Baltimore-based sex educator Deborah Roffman has a tough but important job:  talking to tweens and teens about sex. Phew, some parents out there might be thinking, Maybe I can get her to come to my kidsโ€™ school and Iโ€™ll be off the hook! But thatโ€™s exactly the wrong move, according to Roffman, because parents should be their kidsโ€™ primary (first AND most important) sexuality educators. โ€œData consistently shows that conversation helps postpone the age of first intercourse and it slows kids down,โ€ Roffman says. โ€œSame with all other risk-taking behavior. Parents matter.โ€ Here are some of her tips for making those conversations more helpful and honest, and less miserably awkward:

  • Itโ€™s better to talk than to not talk. Donโ€™t worry about saying the wrong thing, Roffman notes. Thereโ€™s no perfect approach or correct speech to give; instead, itโ€™s more important to open the doors of communication and talk, talk, talk.
  • Pretend youโ€™re talking about something else. You can talk to your kids about chores, homework, television, and brussel sprouts โ€” but when they start asking how babies are made, you clam up. Itโ€™s understandable but also avoidable; just think of sex as a topic like any other. As Roffman points out, โ€œHow did I get here?โ€ is basically a question about transportation. How would you answer your child asking about how airplanes fly, or where buses go? Try to keep that level of calm and youโ€™ll be fine.
  • Give age-appropriate information. Use anatomically correct terms (no need to get all coy and euphemistic) and truthful answers, but remember that talking to a ten-year old is very different than talking to a sixteen-year old. When talking to a younger child, feel free to give them as little information as possible and see if theyโ€™re satisfied with that answer. If they are, great. If they want more information, theyโ€™ll ask. This is a good way to let your child help you figure out what information theyโ€™re ready for.
  • Remember that teens actually know very little. The media gives kids the message that sex is simple and one-dimensional. Roffman suggests using news stories, movies, or political events to open up a more complex conversation about the issues involved.
  • Offer unconditional love and acceptance. If youโ€™re open and willing to listen to your childโ€™s questions and concerns, you send the message that he or she can approach you about potentially difficult issues. Donโ€™t shut discussion down, no matter how uncomfortable it may make you.
  • Donโ€™t just talk; listen. Maybe youโ€™ve written the worldโ€™s best five-minute intro to sexuality, and thatโ€™s great. But make sure youโ€™re not the only one talking. Be sure to leave room for your childโ€™s questions, concerns, and comments.
  • If you donโ€™t talk to your kids about sex, someone worse will. If parents have a hard time talking to kids about sex, the media and marketing companies sure donโ€™t.
  • Need more help? Check out Roffmanโ€™s new book, Talk to Me First:  Everything You Need to Know to Become Your Kidsโ€™ Go-To Person About Sex, and listen to her presentation at the Friends School on October 29.