Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im a Cub Scout den leader. It isnt my regular job, it is a volunteer commitment. My kids wanted to do Cub Scouts and a den leader is necessary for every age. So I volunteered to be the den leader for one of them. I was background checked and have had to do youth protection training. I have also volunteered with the PTA and know many parents who volunteer as coaches, etc.
When your kiddo gets older you will realize that most activities, like the PTA, youth sports, scouts, etc. dont happen without parent volunteers. So we volunteer bc our love of our kids and our desire for them to be able to do an activity they love outweighs the annoyance factor inherent in any large group of children.
I trust other parents much more than I do people without kids.
I get how parents are forced into interacting with other peoples kids for their own kids.
Sometimes people work with kids because they wanted kids of their own but for whatever reason couldn't. So this is their way to get their "parenting" urge scratched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's creepy, yes. Just like how I find male gymnastics coaches creepy. And male nanny's creepy. And male aides in SN classrooms creepy.
Sexism is alive and well.
If it’s sexism if it’s based on fact? Sorry. 95% of sexual predators are men.
If you want to prove you aren’t a misandrist and sacrifice your kids to a male caregiver go for it.
I’ll wear whatever label you want me to label and have protected kids.
Actually, there are MANY women too. Most go undetected because if sexism like yours. You just THINK you are protecting your children. Good luck to them!
+1, I was sexually assaulted by a female coach. People didn't believe me because she was a woman and they thought I must have "misunderstood." I do think there is more female-perpetrated sexual assault than we realize because it doesn't get reported or, even if reported, accusers are not believed. I've read that this is also true for workplace harassment -- women harass more than gets reported because people are embarrassed to report harassment from a woman or reports are quickly dismissed as not credible.
There is also some gender normative stuff that goes on -- female aggressors are more likely to assault/harass other women (it makes sense, people looking for victims will target one who is physically weaker and who is unlikely to be believed). I think my assault was dismissed in part because both parties were female and that made it seem unimportant to others, like some kind of mean girl incident instead of a criminal assault, which is what it was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im a Cub Scout den leader. It isnt my regular job, it is a volunteer commitment. My kids wanted to do Cub Scouts and a den leader is necessary for every age. So I volunteered to be the den leader for one of them. I was background checked and have had to do youth protection training. I have also volunteered with the PTA and know many parents who volunteer as coaches, etc.
When your kiddo gets older you will realize that most activities, like the PTA, youth sports, scouts, etc. dont happen without parent volunteers. So we volunteer bc our love of our kids and our desire for them to be able to do an activity they love outweighs the annoyance factor inherent in any large group of children.
I trust other parents much more than I do people without kids.
I get how parents are forced into interacting with other peoples kids for their own kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's creepy, yes. Just like how I find male gymnastics coaches creepy. And male nanny's creepy. And male aides in SN classrooms creepy.
Sexism is alive and well.
If it’s sexism if it’s based on fact? Sorry. 95% of sexual predators are men.
If you want to prove you aren’t a misandrist and sacrifice your kids to a male caregiver go for it.
I’ll wear whatever label you want me to label and have protected kids.
But 95% of men are not sexual predators. Do you think your husband is? Frankly he is the one most likely to abuse your child’s, statistically speaking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's creepy, yes. Just like how I find male gymnastics coaches creepy. And male nanny's creepy. And male aides in SN classrooms creepy.
Sexism is alive and well.
If it’s sexism if it’s based on fact? Sorry. 95% of sexual predators are men.
If you want to prove you aren’t a misandrist and sacrifice your kids to a male caregiver go for it.
I’ll wear whatever label you want me to label and have protected kids.
Actually, there are MANY women too. Most go undetected because if sexism like yours. You just THINK you are protecting your children. Good luck to them!
Anonymous wrote:OP - your post says more about YOU than you realize. Please, for the sake of your child, get professional help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's creepy, yes. Just like how I find male gymnastics coaches creepy. And male nanny's creepy. And male aides in SN classrooms creepy.
Sexism is alive and well.
If it’s sexism if it’s based on fact? Sorry. 95% of sexual predators are men.
If you want to prove you aren’t a misandrist and sacrifice your kids to a male caregiver go for it.
I’ll wear whatever label you want me to label and have protected kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's creepy, yes. Just like how I find male gymnastics coaches creepy. And male nanny's creepy. And male aides in SN classrooms creepy.
Sexism is alive and well.
If it’s sexism if it’s based on fact? Sorry. 95% of sexual predators are men.
If you want to prove you aren’t a misandrist and sacrifice your kids to a male caregiver go for it.
I’ll wear whatever label you want me to label and have protected kids.