I watched a horrifying, daunting documentary on sexualization of young children. Of course it taps into "sex sells" as adults but what I really want to discuss is children (5-10), tweens (10-13), and teens (13-18).
The documentary just shows how much sex is being marketed to youth which encompasses all 3 groups. They used clips from tween magazines and porn magazines 5 different comparisons. In each comparison it was unidentifiable which was the porn image and which was a mere photograph in a tween magazine. The tweens, teens that were showed these to were asked about their feelings and everything that came out was the effect of desensitization. It was normal to see these pictures.
Then they talked about how sexuality is one of the most important and identifiable and desirable traits young girls wish to be. Your worth as a teen is based on how sexual you are. The focus group was young teenaged girls. They talked about how they had be be sexy to be cool, noticed by boys, liked, admired by girls. When asked if personality meant anything the answer was sadly no. When asked if it made them feel good to be looked at only as something "sexy" did it make them happy? Again, the answer was no. When asked what they can or should do about it they said nothing. It was so sad it nearly brought me to tears. The reason being is because I saw myself. I knew that I fell into this death trap. My value is based on how much sexyiness I can portray. I was one of these sad girls and I'm a full grown woman.
Another thing they talk about is the prevalance of porn (to kids- adults a different issue). A number of Canadian counsellors where there to discuss. They horror stories of young girls (12 years old!) come in and share stories about blow jobs, and hand jobs and taking anal sex! These girls know ALL about this stuff at a terribly young age and it's so, so sad.
At the end I was terrified for not only myself but my future children as well. I wondered what I could do about it. There isn't really anything you actually can do. One lady spent 30 seconds talking about giving your children tools to critically analyze what then take in. Never can you take out all the sexuality in society but you can shape the way in how it's viewed and taken in. Also remind your children who they are as a person and what they mean to you and to the world.
I've always known sex sells but the it's been taken much to far (ie selling g-strings in a tween store) and it's very, very sad.
Thoughts- more suggestions for those who have children? Or even thoughts on what I might do with my state of mind.