The entire month of September, Clint and I have been teaching a class on Sex and Dating. It's cleverly called Sex. Dating. by Haley and Michael DiMarco- whom I LOVE. I have every single one of Haley's books. She's a youth ministry hero. Her and David Fraize (who like totally knows who I am! By name!).
Anyway, we finished the curriculum last Sunday, but Clint and I felt like we needed to cover some more stuff. Namely boundaries in dating.
Now this is tough stuff. This is stuff that single 20 and 30 year olds can have a hard time talking about. This is stuff that parents struggle with talking to their kids about. Because nobody wants to talk about "how far is too far." Either because they are embarrassed or they don't want to admit that they're going to far. Most books I've read on the subject skirt around the issue. The Bible doesn't spell it out. The Bible says a lot about lust, but not necessarily about whether touching a girl's breast before they're married is right or wrong.
So today, we split the junior high and high school students. I had high school first and Clint had junior high. I had 9 chairs sitting at the front of the room. I pulled out a posterboard that said "Hugging" on it. I explained that I needed someone to sit and hold the posterboard. I then explained that we were going to play the "least intimate" to "most intimate" game. "Hugging" was the least intimate. Taylor immediately raised her hand and she sat down holding "Hugging." Bekah jumped up and said "I want the next one! I don't want to hold anything awkward!" Much to her dismay, I handed her a posterboard that said "Sexual Intercourse" and told her to sit on the last chair on the other side of the room. At this point, I told the rest of the class that they had to fill in the 7 chairs with other physical things that lead up to sex. This is what the high school list looked like:
-Hugging
-Holding Hands
-Kissing
-Kissing with more than your lips (this was as close to "kissing with your tongue" as I could get them)
-Touching in inappropriate areas
-"I'll show you mine, if you show me yours"
-Mutual Masturbation
-Oral Sex
-Sexual Intercourse
The ones that are italicized are ones that eventually I had to write down because they were kind of skirting around the issue. Then I split them into groups and they had to decide where they thought the line was. I was pleased that everyone stayed around the "kissing" line. The guy group decided that you shouldn't go any further than "kissing with more than your lips." And both girl groups said that you shouldn't go any further than plain "kissing."
Then they prayed over their boundaries and in came the junior high group.
Sweet junior high kids. So sweet. So naive.
This is the list they came up with:
-Hugging
-Holding Hands
-Kissing
-Sitting on boy's lap (which I SO appreciated- thank you Michele for saying that!)
-Taking a nap together
-Touching "bathing suit" areas
-Taking off clothes
-Mutual Masturbation
-Oral Sex
-Sexual Intercourse
A good chunk of my junior high kids didn't know what masturbation or oral sex were. I encouraged them to talk to their parents about it. The few who did, were shocked when I flipped over the posterboardss to show what they said.
The junior high kids' conversations in their small groups was awesome. They talked about how they didn't think that they were old enough yet to kiss. They didn't even know if they were old enough to hold hands. One sweet girl said she still thought boys had cooties. Most agreed that you shouldn't go past kissing.
So all of this talk about sex and uncomfortable words to say HOW PROUD I AM OF MY TEENAGERS. Sure there was giggling. Sure there was a lot of shock (one mom, when I turned the "Mutual Masturbation" posterboard around in the high school class was so shocked she gasped loudly and covered her face with her hands- so the shock wasn't limited to the teens). BUT THEY DIDN'T SHY AWAY FROM CONVERSATION. They discussed it maturely and respectfully. They answered questions and asked questions and talked in their small group. The parents in the room (and parents have been encouraged to come to every class so there were at least 20 parents in the class) were having open discussions about sex with their teens. And then we bathed the whole thing in prayer at the end. IT WAS GREAT!
After church, I was at lunch with some teens and their parents. I asked the teens what they thought about class. And by far, my favorite response was from a sweet 7th grader who said "I liked that everything was out in the open. Nothing was secretive."
Nuf said.
4 comments:
I am so very proud of you, love! That cannot have been easy, and on the behalf of your students, I thank you for your blunt approach. Im almost more impressef that the parents didnt set you on fire; great group!
Lauren, I applaud you! good job! As a member of the 20 to 30 year old single (and by single I mean NOT MARRIED) it is a difficult issue and we tend to push the envelope. But I think the real issue here is communication. In my relationship I am amazed at how well that works when you just talk about things no matter how uncomfortable it is. And growing up in the Church of Christ, we DID NOT talk about these things, so when I got into the situation I wasn't sure what was right and what was wrong, and asking someone about it was certainly out of the question. and hopefully this has instilled in your kids that THEY CAN ask someone and talk about it. AWESOME!
YES! Clint (my fellow youth minister) and I have been constantly telling them TO TALK ABOUT EVERYTHING. Not only to their parents, but to the people they're dating. We want them to set boundaries BEFORE they get in a situation where the boundaries can be pushed. We want them to say "hey, before we even go out, I want you to know that my line is ____" (fill in the blank).
I'm so glad to hear that you're putting that to use! Communication is SO key!
One kid didn't want to say masturbation, and when I asked why, he said "because it's church." I was like EXACTLY! If you can't talk about it in church, in a safe environment, where are you going to talk about it, SCHOOL!? I want each kid to know that they can talk to Clint and me, and even better, their parents.
Wow... total tangent there!
Yes, it was a little shocking to see the "m" word in print....but it was a great lesson and allowed the kids to know that they don't have to be afraid can talk about sex.
Love you!
(the shocked mom)
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