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Home » Sue Jaye Johnson: What We Don’t Teach Kids About Sex (Transcript)

Sue Jaye Johnson: What We Don’t Teach Kids About Sex (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Sue Jaye Johnson’s Talk: What We Don’t Teach Kids About Sex at TED conference. 

TRANSCRIPT: 

I remember my aunt brushing my hair when I was a child. I felt this tingling in my stomach, this swelling in my belly. All her attention on me, just me. My beautiful Aunt Bea, stroking my hair with a fine-bristled brush. Do you have a memory like that that you can feel in your body right now? Before language, we’re all sensation. As children, that’s how we learn to differentiate ourselves in the world — through touch. Everything goes in the mouth, the hands, on the skin.

Sensation — it is the way that we first experience love. It’s the basis of human connection. We want our children to grow up to have healthy intimate relationships. So as parents, one of the things that we do is we teach our children about sex. We have books to help us, we have sex ed at school for the basics.

There’s porn to fill in the gaps — and it will fill in the gaps. We teach our children “the talk” about biology and mechanics, about pregnancy and safe sex, and that’s what our kids grow up thinking that sex is pretty much all about. But we can do better than that. We can teach our sons and daughters about pleasure and desire, about consent and boundaries, about what it feels like to be present in their body and to know when they’re not. And we do that in the ways that we model touch, play, make eye contact — all the ways that we engage their senses.

We can teach our children not just about sex, but about sensuality. This is the kind of talk that I needed as a girl. I was extremely sensitive, but by the time I was an adolescent, I had numbed out.