Dear Parents and Future Parents,
You may wonder why I choose 13. I choose that, because 13 is the legal age for using websites that are not regulated by COPPA (Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1999). For this article, I use 13 as the age at which you participate on websites intended for the general public. Now, before your little ones participate on Internet forums and social media, there are some things about sex that they should know, so they don't ask them to random strangers online. Strangers may not take them too kindly.
I just watched porn. Why does the guy have to move in and out of the girl?
Why does the girl make noises?
Why does the camera only shoot the girl's face, but the guy's face is off-screen?
Why must the condom be put on an erect penis?
Do men wear condoms all day long, so when they want to have sex, they will be ready?
I just watched porn. Why do the guy and the girl have to change sex positions so quickly and so often? Is there a purpose to the different sex positions and the timing in sexual intercourse?
I just saw porn. I think the white stuff is semen or ejaculate, but I don't understand why the guy has to extract the penis and excrete the ejaculate on the body instead of inside the vagina. Isn't that counterproductive in reproduction? Can she still get pregnant if the semen goes into her mouth?
Each question is about an aspect of sexual intercourse, many of which are related to the explicit depictions of sex in online pornography. With the great volume and easy access to online porn these days, prepubescent children in the developed world can just look for porn online. Make sure your kids know what they are getting themselves into, and have a discussion with your kids. That way, they get informed about sex and won't embarrass themselves in front of an Internet crowd as 30-year-old virgins who are clueless about sex.
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