Anonymous wrote:OP you sound ridiculous. THIS is why Americans have issues with conversations regarding intimate anatomy. The first female in your sons life isn’t even saying the word penis, like it’s scandalous. There is nothing indecent about anatomy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vagina people get a clue. You don’t pee out of it. The urethra would be the proper term, or vulva for the entire area.
Everyone knows this, PP, but vagina has been used for so long to mean vulva. In my life since The Vagina Monologues hit Broadway in the 1980s. Most of use older moms were taught to call the entire female genitalia area the vagina. My now 28 year old daughter proudly talked about her vagina when she was three. Give people a break. I doubt that anyone is going to get confused by what a child means.
Where are you from? I was never taught to use the term vagina for my genitals. I grew up in the Midwest, they taught us the proper terminology in health class in elementary school.
Philadelphia in the 1970s. And “taught” never came into play! Like a previous poster, The Vagina Monologues was groundbreaking and referred to the female genitalia as vagina.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vagina people get a clue. You don’t pee out of it. The urethra would be the proper term, or vulva for the entire area.
Everyone knows this, PP, but vagina has been used for so long to mean vulva. In my life since The Vagina Monologues hit Broadway in the 1980s. Most of use older moms were taught to call the entire female genitalia area the vagina. My now 28 year old daughter proudly talked about her vagina when she was three. Give people a break. I doubt that anyone is going to get confused by what a child means.
Yep, vagina is the general term. Even guys use penis to refer to everything even if they mean urethra.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vagina people get a clue. You don’t pee out of it. The urethra would be the proper term, or vulva for the entire area.
Everyone knows this, PP, but vagina has been used for so long to mean vulva. In my life since The Vagina Monologues hit Broadway in the 1980s. Most of use older moms were taught to call the entire female genitalia area the vagina. My now 28 year old daughter proudly talked about her vagina when she was three. Give people a break. I doubt that anyone is going to get confused by what a child means.
Where are you from? I was never taught to use the term vagina for my genitals. I grew up in the Midwest, they taught us the proper terminology in health class in elementary school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We used front bum
This is a really disturbing thread.
-a dad of daughters
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vagina people get a clue. You don’t pee out of it. The urethra would be the proper term, or vulva for the entire area.
Everyone knows this, PP, but vagina has been used for so long to mean vulva. In my life since The Vagina Monologues hit Broadway in the 1980s. Most of use older moms were taught to call the entire female genitalia area the vagina. My now 28 year old daughter proudly talked about her vagina when she was three. Give people a break. I doubt that anyone is going to get confused by what a child means.
Anonymous wrote:We used front bum
Anonymous wrote:I knew nothing about my anatomy and when I started my period, I was surprised it wasn’t come out of my urethra. I had no idea I had another part of my body. Teach your kids proper names.
Anonymous wrote:You call it what it is. Her vagina. And your son has a penis, not a wee wee. It’s important kids know the correct terminology so they can communicate to you what’s going on if something ever happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vagina people get a clue. You don’t pee out of it. The urethra would be the proper term, or vulva for the entire area.
Everyone knows this, PP, but vagina has been used for so long to mean vulva. In my life since The Vagina Monologues hit Broadway in the 1980s. Most of use older moms were taught to call the entire female genitalia area the vagina. My now 28 year old daughter proudly talked about her vagina when she was three. Give people a break. I doubt that anyone is going to get confused by what a child means.
Anonymous wrote:As a girl, I was convinced that my genitals were unique. I had no sisters, and grown women mostly had au naturel, concealing pubic hair then. My mom wasn't very helpful. I remember studying a diagram of the "female reproductive organs," all internal, and being totally mystified. It was confusing and even frightening, and led to a lot of feelings of shame.
This is why I think it's important to use the correct words. The vagina is an internal organ; you won't easily find it by staring at your 6 year old crotch. More confusion. Different girls have different names for the parts; is their anatomy different? Further confusion.
Give things their proper names. Make it clear that everyone's the same. We do it for boys; let's give that to girls also.