FREE BRISTOL PALIN
Friends, I have a serious, topical question today. We will be returning to disco balls immediately . . . trust me. I have one on my desk right now, locked and loaded and ready to go.
But let’s just talk for one second, okay? Because I am worried about you guys. And I want to try to answer the question . . . why are people talking about Bristol Palin?
Brisol Palin, for those of you who have managed to avoid all forms of media for the last 48 hours, is the daughter of Republican Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin. Bristol is seventeen years old and five months pregnant, and she has the extreme misfortune to be in the middle of a contentious presidential race.
This makes me so queasy, I find it hard to type.
A lot of people are saying, “Isn’t that wonderful! What a nice family to support her!” I’d bet my Abba collection that most of you saying that are probably pretty nice people, who do a lot to support others. But I respectfully disagree. I think this situation is nuts. I don't think she's getting support at all, and this is one of the most messed up messages I have ever seen put across.
Let’s leave the issue of abortion well, well aside. I happen to be pro-choice, but if you are not, I respect you for that. That’s not an issue I want to approach, because that’s something that everyone holds personally dear, one way or another. Let’s just talk about teen pregnancy in general.
The simple, plain old fact is . . . you really don’t have to get pregnant. No, REALLY. We have had the technology for MANY, MANY DECADES now to prevent pregnancy. It is not expensive. It is not hard to get. It is not hard to use. It comes in many forms. And some of it protects you from disease. Hooray! In the U.S., you can go into any drugstore and buy birth control. It’ll set you back maybe $5. That’s, like, a cheeseburger.
But okay . . . you’re embarrassed. You didn’t plan this. It just kind of came up and . . .
No, my friends. No, no. I do not want to hear it. If sex is in the picture, you need to get over this misplaced embarrassment. If you get pregnant . . . you are in for a world of exposure beyond your wildest dreams. Your body is also going to expand in nineteen different directions. Your internal organs will rearrange. You may develop conditions that restrict what you eat or do. In time, you will not be able to sit with your legs closed, and eventually you will end up on a table with your feet in stirrups and about fifteen strangers coming in and out of the room and looking at your you-know-what like they are looking at the town clock . . .
So you really should get over that “I don’t want to face the checkout person” embarrassment now.
The majority of teen pregnancies are unintended, largely because this is not 1317, and we are no longer dying of old age at forty. We have long lives now, and seventeen is not really an ideal time to settle down. For some people, there’s money and support for the new baby. But that’s actually uncommon. What about all the people whose parents would kick them to the curb if they got pregnant? (And believe me, these people exist. Lots of them. I’ve met quite a few.)
But okay. Say your parents don’t kick you to the curb. Say you are greeted by loving arms. But what if your family doesn’t have complete medical insurance? What about school? What about the fact that your time to grow up is kind of getting a line drawn under it, because now you have a mouth to feed and a human life to nurture . . . and you’ve only recently figured out how to make French toast without burning it, or how to stay awake through all of sixth period Spanish?
If you have a baby as a teenager, you’re a lot less likely to finish high school. You’re a LOT less likely to go to college. Which means you’ve just drastically increased your chances of living in poverty. Even under the very best of circumstances, you’ve just lost a lot of opportunity. And it didn’t need to happen.
And really? Don’t look to your boyfriend. It is a simple fact of biology that guys more or less get off scott-free on this count. There may be social repercussions for them, or there may not be. They may experience guilt, or they may not. But the bottom line is . . . they won’t experience a belly full of baby. This is all you.
As if that wasn’t bad enough . . . let’s look at it from a cold, clinical, beancountery way.
In Alaska alone (you know why we are talking about you, Alaska) . . . teen pregnancies cost the state at least $30 million in the year 2004. AND THERE ARE NOT VERY MANY PEOPLE IN ALASKA. (And no, it is really not that helpful that Governor Palin slashed the budget for the program there for teen mothers.)
Overall, the costs to the nation ran to about $9.1 billion. Yes. $9.1 billion. Oooof. And that’s just government money. The burden of a lot of this is on families, and who even knows what that runs to. This is all for something that could have probably have been prevented by a small piece of rubber or a pill that costs pennies to make.
A lot of people say, “ABSTINENCE! IT IS THE ONLY WAY! THE ONLY THING TO TEACH! All of this fornication is a horrible modern thing brought on by television and video games and BOOKS!”
