FOTF-Logo-Stretch-Color.png
Search

Teen Attitudes Toward Intercourse and Oral Sex

Is oral sex really sex? We stumbled upon an entry in our daughter's journal and discovered that she's been involved in oral sex. That was disconcerting enough, but when we confronted her she argued that oral sex isn't really sex at all, and that it's "safer" than vaginal intercourse. She even claims that she's still a virgin! What's your response?

Unfortunately, your daughter’s ideas on the subject aren’t unusual. In the midst of all the media hype surrounding the high-profile political scandals of the 1990s, it became abundantly clear that a surprising number of people in contemporary society don’t perceive oral sex as sex. To make things worse, this view is often accompanied by a dangerously mistaken belief that it isn’t particularly risky.

This belief is especially common among teenagers. In a study of 12- to 12-year-olds, one in six reported having tried oral sex, and many of these denied ever having vaginal intercourse. A more recent study from the National Center for Health Statistics found that more than fifty percent of the 15- to 19-year-olds surveyed had engaged in some form of oral sex (giving, receiving or both). Not surprisingly, alcohol and drug use increase the likelihood that a teenager will try oral sex.

Like your daughter, some adolescent girls who practice oral sex consider themselves to be virgins or sexually abstinent. As a matter of fact, health-care providers and counselors who are attempting to obtain an accurate sexual history from teenagers must routinely ask not only “Are you sexually active?” but also “Are you giving or receiving oral sex?” It’s not uncommon for a teen or young adult to answer “no” to the first question and “yes” to the second. Even significant numbers of college students – as many as one in three according to one study – consider the practice of oral sex to be compatible with a sexually abstinent lifestyle.

This idea is both emotionally and morally naïve. As a Christian organization that draws its beliefs about human sexuality from the Bible, Focus on the Family is committed to the perspective that virginity is a matter of both the body and the mind. That’s why we recommend that dating couples draw the line at holding hands, hugging, and light kissing, and look for creative nonsexual ways to show their feelings. Biblically speaking, premarital sexual purity entails a lifestyle that refrains from any and all sexual contact that seeks to arouse. “I charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem,” says the writer of Song of Songs, “Do not stir up nor awaken love until it pleases” (i.e., “until the appropriate time”). Jesus takes this a step further in Matthew 5:28 by placing lustful thoughts on the same level with adulterous behavior. Given that context, it’s impossible to see how two unmarried people could engage in oral sex while simultaneously maintaining a proper concern for the purity of their hearts and minds.

The view that oral sex is risk-free may also be medically uninformed. While it’s true that pregnancy will not result from oral sex, a number of sexually transmitted infections can be transmitted through oral-genital contact, including syphilis, gonorrhea, herpes simplex virus, Human Papillomavirus (HPV), chlamydia and even HIV. The potential consequences can range from a sore throat (from gonorrhea) or hoarseness (HPV) to serious systemic illness (syphilis) and even death (HIV/AIDS). Estimates of the number of HIV cases that result from oral sex range from one to seven percent.

We would strongly advise you to discuss all of the risks and dangers associated with oral sex – the moral, emotional and spiritual as well as the physical-with your daughter at the earliest opportunity. If you need help in coming up with a plan or advice about the most effective way of broaching the subject, we’d like to invite you to call and speak with a member of Focus on the Family’s Counseling department.


Resources

The Focus on the Family Guide to Talking with Your Kids about Sex: Honest Answers for Every Age

Boundaries in Dating

A Chicken’s Guide to Talking Turkey with Your Kids About Sex

Articles
Talking About Sex and Puberty

SHARE:
You May Also Like