Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This can’t be serious. 13 year old boys like porn. Limit his access. 13 year olds get erections. Leave him alone and let him do what teen boys do.
/mom of three grown boys
Shouldn’t you expect more for 13 year old boys? I have a 14 year old boy who does not have access to porn. He doesn’t have a phone and doesn’t get to use the computer without supervision. It really isn’t that difficult to prevent a boys callousness toward sex and women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This can’t be serious. 13 year old boys like porn. Limit his access. 13 year olds get erections. Leave him alone and let him do what teen boys do.
/mom of three grown boys
Shouldn’t you expect more for 13 year old boys? I have a 14 year old boy who does not have access to porn. He doesn’t have a phone and doesn’t get to use the computer without supervision. It really isn’t that difficult to prevent a boys callousness toward sex and women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18:53 is right on target. Explain that what is staged/filmed is not love (hopefully he has good family role models for a loving, respectful relationship with you and DH, aunts and uncles, etc), and not real. That you are concerned because some people see porn, and think it is real, and/or get those images stuck in their head, and you don't want that for him. Definitely let him know is curiosity is normal!
+1. I banned it at our house [LOL no doubt it pleases you to think so.] but a lot of boys even when I was in high school just watched it on their friends' phones. I always include a discussion about consent, respect, and sex trafficking whenever porn comes up. [Another scoldy lecture from sanctimommy automatically tuned out.] Erections and curiosity are normal and fine. I'm always happy and open to discuss with them. [“Mom, I want to talk about erections,” said no teen boy ever.]
Anonymous wrote:This can’t be serious. 13 year old boys like porn. Limit his access. 13 year olds get erections. Leave him alone and let him do what teen boys do.
/mom of three grown boys
Anonymous wrote:This has to have been posted by a 12-year-old.
Hint: boners are part of life.
Anonymous wrote:Just be thankful it’s not gay porn. Leave him alone, kids his age have been doing this for ever. Before the internet there was once a magazine called a Playboy. I guarantee you your husband did the same thing at this age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(1) Use content blockers on your computer and his phone. Sure, he might see it at a friend's house, but porn sites are often full of malware, so you really don't want it on your computer.
(2) Inform him that porn sites are full of malware.
(3) Remind him that watching porn and masturbating are private activities.
(4) Explain to him that porn is not a realistic depiction of sex, let alone love. People in porn often fail to practice safe sex, and often engage in apparently non-consensual activities. Women often pretend to enjoy things that they don't actually enjoy, or that might even be painful or uncomfortable or humiliating. It might depict forcing or hurting women as pleasurable for the man, when there are many men who would not enjoy that at all.
(5) The conditions under which porn is made can be exploitative. Some actors are decently well-paid professionals, but watching porn means you might be watching people who are underage, trafficked, or otherwise coerced.
(6) Porn tends to reduce people, especially women, to objects, and people are not objects. He should be treating the girls he knows, including but not limited to any future romantic partners, with respect and consideration.
This is good advice. Make sure you don't shame him for having an erection or masturbating, OP. Just let him know these are private things and should be done when he's alone in his room.
Anonymous wrote:(1) Use content blockers on your computer and his phone. Sure, he might see it at a friend's house, but porn sites are often full of malware, so you really don't want it on your computer.
(2) Inform him that porn sites are full of malware.
(3) Remind him that watching porn and masturbating are private activities.
(4) Explain to him that porn is not a realistic depiction of sex, let alone love. People in porn often fail to practice safe sex, and often engage in apparently non-consensual activities. Women often pretend to enjoy things that they don't actually enjoy, or that might even be painful or uncomfortable or humiliating. It might depict forcing or hurting women as pleasurable for the man, when there are many men who would not enjoy that at all.
(5) The conditions under which porn is made can be exploitative. Some actors are decently well-paid professionals, but watching porn means you might be watching people who are underage, trafficked, or otherwise coerced.
(6) Porn tends to reduce people, especially women, to objects, and people are not objects. He should be treating the girls he knows, including but not limited to any future romantic partners, with respect and consideration.
Anonymous wrote:I posted this question yesterday for some advice on my 12 year old , almost 13 boy seen with some inappropriate websites and then subsequently with an erection.
Apparently don't find this post anywhere now???
What I am seeking here is a better way to deal with him gently so that he is focussing on building a strong character and academics and is not diverted into such inappropriate sites. We blocked the navigation ability in computers but want to know how he got to know of these type of web sites and how to prevent him from doing anything inappropriate at school or getting into inappropriate experiences outside home. Please advice.
Anonymous wrote:18:53 is right on target. Explain that what is staged/filmed is not love (hopefully he has good family role models for a loving, respectful relationship with you and DH, aunts and uncles, etc), and not real. That you are concerned because some people see porn, and think it is real, and/or get those images stuck in their head, and you don't want that for him. Definitely let him know is curiosity is normal!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teach him the appropriate way to look at porn. Meaning, in private and when no one else will see him. Also ensure you mention something in relation to the fact that porn is not indicative of real life. You may also mention that you don’t approve of it, should you feel so compelled. I’m sorry but you are unlikely to find a healthy way to divert him from seeing porn because he lives in America and you probably don’t plan to lock him in the house. You can keep him from being inappropriate at school and home.
What the ever loving eff is this? No 13 year old should be looking at porn, you whack job. 99% of it is misogynistic and super messed up for an adolescent who still hasn't developed his sexuality. Just imagine how messed up you'd be if you grew up regularly looking at the stuff. I dated a guy with a porn problem and he was terrible in bed, couldn't come, everything seemed fake, there was zero connection when we were intimate. Not only could the kid develop those problems, but he also will probably grow to see women as less than human because that is 100% how mainstream porn portrays them.
OP, don't give your kid access. Figure it out. Talk to him about it. Make sure he doesn't have a smart phone or a computer in his room.