What can we do to help young men respect women, recognize
consent, and have healthy sexual relationships? Teach them kindness to
others and the courage to go against the crowd.
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DemocraticUnderground.com, ,
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When Max was just a few months old, I sat cross-legged on the floor
with him in a circle of other mothers. The facilitator for our "Mommy
and Me" playgroup would throw a question out to the group, and we would
each volley back an answer.
"What quality do you want to instill in your child? What personality
characteristic would you most like for your son to be known for?" she
asked.
One by one, the mothers answered. "Athletic", "Good sense of humor", "Brave", "Smart", "Strong".
The answers blended together until it was my turn to speak. I looked
down at the tiny human wiggling around on the blanket in front of me,
his perfectly round nose, his full lips that mirrored mine. I stroked
the top of his very bald head, and said with confidence: "kind".
I want my son to grow up to be kind.
The eyes of the other mothers turned toward me. "That's not always a
word that you hear used for boys" one said. "But yes, you're right ...
so I guess, me too". At the end of the day, we wanted our tiny,
fragile, helpless baby boys to grow up to be kind. Strong, resilient,
athletic, funny ... but above all else, kind.
Max is almost 4 years old. He knows nothing about the horrific things
that young men did to a young woman on the saddest night that
Steubenville, Ohio, has ever seen. He doesn't know, but I sure do. I
know that someone's daughter was violated in the most violent way
possible, by someone's son. By many sons. The blame for that night
falls squarely on the shoulders of the young men who made terrible
choices, but it also falls in the laps of their parents.
Sexual assault is about power and control. But it is also about so
much more. While it's true that big scary monster men sometimes jump
out of bushes to rape unsuspecting women, most rapists look like the men
we see every day. Acquaintance rape (or date rape) accounts for the
majority of sexual assaults among young people: in colleges, in high
schools, at parties, in the cars and bedrooms that belong to the men who
women trust. These men are your fraternity brothers, your athletes,
your church-going friends. They are somebody's son.
Date rape is often saturated with entitlement. It feeds off of the
hero worship that grows rampant like weeds on school campuses and in
locker rooms. Young men are taught to be strong, to be athletes, to be
feared. Young women are taught to be meek, to be feminine, to be small.
As our young people begin to sort out relationships with each other
and relationships with alcohol, they encounter an endless menu of ways
to hurt each other.
As a community we give our athletes free rein. Young men are filled
with the heavy power of triumph, their heroism illuminated by the bright
lights of a brisk Friday night football game. Young cheerleaders spend
hours painting signs for them, adorning hallways with fluorescent notes
of encouragement. Young men are known by their football number, their
last touchdown pass, their ability to get any girl they choose. Young
women fill the stands with hopeful smiles, dying to be noticed.
We have created this. We have allowed this. We choose not to demand
more from our young men, because we see how big they grow in the
spotlight. We give them adult power, without instilling in them an
adult sense of responsibility and ethics.
It is time. Now is the time to make this stop. If you are the mother
of a son, you can prevent the next Steubenville. It doesn't matter if
your boy is 4 or 14 or 24. Start now.
We must teach our boys to be kind.
Photo by Kate Hisock.
A toddler can learn how to use words of kindness. It's never too early
to teach empathy, compassion, and awareness. "Friend, are you OK?"
"I'm sorry friend, did you get a boo-boo?" Encourage tiny boys to be
aware of how others are feeling. Name what they see. "Mommy is sad
right now, honey. Our friend G is sick, and I want her to feel better".
Give children tasks that they can do to help someone in need. Bake
cookies to take to the local firehouse. Bring dinner to a mother on
bedrest. Choose a toy to share with the new child that just joined your
preschool class. Teach your child to go toward a child who is upset,
instead of walking away.
When I picked Max up from school the other day, his teacher remarked on
how "kind" he was. He checks in on other students. He runs to them
when they get hurt. At first I was embarrassed ... oh how my husband
will tease me for instilling my "Social Worker" traits in our son. He
must be brave and tough instead. But I am so proud that he is kind.
That he is a helper. That he sees the emotions of those around him.
