Week
3 of December: Fidelity and Chastity
In
Connection with Richard and Linda Eyre
Editor’s Note: This month the Meridian Family Value of the month is
Fidelity and Chastity. Click
here to read this month’s overview article). Each
week during the month we will post an update in Meridian,
illustrating a couple of the Eyres’
favorite methods for teaching Fidelity and Chastity to each age group. Remember that
you can also go to www.valuesparenting.com for still more ideas and teaching
methods. Thanks for your interest and participation.
There are tens of thousands of parents concentrating on this
value this month. Strength in numbers!
Methods for Preschoolers
Answer
Children’s Questions to a Certain Point and Help Them Positively
Anticipate Other Answers When They Turn Eight
Encourage
questions and openness and emotionally prepare your child
for the eight-year-old discussion. When small children ask,
“Where do babies come from?” tell them that they grow from
a tiny cell of seed in the mother’s belly. When they ask,
“How does the seed get there?” tell them that it is part of
the most wonderful thing in the world, which they will get
to hear all about when they turn eight. When they ask why
they have to wait until their eight, tell them that it is
such a beautiful and important thing that they have to be
old enough to understand it.
With
this kind of a “basis” you are ready for any question, because
you can answer the general parts and defer the specific parts.
For example, if the small child says, “Why are boys and girls
so different? Why do boys have a penis and girls don’t?” you
can answer that boys and girls are beautiful in two different
way so that each will be special and attractive to the other
— and that boys have penises not only to go to the bathroom,
but to do some other very important things, which will be
part of the talk about “the most wonderful thing in the world”
that they will get to have when they are eight.
Methods for Elementary School Age
Follow-up Discussions
Reinforce
the knowledge you have passed on and your positive and “wonderful”
interpretation of it. After the age-eight discussion (especially
in the weeks and months following it), make opportunities
for follow-up. As you tuck a child in bed, lie or sit down
by him and recall the special time you had with him when he
turned eight and ask if he has any questions.
As
children get older, talk about puberty. Tell them what to
expect (physical changes, emotional changes, and moodiness,
“wet dreams” in the case of boys). Try to remember experiences
from your own puberty — how you felt when certain things happened,
and so on.
The “What a Baby Needs to Grow” Game
This
can help elementary, prepubescent children begin to think
of sex as the important and beautiful way that children and
families get started. Prepare the game by getting some
blocks or “checkers” or anything that you can “stack up.”
Tape small labels to each block or checker that say:
Daddy’s
sperm
Mommy’s
egg
Food
People
to teach him and help him
Clothes
Parents
who love him
A
warm home where he feels happy
Example
in his house of how to be a grown-up
Without
letting the children see the labels, ask them what things
are required to “make and grow a baby.” Give hints as necessary
for children to guess the things on your blocks. Stack them
up as they “get them.”
As
you play the game and as you finish it, ask questions like,
“Do all children have this one? Do a man and a woman have
to be married to give this one? Do people have to love a child
in order to give this one?” and so on. Use your questions
and use the game to point out that it takes a lot to “grow
a child,” that the sexual act that starts a child is only
the first step, and that a child who doesn’t have the other
steps doesn't have much of a chance. Help children see that
sex should not happen between people who do not intend to
provide each of the other things it takes to grow a child.
Methods for Adolescents
Discussion: “The Cause, the Dangers, and the Solution”
This
can give adolescents a clear understanding of why most early
sexual promiscuity occurs and a practical, workable formula
for avoiding it. Before an adolescent or teenage reaches the
age where you will allow him or her to date, hold a discussion
along the following sequence of points (emphasize appropriate
boys fro boys or for girls accordingly):
Review
the reason of the desirability for sexual abstinence prior
to marriage (physical reason — AIDS, etc.; emotional reasons
— the hurt and insecurity that can be caused; social reasons
— the desirability of a conservative rather than a “loose”
reputation; mental reasons — early sexual relationships interfere
with one’s ability to focus on academic and other mental pursuits;
and religious reasons — if these are important to you.
Explain
that studies have been done to show that most boys who become
involved in teenage sex most often do so for ego reasons (to
prove their manhood, to exploit someone, to show they can
do it, to brag to their peers), whereas most girls do so for
emotional reasons (desire to be accepted or not to be rejected,
for warmth, security, etc.). Ask if either is a good reason.
Talk about any example or “cases” that you are familiar with.
Point
out that the logic most often used by boys is trying to
persuade a girl to go beyond what she feels is right (and
sometimes vice versa, girl persuading boy) usually takes
one of two basic forms: (a) if you love me, you’ll have sex
with me; and (b) all the other guys I know have girlfriends
who will.
Ask
what is wrong with this logic. (Love means to respect what
the other person thinks is right, not to try to manipulate
them. Everyone else doesn’t do it, and even if they did, the
“everyone else” notion is a poor reason to do anything.)
Mention
that there is a short, almost corny little saying that nevertheless
makes a very true point about a girl (or a boy) that uses
her (or his) body to attract the opposite sex. The saying
is, “It works fast, but it doesn’t last.” When we use our
personality, our humor, and our real selves to attract dates
and friends of the opposite sex, it “works more slowly but
lasts much longer.”
If
(for all the reasons we have discussed) we really want to
avoid too-early, or casual, or premarital sex, there is only
one reliable way to do so. It is to think through possible
situations we may find ourselves in and mentally rehearse
exactly what we still do when that situation happens.
Describe
to your adolescent, in detailed and real terms, some situations
he may find himself in (alone, dark, aroused, attracted, etc.,
only don’t just suggest adjectives — describe a real scenario).
Then ask him what he would say and do. Have him be specific
and think through and rehearse his actions mentally. (“I would
get up and say, ‘I’m going to go home now’; put my car key
in the ignition, start the engine; etc.”)
Explain
that this kind of mental rehearsal will make it much easier
to do what you have decided when the time comes.
Delay Single Dating Until a Reasonable Age
This
gives adolescents time to reach a level or mental and emotional
maturity that gives them a chance of handling and controlling
physical and ego-centered desires. Preteen and early teen
single dating is at best rather senseless and pointless and
at worst the beginning of bad choices that affect their happiness
and security for the rest of their life. The early adolescent
and early teen years should be times of group fun and non-pressured,
non-committed activity. Fifteen or even sixteen is not too
old an age to begin single dating. Decide on limits for your
own family and discuss them thoroughly with your children
so they will know that they come not from lack of trust but
from love and logic.
*
Sometimes the best advice we give our children (or the
times we get through to them most clearly) comes when we just
say what we think and catch them off guard.
A friend of Richard’s told him of an incident when his
sixteen-year-old daughter had come in late from a date, woke
him (her father) up and said, “Daddy, Rob and I want to go
steady.”
“You mean only date each other?” Richard’s friend said
groggily.
“Yes, Dad.”
Deciding it was way too late to deal with the issue
that night, the father rolled over, buried his head back in
his pillow, and mumbled, “I don’t know why you’d want to end
your relationship. That’s what going steady always does!”
Apparently his daughter thought about that, because
the next morning she announced that she had changed her mind.