies are highly variable. I would much rather my students have that moment of asking questions or confusion or even laughter in my classroom rather than when they see their partner’s naked body for the first time.” He, along with Debby Herbenick, who is also the author of the 2012 book “Sex Made Easy: Your Awkward Questions Answered for Better, Smarter Amazing Sex,” advocate that adolescents should understand that most females don’t have orgasms by penetration alone, and that clitoral stimulation often requires oral sex, fingers and sex toys. As she notes: “It’s part of human life, and you teach it in smart, sensitive ways.”

As the students from the first Porn Literacy classes moved through their lives in the year after their courses ended, some things from the discussions stayed with them. In surveys from the first three sets of classes, one-third of the students still said they would agree to do things from porn if their partner asked them to. Several also wanted to try things they saw in porn. They were, after all, normal, sexually curious, experimenting teenagers. But only a tiny number of students agreed in the postclass survey that “most people like to be slapped, spanked or have their hair pulled during sex,” compared with 27 percent at the start of class. And while at the beginning, 45 percent said that porn was a good way for young people to learn about sex, now only 18 percent agreed. By the end of the class, no one said pornography was realistic; just over one-quarter had believed that at the outset. The survey didn’t reveal the catalyst for the changes. Was it the curriculum itself? Was it something about Daley and Alder’s teaching style? It’s possible the students created the changes themselves, teaching one another through their in-class debates and discussions.

A., the young woman who said she had never seen an image of a penis until she watched porn, resisted the idea that porn was uniformly bad for teenagers. “At least kids are watching porn and not going out and getting pregnant,” she said. But recently, she told me that she’d given up watching it altogether. She disliked looking at women’s expressions now, believing that they probably weren’t experiencing pleasure and might be in pain. When Drew watched porn, he found himself wondering if women were having sex against their will. As another student said with a sigh: “Nicole and Jess ruined porn for us.”

In the months after the class, A. had created a new mission for herself: She was going to always have orgasms during sex. “And I did it!” she told me. It helped that she had been in a relationship with a guy who was open and asked what she liked. But even if Porn Literacy didn’t go into as many details about sex as she would have liked, “in this indirect way, the class shows what you deserve and don’t deserve,” she said. “In porn, the guy cares only about himself. I used to think more about ‘Am I doing something right or wrong?’ ” Porn may neglect women’s orgasms, but A. wasn’t going to anymore.

Drew, who had once used porn as his main sex educator, was now thinking about sex differently. “Some things need to come to us naturally, not by watching it and seeing what turns you on,” he told me. The discussions about anatomy and fake displays of pleasure made him realize that girls didn’t always respond as they did in porn and that they didn’t all want the same things. And guys didn’t, either. Maybe that porn clip in which the nice, tender guy didn’t excite the girl was wrong. What Drew needed was a girl who was open and honest, as he was, and with whom he could start to figure out how to have good sex. It would take some time and most likely involve some fumbling. But Drew was O.K. with that. He was just starting out.

Don’t Lead, Teach.

Another absurd discipline action regarding a Teacher.   And this over a student’s demonstration and informational talk.  So allowing a student free speech and an opportunity to educate and inform her fellow students is wrong.

Teacher suspended over condom demonstration to return to classroom
Alex Holloway
The Dispatch
Columbus, Starkville & Golden Triangle
November 20, 2015 3:52:40 PM

A suspended Starkville High School teacher will be returning to the classroom after a district investigation. 

The Starkville-Oktibbeha Consolidated School District suspended Sheree Ferguson after a student reportedly gave a presentation using cucumbers to demonstrate proper condom usage in Ferguson’s English class on Nov. 12. 

State law and school district policy forbid discussion condoms or demonstrating how to use them. 

This afternoon, the district released a statement saying Superintendent Lewis Holloway, assistant superintendents Toriano Holloway and Jody Woodrum, and SHS Principal David Baggett determined “appropriate disciplinary action” for the matter. 

“While the condom demonstration that occurred during the presentation is a violation of Mississippi law and school board policy,” the release states, “the resulting personnel issues goes beyond that scope to include how the employee involved responded during an inquiry regarding the presentation.” 

District spokesperson Nicole Thomas declined to comment on the nature of the disciplinary action, citing a personnel issue. Thomas also could not comment on the length of Ferguson’s suspension, but did confirm that she will return to continue teaching.

“We consider the issue resolved and we look forward to the employee returning to the classroom,” the release states  

Ferguson’s suspension sparked a community outcry. 