Har har har! GOOD ONE! I don’t know how these people missed hearing about all of human history . . . but this sex thing has been going on for a while now, and frankly, it’s probably going to continue. It’s the world’s oldest form of entertainment. We come pre-installed with all kinds of hormones and squishy bits. Maybe this will be improved upon when Human 2.0 is released, but this is what we have so far. And in general, it works pretty well. There is lots of fun and comedy value, and we get to continue as a species!
My bottom line is . . . sex is something we really need to deal with. Not shamefully. Not through hiding information. It’s up to every individual to decide when he or she is ready for it. And at WHATEVER age you make that decision, you should really be informed about how to manage it.
There’s this argument that comprehensive sex education is going to make kids want to have a lot of sex. Clearly these people have never sat through a comprehensive sex ed class. There is pretty much nothing in the world that is less sexy than your teacher talking about condoms, which are completely stupid looking to begin with. You have to be a very special person to sit there under the antiseptic, florescent glow of third period, your mid-morning crash setting in, staring at a plastic cross section of a uterus and think, “I have GOT to get me some of this.”
I speak as someone who was actually never in that class. I only saw them later, after I graduated. I went to a high school that taught abstinence only—in a kind of “have sex and will lock you in the basement and unchain the wolf” way. They were REALLY serious about this.
The only exception was that for ONE DAY in senior year, the health teacher was allowed one period to come in with a big black box. She had to lock the door, and then we got about a half hour crash course on everything in the entire world related to birth control. Which is pointless, because it takes you at least an hour to stop snickering. It was intentionally designed to be ineffective, because the official doctrine was that birth control was bad.
Did any of this help? Errrr . . . no. We had loads of people who got pregnant. It would have helped a lot if someone had really hammered home the statistics and said, “Girls who have sex without birth control have a 90% chance of getting pregnant within a year.”
So what was the solution in my school? I’ll tell you about something that really happened.
In my senior year, there was a very sweet, kind of innocent sophomore. After a dance one night, a guy started paying her a lot of attention. They started making out, and she ended up getting pressured into having sex. And got pregnant. In one shot.
Devastated and unable to talk to her parents out of fear, she turned to a teacher. This teacher, though incredibly kind, was obligated to tell the administration. A day later, the girl heard her name being called over the speaker to come to the office, which was always a bad, bad sign. When she walked in, the principal was on the phone, and what she heard was, “I think your daughter has something to tell you.” And she was handed the phone to talk to her parents. Then she was expelled, just like every single other student who ever got pregnant in my school and was found out. Every single one. That was the policy. For the most part, people kept it quiet. They got abortions on the downlow, and they got zero support, because they couldn’t tell anyone. That’s how it was managed. LOOK! WE HAVE NO TEEN PREGNANCIES! SEE HOW EFFECTIVE THIS IS?
I was three months away from graduation at the time. When I heard this, I turned to my mom and said, “I am leaving this school. I don’t even care anymore.”
And I think for maybe an hour, I was serious. I wanted to walk away from the place and go to some other high school for another senior year. My mom is pretty conservative, but she is also a nurse, and she is very practical about the matter of pregnancy, as nurses tend to be. She was, to my amazement, almost as outraged.
“That is NOT how you handle a pregnancy,” she said. “What goes on in this school? Don’t they teach birth control?” Because she hadn’t realized up to this point that they didn’t.
When I explained that we had no such class, her jaw dropped. “Sometimes,” she said, “I think we made a real mistake in sending you there.” This is from the woman who still claims that the stork brought me and loves to tell me how she has never smoked a cigarette or had a drink IN HER ENTIRE LIFE (and she is not joking whatsoever) and is thoroughly scandalized by anyone over forty who wears footless leggings. I mean, she has an entire drawer of SLIPS!
So I am not coming from some elite, super-progressive upbringing. I am coming from the abstinence/denial program, and it is ONE BIG HOT MESS.
Your school is probably not like that—or, at least, I really, really hope it’s not. I just want you to understand why I am so baffled and enraged by people who take tools away from girls, take away knowledge and protection. It’s Medieval and illogical and makes the world look at us like we are its insane hillbilly cousin who washes himself with a rag on a stick.
So we return to Bristol Palin, who is standing there with a spotlight the size of the moon shining on her, all of seventeen years old, with the entire Republican National Convention hanging on the fact that she has to have this baby she probably didn’t intend to ever be pregnant with and marry her boyfriend. She will now be saddled to this dude whether she wants to be or not. And she can’t have an abortion even if she wants one because the PRESIDENT WILL PROBABLY CALL AND YELL AT HER and three thousand news cameras would follow her.
