Anyone can
copy anything on my blog posts and use them.
When I was
in 8th grade, I took sex education. This was in 1964. All I remember
was a list of diseases we girls could get from boys. I’ll never forget how they
told us you could get Herpes from cold sores on a boy’s mouth. I had just
kissed a boy with cold sores. I was horrified.
I told my
mom I might have this sexual disease. She didn’t ask any questions, just took
me to a doctor where they did some tests. He came back in the room and asked me
where I thought I got a sexually transmitted disease. I told him I kissed a boy
with cold sores on his mouth. The doctor was furious with my mom. He asked her
if she had asked me about this and she had to say no.
At the time,
I was dating and my parents had just assumed I was having sex because I was
already drinking and smoking. I was a virgin, but then, they never asked. Sex
was not talked about in my family.
When my
daughter had sex education at school it was co-ed. I asked her how it went and
she said, “I wanted to ask questions, but there were boys there, so I didn’t.”
I thought that probably the boys wanted to ask questions too, but the girls
were there. Ridiculous to have co-ed sex education, but they still do it.
I believe
sex education is good for teens. They need to know they can get diseases and
how to prevent that. They need to know how to use contraceptives to prevent pregnancy.
They need to know sex is an important activity.
I should
probably tell you now, I am a Christian. But I know that kids who take sex
education classes have less unplanned pregnancies. I know my daughter always
made every male she had sex with wear a condom and she has never caught a
disease. I’m glad about that. I didn’t want her to have sex until she was married,
but I’m not stupid and I accepted her as she was. Turns out she and my other
daughter were bi-sexual too.
My wonderful
younger sister is a lesbian. Or perhaps bi-sexual, since she has been with men
also. But she prefers women. She is a Christian too. She is such a blessing to
me spiritually. God shows her many things about life that have helped me. I try
to help her too. We are opposites politically and in many other ways, but our
love for each other overcomes that. She likes Trump, I don't think he is fit to be President. We know we each have the right to believe
how we want. She doesn’t believe being a lesbian is a sin at all. Neither do my
daughters and granddaughters. For myself, I’m not sure and leave it all in God’s
hands. Paul says in the Bible that if someone believes something is a sin, then
to them it is sin, if someone believes something is not a sin, then to them it
is no sin. Can’t argue with that.
Okay, so now
I am getting to the subject of “Parent’s Rights,” as far as sex education goes.
I have been listening to arguments from both sides of this issue for a long,
long time. What has hurt me the most is how those who want LGBQ etc. taught in
schools tell everyone who doesn’t want this part of sex emphasized, hate gays,
trans kids etc. For me, this is the farthest from the truth you can get. I do
not hate trans kids, lesbians, Queers, etc. Not at all. I just think, from what
I have read and heard, sex education has become too involved and intimate.
By that, I
mean going into detail about what everyone does sexually and how sex can be “fluid”
and one’s sexual tastes can change and this seems to encourage experimentation.
I’m not saying sexual desires can’t be fluid, I’m saying we don’t need to teach
this to kids who don’t even know who they are yet.
Sure, teach
them about the different kinds of sex there is in the world, and teach them we
should never judge or hate anyone who likes a different kind of sex. But after
you inform them, let them come to their own conclusions about themselves. Give
them that freedom.
Now to the
nitty-gritty: bathroom laws. This sharing of bathrooms and locker rooms with
trans men and women horrified me at first. Mainly because I was sexually abused
by my father and my mom and daughters were all sexually assaulted during their
lives by men. Teachers, bosses, doctors, dentists and even a Bible Salesman, have
harmed my family.
If you don’t
think a man would pretend to be Trans so he could go in a woman’s bathroom, then
you don’t know much about men. They have done this and will keep doing this. I
have written online to some podcasters who think some people hate gays because they feel the same way I do, yet when a few of them went to a nude women’s spa and a man came in
saying he was Trans and wanted to join in, they were pretty upset. Luckily, the
woman in charge told him no.
Privacy, this
is very important to most people, but a woman has no privacy if men are allowed
in the public washrooms. How do we know if they are truly Trans? We don’t. When
I have read of young girls having to share locker rooms with boys it fills me
with anger. Not at the boy, not at all, but at the new laws that allow it.
I’m sure
most of us have heard and seen some of the books at the schools on sex, even in
elementary schools. Some are explicit, which I think is terrible. When I see a
placard that says, “Let Children be Children,” I know what they mean. Children
don’t need to be thinking about sex, especially the intimate details of how to
do it or how to pleasure another person.
I don’t know
what else the “Parent’s Rights,” organizations talk about. These are the
problems I myself see with the new sex education. I sincerely hope we can teach
love, acceptance, and kindness to people of all sexes, races and identities.
This is what the world needs now, but the biggest problem we have is hating
each other and calling each other haters. I don’t hate anyone, and I don’t want
anyone to hate me, but I am expecting it.