A change.org petition, titled “Bring Ms. Ferguson back to Starkville High,” gathered more than 2,800 signatures by Friday afternoon. The Dispatch reached out to the petition creators, but has did not receive a response by press time. 

This morning, a group of 30 to 50 students marched at the school in support of Ferguson, changing “Bring Ferg back.”

Camryn Dawkins, a junior, said she came up with the idea to protest Ferguson’s suspension and worked with SHS senior Tyrese Kelly to get word out to students through the messaging app GroupMe. 

“I was in the class when it happened and I just felt that what was done was perfectly OK, and that’s my judgement,” Dawson said. “I love Ms. Ferg to death. Ms. Ferg is the best English teacher I’ve ever had and we just wanted to take a stand as students for what we believe in. Our voice isn’t heard enough and we felt like this was something that was dear and close to our hearts.”

he petition alleges that a student gave a presentation on sexology for a career talk demonstration in Ferguson’s honors English class. The petition further claims that Ferguson had no prior knowledge of the condom demonstration, which wasn’t finalized until 10 p.m. the night before.

Four years ago, the state Legislature passed House Bill 999, mandating that schools adopt a sex education policy — either “abstinence-plus” or “abstinence-only.” This was done in response to the state’s high rate of teen pregnancy, in which Mississippi ranked second in 2011, and sexually transmitted diseases, where Mississippi had the highest rate of teen chlamydia and gonorrhea in 2012.

SOCSD operates an abstinence-plus sex education policy, which requires boys and girls be separated into different classes when it is discussed or taught and prohibits instruction and demonstration on the application and use of condoms, among other stipulations.

District policy also states schools providing sex education are required to provide a written notice to parents no less than one week before the instruction occurs. 

It is unknown if these policies were met prior to the Starkville High student’s presentation.

The message on this again is a dual one.

One: The reality of sex education in public schools is tied to funding.  Teaching “abstinence only” is part of Title I federal funding in which schools that do or in this case do not teach sex education get allotted funds to well ostensibly do nothing.  A waste of taxpayer money and just another example of how the federal government manipulates, extorts and demands states to comply to some odd group of lawmakers personal obsessions or lobbyist to harm education of children.  Clearly it is working as the states that advocate the lack of sex education have the highest teen pregnancies. Which costs more? The kids education on how to prevent pregnancy or a child having a child and the extraneous costs that it encompasses?

Two: The reality of America’s obsession with morality and ironically largely in the South which has tinges of racism that is now seen on college campuses with accusation of racism and of course sexual assaults.  And to think this is limited to the South need to look to Yale and Harvard for its role in racism and prejudice.

To think that a child gets to college regardless where they attend is an achievement in today’s America. To get to the Ivy League and even greater one. So one would believe that they are examples of the best and brightest with all the tools and  information as well as exposure to all kinds of lives, people and cultures. Apparently not.  So by the time a child gets to college there should be less ignorance and oblivion on how to treat people and be open to new ideas and opportunities to learn and be exposed to things that may be new, challenging and even “threatening.”  But no we cannot have that. Our coddled swaddled helicoptered youth cannot have anything that “threatens” their world view.  So they must oppress, protest and find a safe space to withdraw and hide from those things that scare, embarrass or anger you.   They are in conflict with themselves and the very values they claim to support.

Do I think anything of lasting value will come from the current crop of student protests? No this is the new Occupy Wall Street.  There will be some pandering and some type of minor resolution and then by the time the next crop of rotating student’s arrive it will be back to square one or in this case zero. But t

 No we won’t have a building named after a racist but they are dead so why do you care so much about a dead man when you have people alive who are getting third rate education that will never even allow them to get to the same grounds you now camp on.   And the same person you share a classroom with is the same person that is your adversary.  How healthy is that when you cannot speak or exchange ideas even those repugnant to further understand and learn and even perhaps change hearts and minds by being a leader and a teacher.  It all goes back to Teaching and the idea that we all can share that role but the constant demeaning and degrading of the Profession in the K-12 field to the post secondary one is the most informative one.  We don’t want to learn, we want to be protected, lead and guided by those whom we deign appropriate and anyone else is SOL.   We have produced a generation of adult children.  I look to the model of that prototype, Jimmy Fallon, and that is what America admires  – a bland white man child.  And yes he is funny but he has writers who assist with than endeavor and irony one is his sister yet we never see her front and center.  This is the new America, the bland and the faux belief in color blindness and gender neutrality.  That is fantasy.  We need to realize that our strength comes from our differences.