Bristol Palin has no choices.
This is the very definition of suck. I feel for her. When I was seventeen and newly released from the aforementioned high school gulag, I basically acted like someone who was in full-time training for the Stupid Olympics. I woke up each new and glorious morning and asked myself, “What mischief today?” Seventeen is when you get to date ALL THE WRONG PEOPLE so you can learn important lessons. Not when you marry them because there’s an election. Not when you have babies you aren’t ready for so a political machine can roll on, right over top of you.
So why are people talking about Bristol Palin? Because it’s an election, and this is what happens. But most people are talking about the messed up system that backed her into a corner. This isn't to say that this is everyone else's fault. Mistakes were made here. I think these kinds of mistakes tend to happen a lot when girls have to fumble around in the dark, when they aren't armed with facts and realities and treated like full human beings, reproductive system and all. To hold her up as a shining example of things being done right is beyond my comprehension.
On a day to day basis, Bristol will be taken care of. The girls like her who aren’t the focus of media scrutiny . . . not so much.
And I’m saying this to you, because a lot of you are girls, and a lot of you are seventeen or younger . . . and these things will sooner or later come up in your life, if they haven’t already. There is no reason why your options should be taken away. There is no reason why you should be denied knowledge or care. And there’s no reason for you to be moms yet, not if you don’t want to be, which I imagine many of you don’t. Whether it is abstinence or contraception . . . either way, this does not have to be your fate. And you’re not dirty. And you’re not bad. You’re human, squishy bits and all.
If anyone tells you otherwise, I really, really hope you have the natural presence of mind to turn and walk away from them.
Wow. I need to shake it off. And I have just the thing. Whenever I get stressed now, I think about the subject that stresses me out, and I superimpose it over this video. Try it! Imagine that test, or dreaded conversation, or horrible deadline . . . imagine it in detail . . . and that this is the movie someone has made of you going through this problem!
It WORKS, doesn’t it?
Now, today’s winner of Suite Scarlett is . . . Summer Marie.
And I’ve decided that I have to give away one more, because there were very few shiny things in this post. I didn’t know this rant was coming on. I will post again soon, and there will be LOADS OF SHINY THINGS AND SEKRITS in it!
So, if you want to win, leave a comment! Fire away! What do YOU think about all of this? ALL OPINIONS WELCOME, as always!
But let’s just talk for one second, okay? Because I am worried about you guys. And I want to try to answer the question . . . why are people talking about Bristol Palin?
Brisol Palin, for those of you who have managed to avoid all forms of media for the last 48 hours, is the daughter of Republican Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin. Bristol is seventeen years old and five months pregnant, and she has the extreme misfortune to be in the middle of a contentious presidential race.
This makes me so queasy, I find it hard to type.
A lot of people are saying, “Isn’t that wonderful! What a nice family to support her!” I’d bet my Abba collection that most of you saying that are probably pretty nice people, who do a lot to support others. But I respectfully disagree. I think this situation is nuts. I don't think she's getting support at all, and this is one of the most messed up messages I have ever seen put across.
Let’s leave the issue of abortion well, well aside. I happen to be pro-choice, but if you are not, I respect you for that. That’s not an issue I want to approach, because that’s something that everyone holds personally dear, one way or another. Let’s just talk about teen pregnancy in general.
The simple, plain old fact is . . . you really don’t have to get pregnant. No, REALLY. We have had the technology for MANY, MANY DECADES now to prevent pregnancy. It is not expensive. It is not hard to get. It is not hard to use. It comes in many forms. And some of it protects you from disease. Hooray! In the U.S., you can go into any drugstore and buy birth control. It’ll set you back maybe $5. That’s, like, a cheeseburger.
But okay . . . you’re embarrassed. You didn’t plan this. It just kind of came up and . . .
No, my friends. No, no. I do not want to hear it. If sex is in the picture, you need to get over this misplaced embarrassment. If you get pregnant . . . you are in for a world of exposure beyond your wildest dreams. Your body is also going to expand in nineteen different directions. Your internal organs will rearrange. You may develop conditions that restrict what you eat or do. In time, you will not be able to sit with your legs closed, and eventually you will end up on a table with your feet in stirrups and about fifteen strangers coming in and out of the room and looking at your you-know-what like they are looking at the town clock . . .
So you really should get over that “I don’t want to face the checkout person” embarrassment now.
