Anonymous wrote:I’m so over this trend for preteens and teens to “identify.” They aren’t even having sex! Sex among teens is lower than ever but that’s all this segment of the kids talk about. It’s so strange!
Anonymous wrote:My DD told me in confidence that she thinks she is bisexual. She is 15 and not sexually active , but she says she seems to be attracted to both boys and girls. I come from a culture where we weren't even exposed to gay/lesbian and I am not sure what to make of this? How can a kid know they are bisexual ? Does it mean she wants to experiment with both genders before she decides?
I played it cool in front of her and ask her to not rush into an "identity box" yet. But she says kids ask about each others sexual identity now in school and she want to tell she is bisexual.
I am not sure how to take this. Please advise without being mean, I would like to hear especially from other parents experience if they have a bisexual kid... as I said it is very new and I promised my DD not to share this even with her Dad yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m so over this trend for preteens and teens to “identify.” They aren’t even having sex! Sex among teens is lower than ever but that’s all this segment of the kids talk about. It’s so strange!
How does this help the op, though?
Anonymous wrote:I’m so over this trend for preteens and teens to “identify.” They aren’t even having sex! Sex among teens is lower than ever but that’s all this segment of the kids talk about. It’s so strange!
Anonymous wrote:Say that's great, reiterate issues of consent and safety, and let her figure it out. It's not going to hurt anything if she's bisexual, and it's not going to hurt anything if she says she's bisexual and only dates one gender. It's all fine. Safety and consent are all that matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11yo told me she was pansexual and I asked her what that meant to her, and then asked her if she had any feeling of attraction to anyone. She responded “ew, no”, then paused for a beat and said, “I guess I’m nothing sexual”, to which I responded “you’re 11 and that is fine. No need to rush to label yourself”. She then decided that her current sexual orientation is “questioning” which sounds great for a preteen/teen kid who is still figuring it all out. By 15 I expect she may have some answers, but at 11 it’s still really all beyond her. If at 15 she told me she was bi I would say great, thank you for sharing that with me. I hope you find wonderful people to love and who love you.
This is really interesting. I started to write this scenario earlier today because I went through it when my daughter was 11 (she's 15 now.) She claimed she was pansexual just as she started to meet non-binary people, attended her first PRIDE march and wanted to buy everything rainbow (the beginning of middle school.) She put up a pan flag in her room and I said to her that if she is truly pansexual then we need to have a different conversation to make sure she was protecting herself sexually. She had a similar reaction and was like "wait... no I'm not sexual." Now at 15 she has moved out of her everything rainbow/PRIDE stage and doesn't label herself as anything (although her brother likes to label her.)
I don’t get this. If she was heterosexual, wouldn’t you still have needed to have a safe sex convo? It is important to have safe sex convos with our kids no matter their sexual preferences and to start these convos before they are sexually active. It sounds to me like she just didn’t want to have a sex talk with you, which was being tied to her self-identification as pansexual, so of course she’s going to step back from identifying in that case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11yo told me she was pansexual and I asked her what that meant to her, and then asked her if she had any feeling of attraction to anyone. She responded “ew, no”, then paused for a beat and said, “I guess I’m nothing sexual”, to which I responded “you’re 11 and that is fine. No need to rush to label yourself”. She then decided that her current sexual orientation is “questioning” which sounds great for a preteen/teen kid who is still figuring it all out. By 15 I expect she may have some answers, but at 11 it’s still really all beyond her. If at 15 she told me she was bi I would say great, thank you for sharing that with me. I hope you find wonderful people to love and who love you.
This is really interesting. I started to write this scenario earlier today because I went through it when my daughter was 11 (she's 15 now.) She claimed she was pansexual just as she started to meet non-binary people, attended her first PRIDE march and wanted to buy everything rainbow (the beginning of middle school.) She put up a pan flag in her room and I said to her that if she is truly pansexual then we need to have a different conversation to make sure she was protecting herself sexually. She had a similar reaction and was like "wait... no I'm not sexual." Now at 15 she has moved out of her everything rainbow/PRIDE stage and doesn't label herself as anything (although her brother likes to label her.)
Anonymous wrote:My 11yo told me she was pansexual and I asked her what that meant to her, and then asked her if she had any feeling of attraction to anyone. She responded “ew, no”, then paused for a beat and said, “I guess I’m nothing sexual”, to which I responded “you’re 11 and that is fine. No need to rush to label yourself”. She then decided that her current sexual orientation is “questioning” which sounds great for a preteen/teen kid who is still figuring it all out. By 15 I expect she may have some answers, but at 11 it’s still really all beyond her. If at 15 she told me she was bi I would say great, thank you for sharing that with me. I hope you find wonderful people to love and who love you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11yo told me she was pansexual and I asked her what that meant to her, and then asked her if she had any feeling of attraction to anyone. She responded “ew, no”, then paused for a beat and said, “I guess I’m nothing sexual”, to which I responded “you’re 11 and that is fine. No need to rush to label yourself”. She then decided that her current sexual orientation is “questioning” which sounds great for a preteen/teen kid who is still figuring it all out. By 15 I expect she may have some answers, but at 11 it’s still really all beyond her. If at 15 she told me she was bi I would say great, thank you for sharing that with me. I hope you find wonderful people to love and who love you.
Hasn’t something gone wrong in our world when an 11yo knows the word pansexual, let alone identifies as one? I think you handled it well, pp, but I just think this celebration of sex and sexuality in elementary and middle schools is less than ideal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11yo told me she was pansexual and I asked her what that meant to her, and then asked her if she had any feeling of attraction to anyone. She responded “ew, no”, then paused for a beat and said, “I guess I’m nothing sexual”, to which I responded “you’re 11 and that is fine. No need to rush to label yourself”. She then decided that her current sexual orientation is “questioning” which sounds great for a preteen/teen kid who is still figuring it all out. By 15 I expect she may have some answers, but at 11 it’s still really all beyond her. If at 15 she told me she was bi I would say great, thank you for sharing that with me. I hope you find wonderful people to love and who love you.
Hasn’t something gone wrong in our world when an 11yo knows the word pansexual, let alone identifies as one? I think you handled it well, pp, but I just think this celebration of sex and sexuality in elementary and middle schools is less than ideal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You say "Okay. I love you no matter what, and no matter who you're attracted to." And then you hug her and go on with life because this isn't a big deal.
I think this is actually a negative message. It suggests that this revelation is some major negative bit of news that you are tolerating.