 It starts earlier, and when the funding of education is tied to extraneous stupid shit like teacher evaluations tied to testing, sex education tied to abstinence only, tied to how many kids are on free lunch, schools with better PTSA and private sources of money to enable the school in the same city but located in a better neighborhood to provide Teachers, equipment and field trips, you have what we thought we resolved with Brown vs the Board of Education.    It appears that no, no we didn’t.

So we find the front man.  And unless the radical “extreme” wants to make changes that are lasting and real, get leaders who represent the America you aspire to have.  I don’t think there is anyone up for the challenge, frankly they are too afraid.   Look to America’s Teachers.. they are leaving in droves, ask yourself why?

Talk About Sex Baby

I grew up with foreign born parents. We had largely foreign born or very avant garde people in our home. I cannot remember when I understood what trans/gender or being gay was it was just part of the family and I thought little of it.  It certainly makes one different among one’s peers and probably why I had few.

But I have been lamenting about the state of sex education among our children and that is what is contributing to the sexual assaults, misbehavior when it comes to sexting and of course utter confusion about sexual roles, identity and all that in between.

  I know adults who seem confused about it and when I tell people I am now pursuing celibacy, I might as well announce I am becoming Bruce Jenner.  The sheer pressure and constant need to be sexual in this country astonishes me.  Yet we are actually taking another matter of contraception to the Supreme Court as the ACA allows that element to be covered while no one group is debating/challenging that erection pills are also covered under the ACA.  Can you have one without the other?

And then I read the article below today and thought at any minute law enforcement will be busting his door down for some type of violation of the law regarding minors and safety.

Yes America is a country run  by men whose idea of sex is that it is on demand, without protection and women are ultimately responsible for what that entails. Disease, child birth, rape or whatever, we caused it, we need to live with it.  And people wonder why I am done with it all? When will they be issuing our burquas?

This Dad’s Honest Sex Advice to His Teenage Kids Deserves a Standing Ovation

For most people, the first time they have sex is awkward, clumsy, incredibly not-pleasurable and, in the event that the deflowering takes place outside, potentially results in a nasty case of poison ivy. 

But just because most first-time sex stories are pretty uncomfortable and terrible doesn’t mean they have to be, especially if you have the proper guidance and sex ed beforehand. Case in point: this awesome dad, who recently posted on Reddit about his surprisingly refreshing (not to mention progressive) sex advice for his 13-year-old son and 15-year-old daughter.

In a post on /r/sex, the dad (known only as t-away-man) said he gave his kids four pieces of advice for knowing whether they were “ready.”

You’re ready for sex, he wrote, if and only if you are:

1) mature enough to be open about it.. no sneaking around … if they’re not mature enough to talk to me or their Mom about it, they’re not ready.

2) mature enough to wait until they develop full trust in their partners… start slow and work your way from holding hands and talking to kissing, touching etc. That gives you time to really know your partner, develop trust and a measure of real affection not just infatuation and lust (don’t get me wrong.. I’m not putting down lust… it’s just not the best emotion for life decisions).

3) mature enough to understand the need for and to use condoms.

The fourth and perhaps most practical piece of advice? He told his kids “not to have sex in creepy places like school stairwells or behind the gym. They have perfectly good bedrooms with doors that lock and their friends will be welcome to stay for breakfast.”

Arrest this man for burglary, because he has officially stolen our hearts.
 
There’s something seriously wrong with American sex ed: In an email to Mic, t-away-man (who wished to remain anonymous) said that he was inspired to write the post after talking to his son about his school sex ed program. Until recently, he said, he and his wife had believed that their kids’ “fairly progressive” school system was teaching comprehensive sex ed. But that turned out not to be the case.
“We found out from my son that their idea of sex ed was: 1) A man’s penis goes into a woman’s vagina to make a baby, 2) It is very dangerous and if you do it too much or too soon you will die and 3) Don’t do it,” he told Mic.

The dad said that he had raised his kids under the Dutch sex ed model, which teaches youth not only the importance of safe sex, but also how sex and relationships can play a crucial (not to mention pleasurable) role in one’s development.

“Most of what I am espousing in my post is straight from the Dutch approach — open discussion, no shame,” he told Mic.

“I wish my parents were like this.” 

