Teens Having Sex Porno

Teens Having Sex Porno




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Teens Having Sex Porno

Lifestyle Lizzie Marvelly: Teens are having sex and watching porn - deal with it
8 Jan, 2016 11:00 PM 5 mins to read
When I started a little thing called #MyBodyMyTerms last year, I became aware that many parents have no idea what their kids are getting up to online. Photo / Emily Raftery
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When I started a little thing called #MyBodyMyTerms last year, I became aware that many parents have no idea what their kids are getting up to online. Photo / Emily Raftery
I don't envy parents. Don't get me wrong; teens regularly amaze me with their vitality, passion, intelligence and insight. I feel reassured about our future whenever I spend time with them. I also become acutely aware of just how quickly I am becoming "old".
At 26, teens likely think I have one foot in the grave. Thankfully, however, as one of the original digital natives, the teen world is not entirely foreign. I too grew up chatting to my friends online, posting photos on social media and texting until my thumbs hurt. I too was pressured to send sexy selfies, knew exactly where to find porn in my early teens and knew a lot more about sex than my poor parents would ever have suspected.
Back then we knew how to beat any web nanny, how to hide our geographical location to access whatever we wanted, how to create fake accounts with fake names and burner email addresses to roam around the web virtually invisible. That was in 2005. Imagine what teens have access to now.
When I started a little thing called #MyBodyMyTerms last year, I became aware that many parents have no idea what their kids are getting up to online. I had taken for granted that people knew what the term "revenge porn" meant. I thought that all Kiwi students had access to decent sexuality education. I thought that most parents knew that online porn is as easy to find as typing "porn" into Google.
It sounds like a scary state of affairs, and in a sense, it is. But it needn't be. Knowledge, after all, is power, and communication is the simplest way to impart knowledge. If we join the dots and face reality, we can empower teens and keep them safe.
As uncomfortable as this may sound, giving teens comprehensive information about sex and sexuality is far better than trying to shelter them. Researchers have built a body of proof that comprehensive sexuality education is correlated with better outcomes for young people, including the interesting finding that students who receive expansive sexuality education are more likely to delay their first sexual encounters. As tempting as it may be to cling to denial or wilful ignorance about teens and sex, it won't do teens any favours.
As basic as it seems, actually chatting with teens is a great place to start.
It's not as simple as teaching teens about contraception, avoiding pregnancy and STIs (and I'm not even going to address the idea of teaching abstinence-until-marriage because it is laughable and arguably dangerous). It blows my mind that we first think to teach teens about the biological and medical aspects of sexuality when sex is almost always inherently social. Teaching teens how to correctly use a condom is important, but it doesn't give them any insights into how to build a healthy and fulfilling relationship.
It also doesn't begin to deconstruct the porn-informed notions that anal sex is an expectation, that girls should give oral sex as par for the course, that male pleasure is more important than female pleasure, or that hitting and slapping your partner is commonly acceptable. It does nothing to address the vital, basic fact that consent is not the absence of a "no". As much as society doesn't want to think about the mechanics of teens having sex, how can we expect them to instinctively figure out what is and isn't okay in a sexual relationship when their most easily accessible (and most-viewed) reference is online pornography?
If you're reading that last paragraph in a state of shock, you're likely not alone. The reason that I don't envy parents of teens is that the world young people live in today is so different to the world parents grew up in. Add the prevalence of alcohol and drugs into the equation and it may as well be a different planet.
Teens will always be teens, and curiosity is an entirely normal part of growing up. But the environmental influences today's young people absorb on a daily basis are hugely different to those past generations have faced. Young people don't become "predators" in a vacuum.
When it comes to online media, many parents frankly have no idea how parts of the internet work, let alone what can be accessed if you know where to find it.
The solution? It's not to wage futile campaigns to abolish pornography, nor to attempt to wrap teens in technological cotton wool. Neither is it to leave it to schools to decide which parts of the voluntary sexuality education curriculum they are brave enough to teach.
Until our Government musters the courage to implement compulsory comprehensive sexuality education - which, given we have the worst sexual violence statistics in the OECD, you'd think would be a no-brainer - parents need to step up. It's time to shatter the rose-tinted glasses. Teens are watching porn and having sex. I know, I was one of them.
Empowering young people with the skills; social, practical, psychological and emotional, to navigate sex, sexuality and relationships, no matter how awkward it might be, is a vital part of keeping them safe.
As basic as it seems, actually chatting with teens is a great place to start - just don't sit them down for "the talk" (omg mortifying). Create an environment where they feel comfortable asking questions without fear of judgment or punishment. Engage with them regularly about what's happening in their lives and you'll likely find ample opportunities for discussion.
As for the awkwardness, if you don't make it a big deal, they won't make it a big deal. And what's worse: confronting an uncomfortable subject or sending your teens into the world without knowing what consent means? I know which I'd choose.
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HIT series Sex Education is back with a bang – and a lot more besides – in what is already Netflix’s most X-rated show.
And in a warning to young fans excitedly awaiting series two — cheekily billed “the second coming” — its star Gillian Anderson says: “Don’t watch it with your parents.”
The first episode of the new season, shown at the world premiere in London on Wednesday, features FIFTEEN scenes of solo sex acts in the opening three minutes.
Mother-of-three Gillian, 51 , said: “I have a 25-year-old daughter and I have never watched it with her, although she has watched it herself.
“We talk about the sex bits. But that’s a lot different than sitting next to your child and watching it together.
“I am not sure any parents would want to watch this with their teenagers in the same room.
“People say they sit and watch it at the same time but in separate rooms.”
The first series was a global hit, having been watched by 40million people in the first four weeks.
It saw former X-Files star Gillian as sex therapist Dr Jean Milburn, mother to main character Otis, played by rising British star Asa Butterfield, 22 .
Otis uses his mum’s expertise to start his own lucrative sex clinic at school, helping a band of hapless teens going through puberty.
Filmed across Wales in Newport, Cardiff and the Wye Valley, the series mixes English and US culture, which helps explain its wide appeal.
Money is in sterling and the actors have British accents, but they play American football and attend an American-type school.
Gillian said of the decision: “The rules are shifting all the time in terms of how an audience receives shows, what they’re willing to accept and what worlds they’re willing to step into.
“I think Netflix feels quite strongly that they’ve hit on something with this amalgamation.”
Although mainly focused on the trials of teen sex, Gillian strips off for a racy scene of her own in the second series opener, romping with on-screen lover Jakob.
BRIT star Asa’s sexually frustrated character Otis pleasures himself 15 times in the first 180 seconds of the season opener – despite being in a number of public places.

