Cape Times

Conference looks for power in puberty

- Stephanie Auteri Washington Post

EDUCATOR Al Vernacchio strides into the room wearing a superhero outfit: A blue top with “POW” emblazoned across the chest in a bright yellow starburst. Shiny gold arm sleeves. A blue mask over his glasses. His cape billows behind him.

No, it’s not Comic-Con, though his “cosplay” is on point. Vernacchio is at a profession­al conference for sex educators, and he’s about to present a curriculum that uses the developmen­t of super powers as a metaphor for puberty.

Why this metaphor? Vernacchio wants kids to feel powerful, rather than out of control, as they go through puberty.

A study published earlier this year shows that girls feel unprepared for puberty.

As a result, this time in their lives is marked by negative experience­s. Vernacchio traces this to our culture’s general discomfort with – and disrespect of – women’s sexuality.

“Young women are not encouraged to talk about their bodies or know their bodies or experiment with their bodies,” he says.

“Everybody expects that by the time a boy enters puberty, he knows what it looks like, what it feels like, what’s normal for it. It can be pretty common for a girl to go into puberty never having seen her own vulva.”

There is a similar discomfort around puberty.

“We often frame puberty in these really negative ways,” Vernacchio says.

“We need to figure out how to talk about things, so periods aren’t scary or gross or anxiety-producing.”

“And we need to start much sooner. Many of us – parents and educators alike – pay lip service to the idea that sex education should be a lifelong process. But, in reality, we don’t teach kids much before puberty. And because we wait so long to start talking about our kids’ sexuality, parents tend to be just as unprepared as their children.”

“Parents keep waiting until they see those signs of puberty,” Eva Goldfarb, a sexuality educator says.

“But if you have zero conversati­ons until ‘The Talk,’ the talk is not going to go anywhere.”

When we falter at preparing our daughters for puberty, the repercussi­ons can be numerous.

For one, if they don’t have the knowledge they need about their body and how it works, this time can come as a bit of a shock.

“If they’re not emotionall­y ready,” Cory Silverberg, a sex educator and the author of Sex Is a Funny Word, says, “they can experience something unwanted or weird or frightenin­g.”

Some studies have shown that poor genital self-image developed in childhood can affect one’s self-esteem, eventually having an adverse impact on one’s health care.

Here are 10 ways mothers can help prepare their daughters for puberty.

Do your homework. “If Mom didn’t have the best experience in puberty,” Vernacchio says, “she may need to do some advance work. I think it’s okay for moms to say they’re nervous about this conversati­on. And I think it’s okay for moms to share experience­s from their own life that maybe aren’t positive, but come from the perspectiv­e of ‘that’s not what I want for you'.”

Set a good example. “The way you act gives your children a sense of what you think and believe about sexuality,” Debra Hauser, president of Advocates for Youth, one of the groups behind the sex-ed video series AMAZE, says. “How you interact with you partner or spouse... what you say when you find your 3-yearold touching herself for pleasure (‘don’t do that’ or ‘don’t do that in public’?)... Each sends a message.”

Find ways to start the conversati­on. “We can prepare kids for change at any age,” Silverberg says. “Always look for opportunit­ies to talk about how bodies change. Start planting those seeds.”● Use other resources. Many of the educators quoted in this piece mention the AMAZE videos, and similar online resources. Others use books, television plots and even the news as starting points for a conversati­on about puberty, relationsh­ips and sexuality.● Make sure it’s a twoway conversati­on. “Set up a dynamic between you and your kid so that it isn’t about you delivering expert informatio­n from high,” Silverberg says. “It should be understood that they’re going to ask questions, and you’re going to ask questions back.”

Don’t make assumption­s. “Talk about what puberty looks like for all kids,” Silverberg says. “Avoid making assumption­s about who your kid is going to be.”

Reassure them that they’re normal. Thea Eigo, a 15-year-old high school pupil on the youth board for Advocates for Youth, says that one of the best things her mom did was to frame the changes that occur during puberty as normal. Keep it positive. Vernacchio uses the superhero framework so his students feel powerful, not powerless. “But even if the superhero part of it doesn’t connect with either you or your daughter, you can still talk about the idea of puberty as powerful,” he says. He recommends that mothers talk with their daughters about the women they admire.

Warn them about sexism. “We don’t tell enough young women that if you move through the world as a woman, you’ll be treated differentl­y,” Silverberg says. “If we don’t tell girls that enough and then they start experienci­ng it, they’ll think it’s just them, or that they’ve done something wrong.”

Be there. “The most important message you can give to your child is that you are an askable parent and that you’re there for them. That you love them unconditio­nally,” Hauser says. “It’s important to let kids know they have a space to go if they need to,” Eigo adds. “It’s better to have an uncomforta­ble moment than not knowing how to approach the subject.”

Goldfarb gives a final word of warning.

“There’s a whole world out there waiting to teach your child things that don’t match your values. You don’t get to abdicate that responsibi­lity, because someone else will take it over.”

We need to figure out how to talk about things, so periods aren’t scary or gross or anxiety producing

 ??  ?? POWERFUL: Al Vernacchio wants children entering puberty to feel powerful, rather than out of control.
POWERFUL: Al Vernacchio wants children entering puberty to feel powerful, rather than out of control.

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