Indeed, there is ample statistical evidence that the approach to sex ed in the Netherlands is factually superior to that of the United States. 
According to a 2006 study AlterNet reported, while Dutch teenagers and American teenagers become sexually active around the same age, American teen girls are twice as likely to have an abortion and eight times more likely to give birth than their Dutch counterparts.
 (In fact, the American teen pregnancy rate is one of the highest in the world, with 600,000 teens becoming pregnant every year.) 
Moreover, the STI rate among American young adults is “considerably higher” than that of their peers in the Netherlands, according to a 2011 Adolescent Sexual Health report.
With these stats in mind, it makes perfect sense for parents like this sex-positive redditor to talk to kids about sex. In fact, there’s positive evidence that teens benefit from it, no matter how initially uncomfortable it might be. 

According to a November 2015 survey of past sex ed research, teenagers who talk to their parents about sex are less likely to become pregnant and contract STIs. “Results of this study confirm that parent-adolescent sexual communication is a protective factor for youth,” the authors wrote.

Clearly, this anonymous redditor is onto something here — and others agree, judging by the effusive response from others who received subpar sexual health education.

“As a daughter who has had a parent say this to me, you did good,” one redditor wrote. Another added, “I’m 15, I wish my parents were like this. It avoids a lot of sneaking around and fear of being caught doing something that is OK to do.”

Snap Chat

 Last week after the week from hell in the public schools I serve, we had our own drama with regards to a sexting scandal at a Middle School that frankly boggles the mind. 

And then Saturday I read about the Colorado School of infamy as this is now becoming ground central for media. 

And why all of this attention centers on what appears to be a long term problem, linked of course to the football team as ground zero, I keep going back to the Prep school assault that is now leading the young man to jail, not for the sexual assault itself but for his use of a computer to arrange the assignation that led to the incident.  

And I have commented frequently about the confusion and sexual assaults that have happened on both secondary and post secondary campuses as largely sexual confusion and lack of education and information.  There are enough sexual encounters at middle school as well and to say that it is drugs and alcohol with regards to minors as these assaults largely happen under adult watch, on campus itself or at well chaperoned field trips (well clearly not that well chaperoned).

I first encountered it at a middle school where it was happening on campus in the adjacent grounds that were a park and in the portable bathroom that was blocked by a screen. There was no repurcussions other than canceling the 8th grade trip. The boy who assaulted the girl in high school the next year on a field trip had a prior history at his middle school for the same behavio

And no the culture of America is not less or more sexualized this has been a problem forever and it is tied to sex education.  It need to happen early and often.

Hundreds of Nude Photos Jolt Colorado School

By KASSONDRA CLOOS and JULIE TURKEWITZ
The New York Times
NOV. 6, 2015

CAÑON CITY, Colo. — At least 100 students at a high school in Cañon City traded naked pictures of themselves, the authorities said Friday, part of a large sexting ring.
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The revelation has left parents outraged, administrators searching for missed clues, and the police and the district attorney’s office debating whether to file child pornography charges — including felony charges — against some of the participants.

George Welsh, the superintendent of the Cañon City school system, said students at Cañon City High School had been circulating 300 to 400 nude photographs, including images of “certainly over 100 different kids,” on their cellphones. “This is a lot of kids involved,” he said, adding that the children in the pictures were believed to be students at the high school as well as eighth graders from the middle school.

Members of the high school football team, the Cañon City Tigers, were at the center of the sexting ring, Mr. Welsh said. On Thursday night, separate community meetings were held for parents of football players and parents of other students to address the scandal, which has shocked this quiet, semirural community of 16,000. The team was forced to forfeit its final game of the season.

Because it is a felony to possess or distribute child pornography, the charges could be serious. But because most of the people at fault are themselves minors and, in some cases, took pictures of themselves and sent them to others, law enforcement officials are at a loss as to how to proceed.

“Consenting adults can do this to their hearts’ content,” said Thom LeDoux, the district attorney, but “if the subject is under the age of 18, that’s a problem.”

He added that he was not interested in arresting hundreds of children and would “use discretion” if he decided to file charges.

Mr. Welsh said a significant percentage of the student body at Cañon City High School had participated, with boys and girls involved in seemingly equal numbers. The photo-sharing, some of which took place in school, was done largely on cellphone applications called “vault apps” that look innocent enough — some look like calculators — but are really secret troves of photographs accessible after entering a password.

While sexting among children is a rampant problem, “I hope no other school has it at the level we have it at,” Bret Meuli, the principal of Cañon City High School, said in an interview in his office. “But I fear we aren’t the only ones.”

Students at the school described a competitive point system that classmates used to accrue photographs. Different point values were assigned to different students. Students who collected naked photographs gained points by adding these desirable children to their collections. Isaac Stringer, a junior interviewed outside the high school who said he did not participate in the photo-sharing, called the boy with the largest collection “the pimp of pictures.”

