Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Teens and sex: Mom seeks advice

- Carolyn Hax Carolyn Hax is away. The following first appeared Aug. 16, 2006.

Dear Carolyn: Do you have specific advice for teenagers (especially girls) to keep them from premarital sex, or are you one who smiles and says, “You are not mature, but if you must, here is a condom.” I need every trick in the book to make sure my kids never go down that road! – Richmond

Richmond: No, you don’t. You need a clear, coherent, lifelong, well-thoughtout message that reflects your values and shows respect both for your kids’ intelligen­ce and for the strength of their hormones.

And, your kids need to know your love isn’t contingent upon their following the exact road you choose for them, because they won’t follow it exactly; you might as well accept that now. If they know you will love them regardless, though, and if you teach them the importance of good choices, they’ll find their own way, for their own reasons – which is the whole point. In fact, the better you raise them, the more independen­t-minded they’ll be.

Tricks, on the other hand, are advance admissions of defeat, declaratio­ns that your kids can’t control themselves so you must control them. That pressure will annoy them – and the annoyed kids of parents who fear premarital sex know exactly how to get their revenge.

And oh my goodness, lose the revolting, sexist double-standard.

Dear Carolyn: I am single with no children, but I volunteer as a Little League baseball coach. I catch the usual grief from parents who think their kid should be playing more or playing a different position or (fill in the blank). My girlfriend, who comes to our games, overheard one of these conversati­ons and just lit, calmly but very firmly, into the parent on my behalf.

On the one hand, I loved her for it, but on the other it was quite embarrassi­ng to me. How do I tell her I appreciate her concern but her approach was not how I prefer to handle such situations? We have been dating seven months and see a long-term future together. – Chicago

Chicago: On behalf of all of us who wish we’d been there, I ask you please to consider not silencing her. It’s something you should consider on your own behalf, too, but for different reasons.

You say yourself you loved her for it. Could it be this is just new for you and worth getting used to? Plus, her willingnes­s to take on a carping Little League parent, (presumably) unarmed, suggests she has a strong character and isn’t afraid to use it. This, in turn, suggests the beatdown in the bleachers was neither the first nor anywhere near the last time she’d use it in public.

Therefore, it might be more realistic to see this not as what she did, but who she is, and therefore part of any future you have together. If you thought her stepping in was inappropri­ate in this one situation, certainly you can thank her, applaud her guts and explain you’d rather the parents hear directly from you. It’s a narrow request, worth her respect.

Still, this also raises a new argument for not saying anything: It happened once. At least let it happen with one or two (or 172) more obnoxious parents before you bench her.

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