The majority of teen pregnancies are unintended, largely because this is not 1317, and we are no longer dying of old age at forty. We have long lives now, and seventeen is not really an ideal time to settle down. For some people, there’s money and support for the new baby. But that’s actually uncommon. What about all the people whose parents would kick them to the curb if they got pregnant? (And believe me, these people exist. Lots of them. I’ve met quite a few.)
But okay. Say your parents don’t kick you to the curb. Say you are greeted by loving arms. But what if your family doesn’t have complete medical insurance? What about school? What about the fact that your time to grow up is kind of getting a line drawn under it, because now you have a mouth to feed and a human life to nurture . . . and you’ve only recently figured out how to make French toast without burning it, or how to stay awake through all of sixth period Spanish?
If you have a baby as a teenager, you’re a lot less likely to finish high school. You’re a LOT less likely to go to college. Which means you’ve just drastically increased your chances of living in poverty. Even under the very best of circumstances, you’ve just lost a lot of opportunity. And it didn’t need to happen.
And really? Don’t look to your boyfriend. It is a simple fact of biology that guys more or less get off scott-free on this count. There may be social repercussions for them, or there may not be. They may experience guilt, or they may not. But the bottom line is . . . they won’t experience a belly full of baby. This is all you.
As if that wasn’t bad enough . . . let’s look at it from a cold, clinical, beancountery way.
In Alaska alone (you know why we are talking about you, Alaska) . . . teen pregnancies cost the state at least $30 million in the year 2004. AND THERE ARE NOT VERY MANY PEOPLE IN ALASKA. (And no, it is really not that helpful that Governor Palin slashed the budget for the program there for teen mothers.)
Overall, the costs to the nation ran to about $9.1 billion. Yes. $9.1 billion. Oooof. And that’s just government money. The burden of a lot of this is on families, and who even knows what that runs to. This is all for something that could have probably have been prevented by a small piece of rubber or a pill that costs pennies to make.
A lot of people say, “ABSTINENCE! IT IS THE ONLY WAY! THE ONLY THING TO TEACH! All of this fornication is a horrible modern thing brought on by television and video games and BOOKS!”
Har har har! GOOD ONE! I don’t know how these people missed hearing about all of human history . . . but this sex thing has been going on for a while now, and frankly, it’s probably going to continue. It’s the world’s oldest form of entertainment. We come pre-installed with all kinds of hormones and squishy bits. Maybe this will be improved upon when Human 2.0 is released, but this is what we have so far. And in general, it works pretty well. There is lots of fun and comedy value, and we get to continue as a species!
My bottom line is . . . sex is something we really need to deal with. Not shamefully. Not through hiding information. It’s up to every individual to decide when he or she is ready for it. And at WHATEVER age you make that decision, you should really be informed about how to manage it.
There’s this argument that comprehensive sex education is going to make kids want to have a lot of sex. Clearly these people have never sat through a comprehensive sex ed class. There is pretty much nothing in the world that is less sexy than your teacher talking about condoms, which are completely stupid looking to begin with. You have to be a very special person to sit there under the antiseptic, florescent glow of third period, your mid-morning crash setting in, staring at a plastic cross section of a uterus and think, “I have GOT to get me some of this.”
I speak as someone who was actually never in that class. I only saw them later, after I graduated. I went to a high school that taught abstinence only—in a kind of “have sex and will lock you in the basement and unchain the wolf” way. They were REALLY serious about this.
The only exception was that for ONE DAY in senior year, the health teacher was allowed one period to come in with a big black box. She had to lock the door, and then we got about a half hour crash course on everything in the entire world related to birth control. Which is pointless, because it takes you at least an hour to stop snickering. It was intentionally designed to be ineffective, because the official doctrine was that birth control was bad.
Did any of this help? Errrr . . . no. We had loads of people who got pregnant. It would have helped a lot if someone had really hammered home the statistics and said, “Girls who have sex without birth control have a 90% chance of getting pregnant within a year.”
So what was the solution in my school? I’ll tell you about something that really happened.
In my senior year, there was a very sweet, kind of innocent sophomore. After a dance one night, a guy started paying her a lot of attention. They started making out, and she ended up getting pressured into having sex. And got pregnant. In one shot.