The repercussions are likely to resonate loudly over the days and weeks ahead in this small town, a tightly knit community ringed by correctional centers, where many people are employed, as well as tourist attractions such as Royal Gorge Bridge and Park, which claims to have “America’s highest suspension bridge.”

Mr. Welsh, the superintendent, said in a statement that “because a large number of our high school football players were implicated in this behavior, the coaching staff and administration, after careful thought and consideration, decided that stepping on the field to play this weekend to represent the Cañon City community is just not an option.”

The “sexting scandal,” as parents are calling it, shocked many, and it has also elicited anger from parents who say they knew about this type of photo-sharing for years and sought unsuccessfully to get school officials to intervene. Heidi Wolfgang, 41, a mother who no longer lives in the district, said in a telephone interview that she had spoken to a Cañon City Middle School counselor in 2012 after she found photographs of a nude adolescent on a cellphone owned by her daughter, then 12.

“He told me there was nothing the school could do because half the school was sexting,” Ms. Wolfgang said. She called the response “heartbreaking,” and said she eventually decided to educate her child at home.

Mr. Welsh said that like other school systems across the country, Cañon City schools had received reports of students’ exchanging lewd photographs, but that he had not been aware of the scope of the issue until recently, when officials received anonymous tips through a system called Colorado Safe2Tell.

“If there’s not a lead that takes you to this larger thing going on, why would you go there?” Mr. Welsh said.

Another mother, Lisa Graham, 46, said her daughter, now a junior at the high school, had been “propositioned by multiple guys” during her freshman year. “She received unsolicited photos from guys, which she immediately deleted,” Ms. Graham said by telephone. “I’m frustrated if people knew and didn’t shut it down three years ago.”

Mr. Meuli has been principal for six years, and he was assistant principal of the school before that. He said that the school had had to handle a few instances in which a girl would break up with a boy and fear that he would circulate intimate photos of her, but that nothing this serious had been brought to his attention before.

What to do about a sexting scandal involving potentially hundreds of students was not covered in his master’s degree classes, Mr. Meuli said — but these days, it should be, he added.

The high school has turned over a cellphone that contains several hundred images to the police, and investigators will try to identify the children in the pictures, according to Paul Schultz, the Cañon City police chief. No arrests have been made, Chief Schultz said, and parents have been notified about the apps that can be used to mask the illicit photographs.

Mr. LeDoux, the district attorney, said the investigation would look into whether any adults were involved, whether children were bullied into participating, and whether any illegal sexual contact occurred.

Amy Adele Hasinoff, an assistant professor at the University of Colorado Denver and the author of a new book, “Sexting Panic,” contends that schools need to find new ways to talk to students about the issue. Rather than just demanding that students abstain from sending risqué images, she said, educators should aim for open conversations that involve guidance in “safer sexting” with trusted partners.

Teachers and school officials “think they’re protecting people from harm,” Professor Hasinoff said. “But we know it doesn’t work.”

Yes, I Know

The Jackass set aka “Lawyers” have been wringing those hands and clutching those pearls over “yes means yes” has been highly amusing.

I have long said that adults project and reflect and if you live in the now and work and see kids as I do on a daily basis it long dispels any notions of what one did when you were that age and what it is like today to be a young person. I have never projected my own history or beliefs on kids other than manners, those are universal and should be mandatory as we seem to have none. I say that civility is connected to humanity and when civility is gone well you see the results.

 I have also objected to referring to Universities/Colleges as rape cultures. Sorry that is pushing it. ISIS seems to have a rape culture and watch the Frontline special on that you will never refer to any institution in America with that term again. Rape as genocide and the spoils of war is a rape culture.

As for our sports and fraternities that seem to bear that flag of responsibility when it comes to rape evokes a type of culture that seems to be more about confused masculinity and in turn sexuality than one of rape and abuse. I read Missoula and well what I read was more about the hideous obfuscation and misogyny that was exhibited by the Police and Prosecutors Office not a school and town absorbed in raping and harming women. There was no Rape 101 class on how to rape.

So we confuse Lawyers and their own projections and obsessions with that of the greater good. They write the laws, which we fundamentally don’t understand and then promptly violate at some point and yes everyone does they just don’t get caught or don’t believe it applies to them. That glass of wine with dinner and you drive home is a DUI. Yes it is.

