Early Adolescent Sexuality: What is
Your Child Going Through
By: Jennifer Johnson, MD, MS
By: David Bell, MD
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Adolescents, TV and Sex
Turn on the TV and chances are, you'll see something about sex. Graphic music
videos, or shows like Sex and the City. A new study shows that kids
between the ages of 12 and 17 who watch a lot of TV are strongly affected by
these images. They are twice as likely as other kids to start having sexual
intercourse. Our guests discuss this study, and find out how parents can react
to the findings.
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If you want to make parents anxious, lock them in a room
with their thirteen-year-old child, and tell them they must
talk to their
teenager about sex. It's an issue that few parents feel comfortable and
ready to discuss. And yet most parents know that they should, because of the
importance of sex and intimacy in adult relationships, and because of the
sexually charged environment we all live in. If kids don't hear about sex
from their parents, they are going to hear about it from somebody else.
What are young adolescents going through? Below, two
adolescent health experts explore this question.
Many parents don't think that children ten to thirteen
years old are sexual beings yet. Are they?
DAVID BELL, MD: We are all sexual beings. Our kids are
learning from us about good touch and loving relationships from almost day
one. There are many exploratory behaviors that happen early in children.
Parents need to be comfortable talking about sexuality with their children
early on, and into adolescence.
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: I completely agree with Dr. Bell that
sexuality is part of every human being's life, whether we're conscious of it
or not, and that does include young children. But I think when kids are
actually approaching puberty or have already reached it, they need some
concrete information about what's happening to their bodies and what's going
to happen.
Cognitively, I don't think that seven or eight-year-olds are
ready to handle that information yet. It's just too hard for them to
understand.
DAVID BELL, MD: I don't disagree with you. I think it's a
developmentally appropriate conversation, and that as the child grows older,
your way of talking with that child changes.
What are the markings of puberty?
DAVID BELL, MD: Some of the first changes for females are
breast development, and one of the first changes is breast bud development.
One of the later changes that people notice and appreciate more is the start
of their first menstrual cycle.
For guys, it's sometimes a lot less noticeable, since the
first change is growth in testicular size, and then, much later on, hair and
muscle development. The growth spurt happens much later for males.
And there's a great degree of variation?
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: Yes, there is. In fact, for girls, the
first sign-the development of breast buds-can occur as early as
eight-years-old. It can also occur at age twelve or thirteen.
There is a big difference in the age of onset of puberty for
both boys and girls. But what's interesting is that once that process is
started, it's a relatively consistent period of time from the beginning of
puberty until its completion.
When do teenagers begin to have sexual feelings?
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: Puberty is the result of sex hormones
developed by the body, and these hormones affect the development of organs
like the breasts or the penis.
Those hormones are also acting on the brain and causing the
beginnings of sexual desires that the child will not have experienced
earlier, at least not in that same way.
We don't really understand completely what triggers sexual
feelings and behaviors, and how the hormones work, but definitely once the
hormones are on board, then the desire is increasing.
At what age is masturbation fairly common?
DAVID BELL, MD: For males, age ten to thirteen.
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: Girls probably don't really begin
experimenting with masturbation until they're more towards middle
adolescence. I think that early adolescents are just kind of overwhelmed
with what's happening to their bodies.
They're also making big transitions in their lives, going to
a new, big school and being expected to perform very adult things
cognitively and in their social world. I think they're just sitting there
saying, "Okay, what's coming today?"
DAVID BELL, MD: Psychologically, they aren't quite there in
early adolescence to experiment with sexuality. They may talk about it more.
I know that, for females, since they are developing faster or at an earlier
time, their desires are there, they're talking more about boys. And at that
same period, boys are not talking about girls, usually. They're waiting.
But there are girls and boys having sex in these early
adolescent years. What does it mean?
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: In my clinical practice, and in the
literature, it's very well documented that girls who have consensual sex
before the age of thirteen are at much higher risk of having been sexually
abused in their childhoods then girls who don't start having sex until
they're thirteen and older. So whenever I have a patient who has had sex and
she's under thirteen years old, that's when I really am careful in my
questioning about possible sexual abuse. I ask that of every girl and every
guy that I see, but it's the young girls who are having sex that I really
have a red flag out for.
Is there a good way for parents to begin a conversation
about sex?
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: Absolutely. Any kind of opener that a
parent can use to start talking about sexuality is one that they should jump
at. Menstruation is a great opportunity, for example. But I think that
parents are more comfortable talking about the concrete processes of
reproduction, or even the concrete aspects of having sex, than they are
talking about sexuality itself.
Why do you think parents are reluctant to have this
conversation?
DAVID BELL, MD: I think that they often aren't comfortable
with saying the words "penis" and "vagina." They aren't comfortable having
conversations about sexual feelings. They have the idea that talking about
sexuality sort of encourages sexuality. I think it's important to emphasize
that talking and sharing your values about sex and sexuality does not
encourage sex and sexual behaviors in teenagers.
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: As a society, we are not generally
very comfortable talking about sex with each other, either. It's something
that lots of husbands and wives don't talk about. They have sex, but they
may not discuss what feels good or what doesn't.
Sexuality is kind of taboo in our society, and so I think
it's all the more frightening for parents to talk about it with their kids,
even for parents who say sex is a normal, wonderful, healthy thing.
If a parent doesn't feel confident about having this
conversation, should they find someone else who might be able to do a better
job?
DAVID BELL, MD: I think that's a healthy choice.
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: Yes. And another approach is
books.
Anybody who goes into a bookstore is going to find a big selection of books
written about sexuality for teenagers, and about reproduction and
contraception for teenagers. What I suggest that parents do is just choose a
couple of books that they like and give them to their child. My daughter has
her collection in her bedroom, and we've looked at a few of them together.
It was really fun, because one of them actually asked questions about both
the mothers' and fathers' experiences in puberty. That was a great
opportunity to bring my husband into it.
What do kids want to know?
JENNIFER JOHNSON, MD: I don't think ten to
thirteen-year-olds are certain that they really want to know too much about
sex, because especially the younger ones still have that childhood view that
sex is something kind of yucky and messy. But they do want reassurance that
what their body is going through is normal.
I think probably the number one health concern for early
adolescents altogether is, "Am I normal?" One breast is bigger than the
other: is that normal? And they want the facts about what's happening, but
they're not very interested in talking about contraception and stuff like
that in detail yet.
Next: Sex and the Early Teen
Last updated: 8/01. Last reviewed: 11/05.
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