Devastated and unable to talk to her parents out of fear, she turned to a teacher. This teacher, though incredibly kind, was obligated to tell the administration. A day later, the girl heard her name being called over the speaker to come to the office, which was always a bad, bad sign. When she walked in, the principal was on the phone, and what she heard was, “I think your daughter has something to tell you.” And she was handed the phone to talk to her parents. Then she was expelled, just like every single other student who ever got pregnant in my school and was found out. Every single one. That was the policy. For the most part, people kept it quiet. They got abortions on the downlow, and they got zero support, because they couldn’t tell anyone. That’s how it was managed. LOOK! WE HAVE NO TEEN PREGNANCIES! SEE HOW EFFECTIVE THIS IS?
I was three months away from graduation at the time. When I heard this, I turned to my mom and said, “I am leaving this school. I don’t even care anymore.”
And I think for maybe an hour, I was serious. I wanted to walk away from the place and go to some other high school for another senior year. My mom is pretty conservative, but she is also a nurse, and she is very practical about the matter of pregnancy, as nurses tend to be. She was, to my amazement, almost as outraged.
“That is NOT how you handle a pregnancy,” she said. “What goes on in this school? Don’t they teach birth control?” Because she hadn’t realized up to this point that they didn’t.
When I explained that we had no such class, her jaw dropped. “Sometimes,” she said, “I think we made a real mistake in sending you there.” This is from the woman who still claims that the stork brought me and loves to tell me how she has never smoked a cigarette or had a drink IN HER ENTIRE LIFE (and she is not joking whatsoever) and is thoroughly scandalized by anyone over forty who wears footless leggings. I mean, she has an entire drawer of SLIPS!
So I am not coming from some elite, super-progressive upbringing. I am coming from the abstinence/denial program, and it is ONE BIG HOT MESS.
Your school is probably not like that—or, at least, I really, really hope it’s not. I just want you to understand why I am so baffled and enraged by people who take tools away from girls, take away knowledge and protection. It’s Medieval and illogical and makes the world look at us like we are its insane hillbilly cousin who washes himself with a rag on a stick.
So we return to Bristol Palin, who is standing there with a spotlight the size of the moon shining on her, all of seventeen years old, with the entire Republican National Convention hanging on the fact that she has to have this baby she probably didn’t intend to ever be pregnant with and marry her boyfriend. She will now be saddled to this dude whether she wants to be or not. And she can’t have an abortion even if she wants one because the PRESIDENT WILL PROBABLY CALL AND YELL AT HER and three thousand news cameras would follow her.
Bristol Palin has no choices.
This is the very definition of suck. I feel for her. When I was seventeen and newly released from the aforementioned high school gulag, I basically acted like someone who was in full-time training for the Stupid Olympics. I woke up each new and glorious morning and asked myself, “What mischief today?” Seventeen is when you get to date ALL THE WRONG PEOPLE so you can learn important lessons. Not when you marry them because there’s an election. Not when you have babies you aren’t ready for so a political machine can roll on, right over top of you.
So why are people talking about Bristol Palin? Because it’s an election, and this is what happens. But most people are talking about the messed up system that backed her into a corner. This isn't to say that this is everyone else's fault. Mistakes were made here. I think these kinds of mistakes tend to happen a lot when girls have to fumble around in the dark, when they aren't armed with facts and realities and treated like full human beings, reproductive system and all. To hold her up as a shining example of things being done right is beyond my comprehension.
On a day to day basis, Bristol will be taken care of. The girls like her who aren’t the focus of media scrutiny . . . not so much.
And I’m saying this to you, because a lot of you are girls, and a lot of you are seventeen or younger . . . and these things will sooner or later come up in your life, if they haven’t already. There is no reason why your options should be taken away. There is no reason why you should be denied knowledge or care. And there’s no reason for you to be moms yet, not if you don’t want to be, which I imagine many of you don’t. Whether it is abstinence or contraception . . . either way, this does not have to be your fate. And you’re not dirty. And you’re not bad. You’re human, squishy bits and all.
If anyone tells you otherwise, I really, really hope you have the natural presence of mind to turn and walk away from them.
Wow. I need to shake it off. And I have just the thing. Whenever I get stressed now, I think about the subject that stresses me out, and I superimpose it over this video. Try it! Imagine that test, or dreaded conversation, or horrible deadline . . . imagine it in detail . . . and that this is the movie someone has made of you going through this problem!
It WORKS, doesn’t it?
Now, today’s winner of Suite Scarlett is . . . Summer Marie.
And I’ve decided that I have to give away one more, because there were very few shiny things in this post. I didn’t know this rant was coming on. I will post again soon, and there will be LOADS OF SHINY THINGS AND SEKRITS in it!
