That's very cool. Good for him. |
+1 |
Nope, no teen sex in this house |
My DD was conceived in a teen's bedroom....DW was 34, and I was 38, but it was a place where we were visiting. |
I'll knock his/her theory. 6 months. The research shows that all that preaching in the uber-Christian community delays sexual debut of teens by 6 months. When they do lose their virginity, they are more likely to get pregnant because they don't use birth control and more likely to catch an STD because they don't use condoms. Abstinence until marriage doesn't work. |
It works just fine for some. Nothing works for all. |
It's just one anecdote, but abstinence worked for me. Was abstinent until married at age 27. I know some will say that I "missed out," but while I have made some poor decisions in life, I will always consider that as one of the better decisions I have made. |
Good for you, but the singular of "data" is not "anecdote." it doesn't work for the vast majority of people. |
I do not allow unmarried young adults/teens to sleep together in our house. I'm not naive. I know they have sex with their significant other and, frankly, I'm very glad they do. But we have a guest room for guests. That's where guests sleep. I've hinted that I'll have no idea how late they stay up with their guests or what room they'll be in -once I've gone to bed- but in the morning I'd like to see that they are coming out of their own room alone.
(they could sleep together till 5am, I'd never know) I try to give my adult children privacy -in our house- with their significant other. I'll let them know when we have plans (when the house is theirs), and what time we will be back -or call when we are on our way home. |
My view is a bit bizarre. I have 2 in college. They bring their SO's home from time to time. They do NOT sleep in the same room. I know they are adults but we have 2 younger ones under foot. My view is that you can bone all you want when you get back on campus and I cannot stop you. So for the 2 nights that you are in my house, I would prefer that you keep it PG.
My rules for the younger ones are no members of the opposite sex or SO's allowed in the house unless an adult is there. Entertaining of such guests takes place in public areas of the house generally, but we have allowed room visits on occasion and I am sure the older siblings (adults) have allowed the younger ones some leeway. I am not naive but I do want the kids to think it is acceptable to get busy with their parents in the next room. |
Good for you, but self-reporting "data" does not equal proof. If you believe people don't lie, for whatever reason -or no reason at all, you're out of touch with reality. For some people, lying on "data" questionnaires is entertaining. Haven't you heard? |
This could have been written by me. My head is still messed up after years of "sex is bad, we don't talk about it, you just can't ever do it until you're married" attitude. I'm definitely raising my girls differently! |
How exactly? |
This is just bizarre to me. Isn't this just being hypocritical? What would you lose by being open? |
My DS and DD are in college.
I did hope that they would not be sexually active in high school (or before age 18). They weren't (and yes, I'm sure -- or very close to it!). With the configuration of my house (I'm a single parent) I do allow them to have girlfriend/boyfriend visits (neither lives in this area). And since I'm on the main floor it's a "don't ask/don't tell" policy. I feel very comfortable with it myself. Each has been in a relationship for 20 months +. Beyond a certain age -- whether that's 16, 17, 18, or whatever -- I think it's much more important that the first experiences are good ones (than the age itself). And, I have to hope that the fact that my son is "a relationship kind of guy" -- as he reported that he once explained to a young lady at college who asked him his intentions, then replied: "relationships don't work -- but we can still party together" -- has something to do with the values transmitted to him at home! |