 And I see the same with Educators and especially Psychologists and Social Workers. Ever met someone who works with alienated youth groups? I can spot a patronizing fake the second they open their mouth, with the hushed whisper and the extended over pronounced phraseology that screams: “I am an utter nut fuck who thinks everyone is stupider than me and I am highly evolved emotionally.”

Then whatever shit happened to them over the course of their lives they will relive and replay it over and over again and project that same trauma onto every encounter. It is a permanent phase of victimology. Who wants to live over and over again their teen years? No thanks. I can barely remember them. Let’s keep it that way. I teach because I like learning. But I do actually like kids and despite their annoyances I listen to them. 

 No wonder people love Donald Trump he yells his idiocy in simple phrases.. you really want to make a point try that. People will either love or hate you but you will get their attention. So when I read this today I was relieved. Yes means that yes they are now talking about sex and getting the education that is piece meal, half assed to non-existent. And unlike the elite class, I actually know and have taught it. It sucks and not in a good way.

So I read two articles today. One about the new way sex ed must be taught to cover this new element in an already confusing subject.  And another who works with kids and find that they are adapting quite fine. Yes kids are resilient another quality we could learn from them.

For Teenagers, Sexual Consent Classes Add Layer of Complexity to Difficult Subject

SAN FRANCISCO — The classroom of 10th graders had already learned about sexually transmitted diseases and various types of birth control. Today, the 15-year-olds gathered around tables to discuss another topic: how and why to make sure each step in a sexual encounter is met with consent.
Consent from the person you are kissing — or more — is not merely silence or a lack of protest, Shafia Zaloom, a health educator at the Urban School of San Francisco , told the students. They listened with rapt attention, but several did not disguise how puzzled they felt.
“What does that mean — you have to say ‘yes’ every 10 minutes?” asked Aiden Ryan, 15, who sat near the front of the room.
“Pretty much,” Ms. Zaloom answered. “It’s not a timing thing, but whoever initiates things to another level has to ask.”

The “no means no” mantra of a generation ago is quickly being eclipsed by “yes mean yes” as more young people all over the country are told that they must have explicit permission from the object of their desire before they engage in any touching, kissing, or other sexual activity. With Gov. Jerry Brown’s signature on a bill this month, California became the first state to require that all high school health education classes give lessons on affirmative consent, which includes explaining that someone who is drunk or asleep cannot grant consent.
Photo

Shafia Zaloom, a health educator at the Urban School, discussing the concept of affirmative consent with students. Credit Noah Berger for The New York Times

Last year, California led the way in requiring colleges to use affirmative consent as the standard in campus disciplinary decisions, defining how and when people agree to have sex. More than a dozen legislatures in other states, including Michigan, Maryland and Utah, are considering similar legislation for colleges. One goal is to improve the way schools deal with accusations of rape and sexual assault and another is to reduce the number of young people who feel pressured into unwanted sexual conduct.

Critics say the lawmakers and advocates of affirmative consent are trying to draw a sharp line in what is essentially a gray zone, particularly for children and young adults who are grappling with their first feelings of romantic attraction. In he-said, she-said sexual assault cases, critics of affirmative consent say the policy puts an unfair burden of proof on the accused.

“There’s really no clear standard yet — what we have is a lot of ambiguity on how these standards really work in the court of law,” said John F. Banzhaf, a law professor at George Washington University. “The standard is not logical — nobody really works that way. The problem with teaching this to high school students is that you are only going to sow more confusion. They are getting mixed messages depending where they go afterward.”

But Ms. Zaloom, who has taught high school students about sex for two decades, said she was grateful for the new standard, even as she acknowledged the students’ unease.

“What’s really important to know is that sex is not always super smooth,” she told her 10th graders. “It can be awkward, and that’s actually normal and shows things are O.K.”

The students did not seem convinced. They sat in groups to brainstorm ways to ask for affirmative consent. They crossed off a list of options: “Can I touch you there?” Too clinical. “Do you want to do this?” Too tentative. “Do you like that?” Not direct enough.

“They’re all really awkward and bizarre,” one girl said.
“Did you come up with any on your own?” Ms. Zaloom asked.
One boy offered up two words: “You good?”

That drew nearly unanimous nods of approval.

Under the new law, high school students in California must be educated about the concept of affirmative consent — but they are not actually being held to that standard. So a high school student on trial on rape charges would not have to prove that he or she obtained oral assent from the accuser. That was the case with a senior at the elite St. Paul’s School in New Hampshire this year who was accused of raping a freshman. The senior was acquitted of aggravated sexual assault but found guilty of statutory rape — sex with a minor.

