So ninety per cent of kids aged 8-16 have seen pornography. Are you ready for The Talk?
I don’t want to talk to my kids about porn.
I really don’t.
I don’t want to talk about big-boobed, hairless women with unusual looking penises in their mouths.
I don’t want to talk about anal sex or money shots. I don’t want to talk about why the women are so passive and the music is so bad. I just don’t want to talk about it at all.
I know this is a head-in-the sand kind of attitude but it’s how I feel. I want the whole big nasty world of YouTube and Google searches to vanish. I want my children to retain their innocence as long as I can hold onto it.
And yet I know it is a battle I cannot win.
A good friend of mine has reminded me the time to have this unwanted conversation is looming. She has a child only a year older than mine. Nine, to mine’s eight. A bold, diligent girl with a generous smile and a quick mind.
She walked in to check on how her daughter’s homework was going last week and found her nine-year old quizzically watching a naked woman blow an erect pornstar on a screen usually used for showing Minecraft zombies and Dress-Up Doras. When she told me it made me want to weep.
“That poor f**king girl” I said, not seeing the awful irony in my words. “How bloody humiliating for her.”
My friend was astonished and stunned, shut down the computer. Her daughter, bamboozled and ashamed, ran.
Her little girl hid for an hour, my friend frantically looked for her while first checking the search history.