So, if you want to win, leave a comment! Fire away! What do YOU think about all of this? ALL OPINIONS WELCOME, as always!
218 Comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 218 of 218-
Anonymous said...
-
- 2:50 AM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 5:12 AM
-
Romantic Heretic said...
-
- 5:44 PM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 1:22 AM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 8:14 AM
-
Badger said...
-
- 1:17 AM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 7:25 AM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 8:00 PM
-
Not-So-Stay-at-Home Mom said...
-
- 8:32 PM
-
Mari said...
-
- 9:47 PM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 10:17 PM
-
Julie Barker Pullman said...
-
- 11:39 PM
-
José Iriarte said...
-
- 12:01 AM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 3:21 AM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 7:20 PM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 1:10 PM
-
Anonymous said...
-
- 1:21 AM
-
Unknown said...
-
- 9:42 AM
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 218 of 218
Personally, I don't support abortion, but I also think it's unfair, that since her mother is republican she can't even go away to a special school or anything where Bristol can have her baby in peace. Instead a bunch of slimy media will follow her into the delivery room. -eyeroll- What a great way to spend your,already pressured,life as a 17-year-old pregnant daughter of the republican running mate in the 2008 presidential voting. Just dandy.
The Loco Roco video really does make the whole world glow-y.
We have Sex-Ed at my school. But the point is past at the "bursting out laughing" embarrassment type of class. Flat out facts at our school. Seriously. Plain Times New Roman size 6 1/2 facts from the inside of a book labeled HEALTH The poor girl. I consider that just plain wrong. To be expelled for peer pressure? Tell me Ms Johnson. Did they have any peer pressure classes at your school? Because that is certainly not the right way to run an administration.
Yay for Shiny Things,disco balls. and other numerous random objects of significance.
Rant.Over and Out.
Hi =)
So here's what I'll add to this discussion:
I DO think even private schools should let their students know about birth control and protection. However, I understand why someone pregnant would be suggested to leave a private school when sex before marriage is against their religion.
I don't think that they should be expelled, just talked to about the possibilies available about the future schooling.
I'm sorry if that doesn't make sense, I'm not very good at being literate on expressing my opinion. :/
lol
<3
Good one, Maureen.
We teach kids to drive safely. If we send them into combat we teach them how to stay alive. We teach them about taxes and even how to cross the road safely.
So it never fails to amaze me that we won't teach kids about safe sex.
There are 205 comments. I'm not gonna read them all, so if I repeat something that's already been said, I'm sorry. But I need to speak my mind because, Maureen, this post made me want to cry. I don't even know where to begin.
Abstinence only education ISN'T the reason girls have sex. That's so ridiculous. I've never had an official sex ed class, because I went to a high school similar to yours. We also expelled people if they got pregnant. (At least that was policy - it hasn't happened in at least ten years.) We did talk about birth control, and we don't think it's bad, we just think premarital sex is bad. And it seriously offends me that you think my mind set is stupid. You are very, very influential. I think you know this, otherwise you wouldn't have written such a powerful blog post. I guess if you want to promote teenage sex, that's your own issue. But there are a lot of girls that read your blog that want to be just like you and will take notice. You want them to date all the wrong boys? I'm eighteen, I'm a virgin, and I've only ever had one boyfriend. In December we'll have gone out for two years. I know that reading comments is pretty daunting, but I hope I can reach out to other girls that THERE IS ANOTHER WAY. We don't need to have sex for a while. Show boys that you have the power to say no if you're not ready. DON'T DATE BOYS YOU KNOW WILL GET YOU INTO TROUBLE. And please, respect yourself.
Wow. Overall, I'm with you, but...
I do take issue with a few points made either in the original post or the comments.
First, Bristol did have a choice. She had a choice to have sex in the first place. And she had a choice to use birth control or not. We need to get past this ridiculous idea that teenagers can make dumb choices and not be held accountable for them. Yeah, teens make dumb choices. I know I did. But the simple fact is - make a dumb choice. Own it.
Second, birth control is NOT infalliable. Hey, meet my friend's newest baby. He's her third but her first surprise. He was conceived while mom was on birth control pills. Umm, yeah. See where I'm going. (And by the way, the high school chum I just reconnected with on the playground was there with her "surprise" child - the "Oops" happened about 5years AFTER a vasectomy.) You assume a lot when you assume a woman with a surprise pregnancy was too ignorant of her options or too much a gambler to tap into them. For all we know, Bristol and her boyfriend *did* get over the embarassment and get a few Trojans. . .maybe they broke. It happens.