As for college students, the law passed last year in California does not change the way sexual assault cases are prosecuted in criminal courts, only in the way they are handled by colleges, which are permitted to use affirmative consent as a standard.

Last year, Corey Mock, a student at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, was expelled after officials there found him guilty of sexual misconduct because he could not prove he had obtained verbal consent from a woman who accused him of sexual assault. But a Davidson County Chancery Court judge ruled in August that the school had “improperly shifted the burden of proof and imposed an untenable standard upon Mr. Mock to disprove the accusation.”

The judge called the school’s ruling “arbitrary and capricious.”
In a separate case, a former student at Clark University in Worcester, Mass., who was evicted from his dorm room after a student accused him of rape, filed a lawsuit in federal court in August against the school and several administrators. The former student, identified in court records only as John Doe, argued that he was denied the rights promised in the student handbook and that the adjudicators of his case had ignored records of text messages that supported his view of the encounter with the fellow student.

Kevin de León, the California State Senate speaker pro tempore and lead sponsor of the high school legislation, said the new law was as much about changing the culture as it was about changing the law.
“Sexual violence has always thrived in the gray areas of the law,” Mr. de León said. “What we want to create is a standard of behavior, a paradigm shift as much as a legal shift. We’re no longer talking about the old paradigm of the victim being blamed for their own behavior.”

But among teenagers, who are only beginning to experiment with their sexuality and have hazy ideas of their own boundaries, the talk tends to be about “hooking up” and what the new rules are. “Kids are still establishing patterns of behavior, and they have a lot of specific concrete questions,” said Ms. Zaloom, who has written a curriculum for affirmative consent programs that is being used throughout the country.

Students will ask, “Can I have sex when we are both drunk?” Ms. Zaloom said. “I get this one a lot: If I hook up with a girl and the next day she decides she didn’t want to do it, then what do I do?

Typically she will use such questions as a way to begin talking about the benefits of sexual partners knowing each other. But sometimes there are no straightforward answers, she said. “We’re trying to show them very explicitly that sex has to include a dialogue,” she added, “that they have to talk about it each step of the way.”

In her 10th grade class, one girl asked about approaching someone about a casual encounter. “What if it’s just a one-time thing?”

“You have to be prepared to say ‘no’ and hear ‘no,’ ” Ms. Zaloom said
Another girl chimed in: “If you don’t care about a person too much, you might not be inclined to listen.”

Ms. Zaloom suggested making clear plans with friends ahead of time, like making pacts with each other to leave parties together. And she urged them to have conversations with potential sexual partners “before you get swept up in the moment.”

“How do we even start a conversation like that?” one boy wondered. “Practice,” Ms. Zaloom answered.

Adults hate ‘Yes Means Yes’ laws. The college students I meet love them. The hand-wringing from the grown-ups doesn’t match what I see on campuses

. By Jaclyn Friedman
The Washington Post
October 14 2015  

Jaclyn Friedman is the editor of “Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and a World Without Rape” and author of “What You Really Really Want: The Smart Girl’s Shame-Free Guide to Sex and Safety.” 

 Last month, Michigan became the latest state legislature to introduce a “Yes Means Yes” law, mandating the teaching of affirmative consent as a sexual standard. In the past year, affirmative consent has become the mandated standard on college campuses in New York and California and is being voluntarily adopted by a growing number universities beyond those two states. The idea is simple: In matters of sex, silence or indifference aren’t consent. Only a freely given “yes” counts.

 And if you can’t tell, you have to ask. Every time one of these bills is introduced, a certain subset of adults freaks out. Earlier this year, as the spring semester got underway and these new policies took hold on some campuses, Robert Carle, writing for libertarian outlet Reason, shrieked that “[a]ffirmative consent laws turn normal human interactions into sexual offenses,” as if there’s anything “normal” about a disinterest in whether or not the person you’re having sex with is a willing participant.

In the New York Times, Judith Shulevitz dismissed the new standard because “[m]ost people just aren’t very talkative during the delicate tango that precedes sex, and the re-education required to make them more forthcoming would be a very big project,” an assertion for which she provides no evidence.

But if students aren’t yet used to practicing affirmative consent, that’s no argument against it. Marital rape used to be both popular and legal, and we didn’t wait until everyone had stopped committing it to institute new laws.

And in the Boston Globe, Wendy Kaminer protests that “in practice [affirmative consent standards] aim to protect women from the predations of men,” even though, as even she acknowledges, the standard is gender neutral. (More on that in a moment.)

