Ok yeah.. she wants to hear it... that is a nasty comment... she is 8 years old... sound like you have a "blame the victim mentality" ( not that I am say DD is a "victim" just commenting on quoted attitude)
Of course I told her to not talk to them and I will reinforce that and also utilize the resources that have been suggested to teach DD!
I am not trying to control anyone.. but if adults don't teach children what is appropriate then who will?? Isn't that our responsibility?
...But I will say, that my Mom had the "talk" with me and my sister when we were in 4th and 3rd grade because of a Soap Opera. Someone was raped on All My Children and we wanted to know what they were talking about. We were not interested in the info at all at that age..... ...
Ok yeah.. she wants to hear it... that is a nasty comment... she is 8 years old... sound like you have a "blame the victim mentality" ( not that I am say DD is a "victim" just commenting on quoted attitude)
Of course I told her to not talk to them and I will reinforce that and also utilize the resources that have been suggested to teach DD!
I am not trying to control anyone.. but if adults don't teach children what is appropriate then who will?? Isn't that our responsibility?
My DS told his K teacher and the entire class that he saw his parents having sex every morning.
Ya, his poor K teacher, got to take us aside and tell us this, then we got to the bottom of it.
Come to find out, DS thought kissing was sex and since Daddy kissed Mommy goodbye every day well, you see where this is going.
When DS was 4, he piped up from the back seat one day "what is a MotherF'er?" when we got over our shock and asked where he heard that word, "so and so" a fellow 4 year old in his preschool class.
I am old too and I remember when the boys in 2nd/3rd grade would gather on the playground with a contraband copy of National Geographic.
I don't think this is a new issue.
I remeber in 4th grade getting the "what's happening to your bodies" talk at school. The boys had a talk separate from the girls. When recess was on, I ended up finding out that boys talked about very different things than girls. You see, I was "one of the guys" and they totally were willing to share their knowledge. Well heck, I didn't think it was quite fair for the guys to be more informed than us, so I became the most informative girl on the playground.
Around the same time a girl firend of mine showed me her parents book of "positions".
Kids have been talking about this stuff since forever.