I have to confess, sex ed is not the only thing I hear school's getting blamed for. They get blamed for failing in a lot of areas. When do we get real and decide their parents own some of this too? Ok, I'm not renegging on my first point - parents and/or the school can talk until their blue in the face, show all the birthing videos they want and stand on their heads - the individual still makes the ultimate choice. However, parents are first and foremost responsible for teaching their children about sex, about the good and the bad and about the options for safe sex...including the fact that abstinence truly is the ONLY 100% infalliable way to not get knocked up.
I went to a school with sex ed programs that talked birth control and that showed the Swedish lady in the throes of natural labor. I also went to school with a few dozen girls that had 'Prom babies' if you know what I mean.
To the girls that are reading this and making this choice? know this - you *do* have options. What you decide today *will* impact you for your entire life. Is sex bad? No. It's not. BUT, there are very real consequences - not just babies, lots of other things too. There's a whole new level of emotion and self-esteem piled in too. If you are not prepared to handle *any* of the potential consequences of sex than don't do it. Don't.
I'm not a teenager. I'm in my mid-30s. I didn't wait for marriage to have sex but I was 22 and in a position to support a child if I did get pregnant. I made that choice armed with the facts. Arm yourself and make the right choice for you.
My niece was in one of the programs which you could sign a form to say that you chose abstinence and you would not have to take Sex Ed Class. I actually spoke to her a little and asked her if she knew about safe sex and said if she did have sex with someone to make sure that she did use protection.
Well, she didn't listen to me, and as she did not take the class (the policy of signing notes for abstinence are shown to be a failure as there are higher percentage of teen pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases in those who signed the forms instead of taking the Sex Ed Classes), and she was pregnant at seventeen and had a baby. I find it amazingly sad personally by how much of her life she is missing out on.
Anonymous -- you made the "right" choice FOR YOU. And that is spectacular. (For the record, I made the same choice and was a virgin until I was 27 years old. And I did not find waiting especially difficult.)
But nobody is saying that "abstinence education makes girls have sex/get pregnant" or any of the straw man arguments you are raising. What abstinence-only education does is withhold important education and facts from the girls who will have sex. And some of them WILL have sex. Regardless of your impassioned please. You may think they are wrong to do so, but that is utterly beside the point. The point is, how much do you want them to suffer for their "mistake?" How far are you willing to be the judge? (Matt 7:1)
To denigrate these girls as "wrong" and "evil" simply feeds into the mentality that considers pregnancy "just desserts" for misbehavior. And I'll tell you one thing -- I would not want to be that baby, regarded by my own mother, for my whole life as punishment for her sins and the ruination of her life.
And you don't magically absorb all the info from the universe upon graduation, or upon your 20th birthday, or upon your 25th. People need to be taught what can hurt them and how to protect themselves.
Everyone is not you. Everyone will not be you. Everyone will not act like you. This is the way of the world. Now, are you really prepared to judge that everyone who does not behave exactly as you do simply deserves to suffer?
That's what makes me cry.
I took extensive sex ed in 7th grade (1972) and it scared me good. I stayed a virgin until well into my 20s. With that said, people need to know that while condoms do prevent pregnancy and many diseases (99.9%) they do NOT prevent the "skin-rubbing" diseases -- herpes, all the HPVs. And, even when those diseases are not in "outbreak mode," they are still contagious. I am surprised at how many people DO NOT KNOW THIS.
Amen, sister! I look back at myself at 19, when I started having sex the boy-I-loved-and-was-going-to-spend-the-rest-of-my-life-with, and I thank my mom for being open with me about pre-conception birth control. Because, man, would that have been a mistake! What girls need is to have the truth spoken to them -- by their mothers, by their sisters, by any women who love them. And your blog was truth on a plate!
Thank you for this. I think teens need to realize that they have the power and the means to not get pregnant by simply using birth control. There is no excuse today, just as you said.
The government, the schools, need to realize this as well. Preaching abstinence doesn't work. The number of teen pregnancies in this country should be proof of that.
Just found this awesome article about how ineffective an abstinance-only policy really is.
Enjoy!
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080916143912.htm
I think that parents should be responsible for teaching their children about sex in a manner that they approve of. However, we all know that there are a bunch of negligent and, well, crappy parents out there. So what about this?