The frenzy, which was filmed over six days, is sparked by him finally learning how to become aroused.
But a side effect means he is now turned on by almost anything, including a slice of Brie and wearing corduroy trousers.
Asa, who played the lead role of little boy Bruno in 2008 film The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas, says: “The w***ing montage will follow me around for the rest of my career.
“When I first read it and when they first pitched it to me they said it was going to be a lot of fun. And it was.”
The actor also reveals the cast had to watch animals having sex as part of their homework for the second series.
The idea came from the show’s “intimacy co-ordinator” Ita O’Brien, who believed it would help make sex a less taboo subject.
Asa explains: “We were given a document the night before which was just animals having sex. We all had to read it. It was like homework.
“Then before filming we had a workshop where we wore loose trousers and watched snails having sex for eight hours.”
The role has rocketed child star Asa to grown-up stardom. And while he admits the part was initially a risk, it has certainly paid off.
He says: “When I first signed up, I knew it would be risky, that the scripts were treading new ground.
“I guess I hoped the show would be talked about a bit. But I didn’t expect it to connect so overwhelmingly. It hit at the right time.”
Despite finding it “hellish”, she says she was keen to be a part of the series as it makes her feel young again.
She added: “The show is actually gentle and compassionate. There are a lot of very emotional topics, a lot of difficult topics that are addressed, aside from the sex.
“Abortion, STIs , it looks at the responsibility of the choices youngsters make when they start having sex.
“I would say what draws people in is that everyone is accepted.
“Whoever you are, whatever you look like, whatever your beliefs are, you are not by yourself.
“There is an energy about this show that makes people watching it feel they are OK, however they are.
“That is miraculous. It almost feels like we are carving out another realm of it entirely because the show has taken things into such a different world.
“It feels like it is almost making its own path for that generation.
“I feel a bit more part of the young generation. Plus this role has racked up the most laughs for me.
"When I first read the script I found it really funny.
“And I haven’t had the chance to do much comedy in my career so far.”
The first series finale saw a sexually frustrated Otis finally manage to achieve his goal of pleasuring himself — in front of a crowd of school friends.
EMMA MACKEY, who plays Maeve, says the show has made her more confident talking about sex – and thinks it helps other youngsters do the same.

