Originally posted by cattitude
Sure it does!
Good thing.
It worked for Kathy.... With their mother gone and their dad (her brother) largely clueless for his first few single years, Kathy had a powerful hand in raising her niece and nephew. One day when her nephew was 13, she walked into the living room and found him watching MTV. She sat down next to him and they watched a rap video together. It was an overtly sexual video; she glanced at him now & then and found his face reddening. Finally, after a scene in which a man roughly grabbed a woman’s breasts from behind, they’d both had enough. She turned off the TV and took him out for a walk to the park.
She said, “You know that was fake, don’t you?” He said “yeah.” She told him, “Usually, no woman would want to be grabbed like that, especially not by surprise and
definitely not by someone she doesn’t know.” He said “okay.” The boy clearly wanted the conversation to be over, but Kathy had one more point to make. They sat down on a bench and she made him look her in the eye, and she told him, “Devyn, when a girl says ‘no,’ she means ‘no.’ She doesn’t mean ‘maybe,’ or ‘later,’ or ‘not here.’ She means ‘no.’” He said, “okay.”
So... he's 23, engaged, and has never raped anyone and has never gotten a girl preggers...
Okay, so it's anecdotal. But here it seems are many, many examples of parents teaching their children well.
(Kathy would've been a terrific mother. She always told the two kids, "if you ever want to know anything about anything, you can come to me...." some other time perhaps I'll tell about the question her niece, age 10, asked out of the blue one day.)