Would he have hurt for the girl in Steubenville? Would he have felt
her fear, and said something? Teach your sons to tune in, name emotions
for them, give them words to match their feelings.
We must teach our boys what it truly means to be brave.
Bravery doesn't always feel good. I've heard it said that "Courage is
being afraid, and doing it anyway".How many of those young men in
Steubenville knew in their sweet boy hearts that what was happening was
wrong, but still they remained silent? They were afraid to ruin their
own hard-earned reputations, afraid of what their peers would think of
them. They were afraid of getting in trouble, afraid they wouldn't know
what to say. Teach your boys that bravery can be terrifying. Courage
can be demanded of you at the most inopportune times. Let them know
that your expectation is that they are brave enough to rise to the
occasion. And show them how.
We must not shy away from telling our sons the truth about sex.
Of course this looks different in a conversation with a 4 year old than
it does with a 12-year-old. In our house, we are still working on
giving body parts their appropriate names. Making family rules about
how we always wear clothes when people come to visit (ok, my husband and
I are good on that one, but Max keeps answering the door in his
underwear).
As uncomfortable as it is, the conversation needs to evolve as your boy
gets older. Sex feels good. Sex is overwhelming. Sex is confusing.
Sex tricks you into thinking that you are receiving what you need
(physical satisfaction, comfort, companionship, love, respect). Sex
education is more than just giving your child condoms and reminding them
about STDs. As parents, we need to worry about our sons being
respectful of their sexual partners, not just about them getting someone
pregnant. Our boys need to know that they will find themselves at a
crossroads one night, or on multiple nights. Their body will be telling
them one thing, and their partner may be telling them another. It is a
young man's responsibility to listen to his partner. Explain to your
son what consent looks like (and doesn't look like). They need to know
what sex looks like. Not the Playboymagazine/online-porn version, but
the logistics of how it actually works. Teach them to ask their
partners. Teach them to check in as they take the next step with
someone. Teach them to stop if they don't think they're getting a clear
answer.
We must give our sons the tools they need to protect themselves, and each other.
Can your teenager call you in the middle of the night, no questions
asked? Can they tell you the truth, without you flipping out and
getting angry? Do they trust that you are on their team, that you will
sit down and talk things through with them, making a calm plan together?
Role-play with your son about how to find help, who to go to for help,
what numbers to call. An embarrassed, terrified bystander in
Steubenville could have quietly snuck outside to call the police for
help, or to text an anonymous tip, or call a parent or older sibling for
advice.
Instead, at least a dozen sons were paralyzed by fear. And
intoxicated. And probably overwhelmed by the sexual feelings of their
own that they were experiencing ... feelings that they were never given
the context for.
Give your son the tools they need to understand that sexuality is a
powerful thing, one that they are solely responsible for. Give them a
framework for understanding that sex carries an enormous responsibility -
not just to themselves, but to their partners. Does your son know what
rape is? Does he know what it means? Does he know that it's not just
creepy smelly guys who hide in alleys who are responsible for rape?
That it's his peers? Discuss the ways that a woman can give consent.
Pull the curtains back on the grey areas, and demand that your son
learn how to protect himself and his partner.
When I found out that I was having a son, I was relieved at first. I
thought I had dodged a bullet by not having a daughter whom I would have
to protect from the big, scary, violent world that is still so unkind
to women. This will be so much easier, I thought. But it's not.
It's harder.
I am now pregnant with my second son. As a feminist and a mother, a
survivor and an activist, a human and a writer, I have discovered that
my job in preventing sexual assault is even bigger than it would be if I
had a daughter. Because every rapist is someone's son. We have the
chance to fix that, one little boy at a time.
[Kim Simon is a mother and social worker. She blogs at Mama By the Bay and tweets at www.twitter.com/mamabythebay ]
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DANCING NEBULA
Saturday, March 23, 2013
No More Steubenvilles: How to Raise Boys to be Kind Men
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I think most pain and conflict in the world could be alleviated, and often vanquished, if we taught and cultivated compassion...kindness. Instead, we teach the value of power. "He/she is a person of power" defines 21st Century achievement. Rape is all about power.
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