She says: “Just because we’ve done a show about sex doesn’t suddenly make us sex experts.
But I love it when mums come up to me in the street and say, ‘Thank you for helping me talk about sex to my kids’. I wish this show existed when I was at school. This is why it works so well.”
In the series, Maeve navigates a difficult relationship with her addict mum, played by Anne-Marie Duff, 49.
She says: “Anne-Marie is an actual living legend. All I do is react off her, that’s all I had to do. I soaked it all up.”
But with his new girlfriend Ola unaware of his unrequited love for bad girl Maeve, played by Emma Mackey, 24 , fans were left desperate to find out what happens next.
Series two kicks off where the first ended, with Otis seen constantly enjoying solo sex.
Then as an outbreak of chlamydia sweeps the school, his mum is called in to help educate the kids.
As embarrassing as that is for Otis, his new love interest turns out to be the daughter of his mother’s lover, leading to more awkward questions around the dinner table.
The second series becomes available next Friday and writer Laurie Nunn is already bursting with ideas for a longer run.
She reveals: “There are so many things we could try. I maybe won’t take the characters to university.
“I feel like that’s when it gets really wrong because you end with up 40-year-old actors in this role. But we still have loads more to cover.”

SHOW creator Laurie Nunn, who was born in London but raised in Australia, decided on an ambiguous setting in terms of location as she wanted people to focus more on the characters and less on their surroundings.

She explains: “My writing and the hook of the show have got a heightened element to them and they needed an elevated world to match that premise.
“I like to think about it as teenagers in their own utopia.” American actress Gillian adds: “The aim and the hope is that Americans will not notice.
“For instance, the Brits may notice they are throwing American footballs, whereas the Americans won’t notice that that might be strange for people speaking with British accents.”
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November 11, 2022, 6:45 PM · 7 min read
Across the country, students are turning to social media to get their sex ed questions answered. (Collage: Getty Images/Nathalie Cruz for Yahoo Life)
Yahoo Life’s School Report Card: Sex Education series examines what adolescents are being taught about sexuality — and why it’s about more than the birds and the bees.
Dr. Jennifer Lincoln is an ob-gyn with a massive following on social media, where she’s a source for many young Americans who are grasping at straws when it comes to sex education — something the doctor knows plenty about.
“I received abstinence-only sex education, which left me ill-informed and ill-prepared to keep myself safe,” Lincoln, 41, tells Yahoo Life. “Once I started using social media professionally, I used myself in high school as the target audience: What did 15- or 16-year-old me need to know? What were the topics I was clueless about, that an ob-gyn on TikTok could shed some light on?”
Unfortunately, not a ton has changed since Lincoln was a teen: Experts have told Yahoo Life in recent weeks that sex education in America is “failing,” with its patchwork approach falling short in most districts when it comes to offering honest, inclusive, medically accurate information that goes beyond teaching abstinence-only. And that’s despite a majority of parents — 59% — wanting their kids to learn about birth control methods beyond abstinence, according to new findings by Pew Research .
It’s no wonder young people are turning to online sources.
“Social media is where most of us spend a lot of time — especially young people — so I knew I could use it as a platform for education and empowerment,” says Lincoln. “If I had access to TikTok or Instagram as a teen, I can guarantee I would have understood much more about my body and felt more confident in seeking care,” she says.
That’s certainly true for Aarush Santoshi, 16. He recalls receiving sex ed in middle school but says it felt exclusionary.
“I personally identify as gay, so I felt it was lacking in that sense,” he tells Yahoo Life. “I didn’t learn a lot of things about how nonheterosexual sex works, or, you know, protection and stuff for nonheterosexual forms of sex.”
Now in high school, Santoshi says sex ed isn’t even taught as a class anymore.
“We just have a Google Classroom page where our gym teacher gives us questions to respond to every week,” he says. “So the research is actually stuff we do on our own; all the information I get is from online.”
Luckily, there are sources like Lincoln, and many other qualified people just like her, sharing their wealth of knowledge on TikTok, Instagram and YouTube.
However, not all content creators teaching sex ed online have Lincoln’s bona fides.
“You have some people who are unfortunately contributing to either misinformation or are unknowingly contributing to stigmatizing language or stigmatizing programs or beliefs that actually harm people,” Monica Edwards, the federal policy manager for Unite for Reproductive & Gender Equity (URGE), tells Yahoo Life. “It’s important for young people to be in community with each other, and to learn from each other’s experiences, but at the same time, there’s always that danger of not getting accurate information.”
That’s why Nora Gelperin’s organization Advocates for Youth tries to counter misinformation by getting involved and creating some expert-led lessons of their own — all informed by youth advocates, who range in age from 10 to 16.
According to a report by sex ed advocacy organization SIECUS (Sex Ed for Social Change), abstinence is all that’s being taught in 16 states and is required to be emphasized in the sex ed curricula of 30. Only 29 states and the District of Columbia require any sex education at all, while 13 don’t require it to be medically accurate. And only nine states have queer-inclusive sex ed policies, while six states require that sex ed lessons are anti -LGBTQ.
It’s what’s driving Santoshi and so many other young people to turn to social media — even though it can have its limitations.

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