 All the grownup scaremongering is drowning out one important fact: Young people are embracing affirmative consent. As an expert on sexual health and sexual violence prevention, I spend a lot of time visiting college campuses and talking with students about sex and expectations. And nothing I teach them seems to give them more clarity and comfort than explaining the basics of affirmative consent.

Yes Means Yes provides answers for so many of the private anxieties students scrawl on the index cards they pass to me anonymously during Q&A sessions, or wait in line to whisper to me after talks. Oftentimes, I’m the first adult they’ve encountered who talk with them directly about sex in a way that affirms that sex can and should be pleasurable and that they’re the ones who get to decide when and how it works for them.

The questions are urgent and a little heartbreaking: How do I say “no” when it makes me feel guilty? How can I have fun hooking up without getting accused of sexual assault? How can I make my friends stop judging me about wanting too much sex, or not enough, or wanting the “wrong” things?

Affirmative consent isn’t the answer to every student’s sexual anxiety, but it’s a core part of my response to many of them. Yes Means Yes tells students who have trouble setting boundaries that a good partner wants to know what your limits are; that if you tell someone what you don’t want and they respond badly, they’re not someone you want to have sex with.

By emphasizing that you can’t make assumptions about what a sex partner might want, Yes Means Yes reminds everyone that there is no universal “right” answer to what any of us should want to do in bed. Instead, practicing affirmative consent encourages young people to get to know their own needs and desires and boundaries.

 It helps them realize that knowing what they want (and don’t) from sex makes them stronger, and the most important sexual relationship they’ll ever have is the one they have with themselves. Yes Means Yes is also immensely reassuring to many of the young men I meet.

Kaminer’s gender assumptions are no anomaly — critics of affirmative consent almost universally assume that the standard is intended to punish men and protect women. Not only does that erase sexual assaults in which the perpetrator isn’t male, it also ignores the reality that men are more likely to be raped than they are to be targeted by an (exceedingly rare) false allegation.

That’s one reason affirmative consent is, in reality, a gender-free standard: It tells young men that their needs and desires and boundaries matter, too, and that it’s just as important when someone violates them as it would be if they were a woman. And it teaches people of all genders that it’s easy to make sure you’re not hurting anyone during sex: Just show up and pay attention to your partner; listen to what they’re telling you; and if you can’t tell, you have to ask. That’s especially helpful for young men, many of whom are worried that they’ll accidentally violate their sex partners, somehow, just by way of being male.

Of course, asking isn’t so simple when you’ve been raised in a culture that seems to say that talking about sex with your sex partner is some kind of a buzzkill. (It’s not, of course — if it were, phone sex wouldn’t be such a lucrative business.) That’s why the new affirmative consent laws are also a great opportunity to teach the kind of sexual communication that makes sex both better and safer for everyone.

There is plenty of evidence that these policies can be effective, and not just in the e-mails I receive from grateful students. (I hear both from students who tell me that practicing Yes Means Yes has given them the best sex of their lives, as well as from students who don’t want to be sexually active who thank me for teaching that their choice is valid and good.)

 A recent poll conducted by The Washington Post and the Kaiser Family Foundation found that overwhelming majorities of both young men and women understood that the absence of a “no” does not equal consent and that consenting to some sexual activity, like kissing or touching, doesn’t indicate consent to other sexual activity. Fully 96 percent of students understood that a very drunk or unconscious person can’t consent.

While it’s hard to find historical examples that map exactly to these poll questions, those numbers sure seem to signify a big shift from the 1998 study conducted by the Sexual Assault & Trauma Resource Center of Rhode Island, which found a quarter of adolescents believing that “a man on a date has the right to sexual intercourse without the woman’s consent if she is drunk.”

It’s yet another piece of evidence that once you explain affirmative consent to young people, they embrace it. Yes Means Yes is being adopted to increase accountability for campus sexual assault, and not a moment too soon.

Just last week, the Association of American Universities revealed a comprehensive study showing that nearly 1 in 4 young women and 1 in 20 young men on U.S. campuses are sexually violated in some way while undergraduates.

But it’s also a thrilling opportunity to shift the way we teach sex in high school and college, one that shifts our framework away from guys who “get some” and girls who may or may not “give it up,” to reimagine sex as a creative collaboration between two equal people, regardless of gender.

Far from criminalizing sexuality, affirmative consent humanizes it. Young people are smart enough to know a great opportunity when they see it. It’s time for the adults to catch up.