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However, very few children interviewed in the qualitative work said they had had such a conversation. Parents were more likely to think their sons had seen pornography than their daughters. The average age of first perpetration of sexual violence is 15 and is associated with exposure to pornography Prevention Science - The average age of first exposure is 11 Randel and Sanchez, "Huffington Post" - A meta-analysis of pornography research reveals adolescent pornography consumption is significantly associated with stronger gender-stereotypical sexual beliefs, earlier sexual debut, increased casual sex behavior, and increased sexual aggression both as perpetrators and victims Peter J, Valkenburg P M. Adolescents and pornography: a review of 20 years of research. J of Sex Research.
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By Eric Spitznagel. January 11, pm Updated January 14, pm. Mason, a former college football player from suburban Milwaukee, was almost 20 years old when he lost his virginity. For Mason, the simple act of kissing was something he largely avoided in high school, afraid that without enough experience he would do it wrong. When he went to college he met a girl, Jeannie, who invited him back to her dorm room to fool around. Over the span of two years, Orenstein spoke to hundreds of boys across the United States, ranging in age from their early teens to mids and spanning all races, socioeconomic backgrounds, religious beliefs and even sexual orientations. According to the latest data by the General Social Survey, men between the ages of 18 and 29 are having less sex than ever; the number of abstinent men has nearly tripled in the last decade, from 10 percent in to 28 percent last year. This paralyzing fear of sexual inadequacy begins for many boys with online pornography. They made it seem so convincing. Dylan, 17, is a high-school junior in Northern California.
Cory Turner. Anya Kamenetz. This story is adapted from an episode of Life Kit, NPR's podcast with tools to help you get it together. Listen to the episode at the top of the page, or find it here. It would have been an awkward moment for just about any parent. Then again, Breuner isn't just any parent. In other words, she is an expert on all the reasons her son had been browsing pornography on her laptop. The moral of this story: No matter how prepared you think you are as a parent, few subjects can catch us off guard or tie us into knots more quickly than sex. For this episode, we spoke with Breuner, along with a host of researchers, advocates and sex educators, about how parents can help tweens and teens navigate the hormone-infused awkwardness of puberty and beyond. Our previous episode explored how to talk to kids from birth to the doorstep of puberty — give it a listen if you want to brush up on the basics, like why you should use anatomically correct terms for body parts — call a vulva a vulva.