When Your Child Has Seen Porn, How Can You Keep Talking With Them About It? Article
The following is a framework to guide productive conversations if you find out your child’s been exposed to porn or your teen is struggling.
The following is a framework to guide productive conversations if you find out your child’s been exposed to porn or your teen is struggling.
There is a wealth of data showing that viewing porn is harmful to men in unique ways and that it’s damaging to efforts to achieve gender equality.
Image-based sexual abuse and nonconsensual porn are forms of sexual abuse that largely refer to incidents in which intimate images are taken or shared.
It’s not as much a matter of if but when your child will encounter porn. So here are five tips for navigating “porn talks” with your kids.
Porn is often called “adult material,” but many of its consumers are well under the legal age. How are the children who see it impacted?
This study reveals the need for more intentional conversations about childhood exposure to content that can have negative lasting impacts.
“I first saw porn in the high school locker room after practice. I was 13. Guys used to bring Bluetooth speakers and play it on their laptops. I had no idea what it would end up doing to me.”
According to a survey of U.S. teens, 84% of 14 to 18-year-old males and 57% of 14 to 18-year-old females have viewed porn. What are they learning?
Each response shows a different opinion about porn, and brings up good points about why porn doesn’t help relationships be healthy.
Those who viewed porn were more likely to experience loneliness, and those who were experiencing loneliness were more likely to view porn.
While the sexualization of youth goes beyond porn, porn today plays a huge role in spreading it. In porn, the fetishization of the underage is blatant.
The percentage of women who consume porn is increasing. By the end of 2019, almost 3 out of every 10 Pornhub consumers were female. What are they watching, and how could it be harmful?