A sex education class that covers ALL of it, but that is NOT required to graduate and the parents have to sign a permission form for students to attend. That way parents still have a choice about what is taught to their children, but kids still have places where they can be educated even if the parents are too lazy to do it themselves. That sounds reasonable to me.
The problem, jules, is that lots of parents want their children to be ignorant, out of a sense that knowledge about sex = encouragement to have sex. They're not being lazy, they're actively choosing ignorance for their children. So what do we do about that?
I agree with what you wrote, and I like that you delivered it with so much wry humor.
But to address some of the comments (I'm sorry, I only read about a third of the comments so maybe this was covered): For those who think Bristol Palin was forced into this life because her mom was nominated for VP, please remember that she was already 5 *months* pregnant when this was announced. Her fate was sealed long before the VP announcement! Maybe the marriage was forced, and that would be sad. Let's also remember that her mother ran for mayor of a teeny town on a pro-life platform. Since when does mayor have any influence over that kind of thing? She doesn't. So the point is, there's no way Bristol would have been allowed to have an abortion, unless she went behind her family. (Does Alaska require parental consent for abortions? I'm guessing it does.) Maybe she would have given the child up for adoption, but given what else we know about the family? Probably not.
omg ur post is dead on!! i never understood why they don't teach birth control in school -- it doesn't make a difference in what people do, it just means more girls aren't safe about it and then they end up pregnant!! and i completely agree w/what kiki said, that would stop sooo many people right away!!
oh and i tried that video w/my english essay and it totally worked!! XD
This should be required reading for every high school teacher around the world. I am an Australian mother of two girls (aged 8 & 10) and my older daughter is starting to ask intelligent questions about how babies are made - intelligent questions require intelligent answers. I went to high school in Australia during the 1980's and 'sex education' was a compulsive class for all students. And not just a class, but a few weeks of classes. Of course we giggled and blushed, but we learned. There was only one teenage pregnancy at my school - she was 16, and she ended up married to the father, they went on to have three more children, and she went on to complete high school and do a nursing degree with the support of her family and friends who didn't judge her (or the father) AT ALL. That's the difference, isn't it? Society's acceptance, as opposed to society's condemnation.
There needs to be a massive change of attitude in America. There needs to be an Obama presidency.
Just my two Aussie cents worth.
I am 21 years old and I am one of those students who fell through the cracks when it came to birth control. I found out I was pregnant at 18, had a baby 2 wks before my 19th birthday. It's not that I didn't know about birth control. Even though it is a taboo subject in the town I live in my mother did discuss it with me. My problem stemmed from the fact that in my town, if you have sex before you're married, you are automatically labeled as a slut. Also, in a small rural town, everyone knows everyone else. I was so scared to buy birth control that I didn't use it. Now I'm living with the consequences. Don't get me wrong, my daughter is the best thing that ever happened to me. The second best thing is that my family completely discouraged me from getting married to the loser who is my daughter's father. I am blessed with a family who loves me no matter what. I am in college, a year behind because of my pregnancy and things that go with it. I work a full time job, and go to school full time, then come home to raise my daughter, which is full time as well. It is so hard to get through, but I was the stupid one. I realize that it would have been worth a little gossip if I had been safe about things. I wouldn't do it over now, because I've had my precious daughter for nearly three years, and I couldn't give her up. But I think it's so important for teens to get the information they need, and to be able to buy condoms or birth control without being automatically labeled. I wish that they would have had a real sex-ed class at my high school and maybe I would have been more trusting of other options.
we have lots of polo shirts
Abercrombie Fitch clothing
Abercrombie Fitch hoodile
ralph lauren shirts
Columbia Jacket
north face jackets
spyder ski jacket
polo shirts
polo shirt
spyder jackets
spyder jacket
mens spyder jackets
spyder jackets for cheap
spyder ski jacket
womens spyder jackets
ralph lauren
spyder jackets cheap
spyder jackets for men
cheap spyder jackets
north face jackets
discount spyder jacket
ralph lauren t shirts
ralph lauren polo shirts on sale
discount ralph lauren polo shirts
ralph lauren shirts
ralph lauren polo discount
ralph lauren polo sale
ralph lauren polo shirts
ralph lauren polo wholesale
north face jackets
north face jacket
Columbia Jacket
ralph lauren jacket
Abercrombie Fitch hoodile
Abercrombie Fitch clothing
abercrombie fitch
abercrombie fitch
welcom to our store.
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home