Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you guys so much. I knew this wasn't normal, husband didn't think it was either, but I was scared maybe it was I and shouldn't worry mom with my overreaction.
First pp, I'm not sure if my son even said no to know if it was respected or not. And now I don't want to keep bringing it up to refresh it in his mind. :/
Do you think I should wait until her husband is home, which is a couple weeks, so as not to give her additional stress? I don't want to push her over the edge with worry, but I also feel like addressing it now might not make it seem like it's totally the worst thing in the world.
I don't think you need to wait. If it was my child, I'd want to know.
Anonymous wrote:I played doctor with an opposite sex friend at that age. It seemed normal. The anus thing is the weird part. I don't think kids are usually interested in anal sex or sodomy. It's the gross thing for kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I dont' think its normal either. My concern would be whether or not confronting the other mom will backfire on you. It sounds like there is a chance it could danger your friendship with her and her family. It's a tough situation, but it sounds like you need to decide whether its worth it to speak up.
If you decided you don't want to be the person to discuss this with the other mom, then I would definitely create some space between the boys. Limited, supervised playdates. Create rules where they are not allowed to be alone unsupervised.. and keep their time together short. If it were me, that's probably what I would do. It may seem passive aggressive, but it could become very uncomfortable and sour relationships, (possibly reputations if this other mom takes it personally and wants revenge).. sorry this happened..
What about the safety of the other boy? What if he is being abused and you didn't speak up?
Anonymous wrote:OP I dont' think its normal either. My concern would be whether or not confronting the other mom will backfire on you. It sounds like there is a chance it could danger your friendship with her and her family. It's a tough situation, but it sounds like you need to decide whether its worth it to speak up.
If you decided you don't want to be the person to discuss this with the other mom, then I would definitely create some space between the boys. Limited, supervised playdates. Create rules where they are not allowed to be alone unsupervised.. and keep their time together short. If it were me, that's probably what I would do. It may seem passive aggressive, but it could become very uncomfortable and sour relationships, (possibly reputations if this other mom takes it personally and wants revenge).. sorry this happened..
Anonymous wrote:OP I dont' think its normal either. My concern would be whether or not confronting the other mom will backfire on you. It sounds like there is a chance it could danger your friendship with her and her family. It's a tough situation, but it sounds like you need to decide whether its worth it to speak up.
If you decided you don't want to be the person to discuss this with the other mom, then I would definitely create some space between the boys. Limited, supervised playdates. Create rules where they are not allowed to be alone unsupervised.. and keep their time together short. If it were me, that's probably what I would do. It may seem passive aggressive, but it could become very uncomfortable and sour relationships, (possibly reputations if this other mom takes it personally and wants revenge).. sorry this happened..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually don't find the specific acts to be that disturbing and explored similar things with other boys at that age, despite none of the kids involved having been abused (to the best of my knowledge).
What I do find worrying is that the other boy seemed very focused on it while your son was indicating discomfort. It doesn't sound like mutual curiosity.
Alex stick his hands in Freddy's anus and you don't find that unusual?
Correct. I don't think its unusual for young boys to be curious about bodies and to explore their own and their friends. They don't ascribe the same sexual significance to it as we do, because they are ignorant about their meaning. But they do keep it secret, because they pick up early on that there's something different about private parts that adults don't like to talk about. I can easily imagine two boys at a sleepover daring each other to stick their fingers up each others butts out of curiosity then nervously laughing about it and agreeing not to tell mom. In that scenario, I wouldn't have any concern.
What seems different here is that: (1) one boy seemed much more fixated on it than the other; (2) one boy seemed to have resisted and expressed displeasure and the other boy still pushed forward; (3) the affected boy apparently was concerned enough about it that he decided to tell his parent instead of either forgetting about it or keeping it secret.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually don't find the specific acts to be that disturbing and explored similar things with other boys at that age, despite none of the kids involved having been abused (to the best of my knowledge).
What I do find worrying is that the other boy seemed very focused on it while your son was indicating discomfort. It doesn't sound like mutual curiosity.
Alex stick his hands in Freddy's anus and you don't find that unusual?