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How to Respond to Toddlers and Their Sexual Discovery
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Your toddler’s new sexual discoveries are fueled by age-appropriate curiosity. For toddlers, this exploration is normal. However, you now have an opportunity to create a healthy foundation for biblical sexuality in your toddler’s future.
Toddlers are curious people. The quest for more information often leads these little explorers into uncharted territory. From bugs in the backyard, to Mommy’s makeup drawer, to examining their own body parts, if you have a toddler, you understand how their curiosity can quickly lead them to make new discoveries. At times, a toddler’s curiosity shifts to sexual discovery of his or her private parts.
Within toddlerhood, it is completely normal for toddlers to explore their private parts says Joyce Penner, co-director of the ministry, Passionate Commitment. Penner says, “Toddlerhood is the stage of sexual development that is particularly associated with genital discovery. Just as 18 month to three year olds poke their fingers in their ears and up their noses, they find their genitals and discover that they feel good to touch.”
Although a toddler’s recent find may force some parents out of their comfort zones, Penner says how a parent responds is crucial for healthy sexual development. “How effectively we master each stage of sexual development has an impact on our adult sexual adjustment. The confident mastery of this stage of sexual development leads to positive acceptance of one’s genitals and the ability to affirm our God-given sexual feelings, while making wise decisions about controlling our sexual actions.”
How to Respond to Your Toddler’s Sexual Discoveries
Since self-control seems to elude most toddlers, it’s up to parents to create an environment with proper safeguards that protect innocence. Here are a few tips on how parents can encourage appropriate physical boundaries for your toddler as he or she has more sexual discoveries:
1. Avoid Shaming
The most helpful response is to acknowledge that touching his or her own private parts feels good and that God designed it to have those special feelings. This can immediately lead to building a healthy foundation of biblical sexuality for your child.
From here, you can begin to reinforce positive, biblical messages about how God created your toddler. Know that your toddler will likely still be curious about his or her body. If your child becomes too focused on touch, try to redirect to another activity.
2. Respect your Toddler’s Privacy
Often, toddlers are inconsistent with their modesty. They might run naked through the house one moment, then refuse to undress in front of a sibling the next. Regardless of their behavior, make sure that you listen to your toddler and his or her needs. You can begin to show respect to your toddler in these moments through your attention and listening. Provide a private place for her to change, go to the bathroom or bathe without an opposite sex sibling (with parental supervision, of course).
3. Keep the Parents’ Door Locked
Be sure to lock your doors when making love with your spouse, even after your child has gone down for the night. Children can become traumatized when they overhear or are exposed to parents’ sexual activities. If your child has accidentally walked in on you, make sure he knows it’s not his fault. You might explain that Mommy and Daddy were just playing around, having fun and loving each other.
4. Teach Your Toddler About Inappropriate Touch
Even though your child may not understand well enough or completely enough to entirely protect him from harm, teaching about bad touch is a learning process. After all, we start teaching toddlers not to run into the street long before they can be counted on to follow that instruction.
Delight in your toddler, speaking words of affirmation. Keep your child looking good so that others will respond positively to her also. Everyday, verbalize how much you love your child. Give specifics about what you like about him, even about how he looks. Don’t worry about making your child proud. We all get enough negatives in life that we need all the positives we can get.
As mentioned earlier, these moments present an excellent learning opportunity for your kids. Help your toddlers learn the differences between private and public parts. Then, you can begin to create a healthy foundation for biblical sexuality. Finally, always listen, respect, and value your toddler’s voice and perspective. Your relationship will only grow stronger as they grow older as you develop these healthy habits.
*Compiled with Joyce Penner, Co-Director Passionate Commitment Ministries
Lynne Thompson is a public speaker and a writer who has published more than 300 magazine articles. She is also author of The Official Soccer Mom Devotional and a contributing author to several books including Chicken Soup to Inspire a Woman’s Soul and Stories from a Soldier’s Heart. Lynne is regularly featured on Focus on the Family’s Weekend Magazine broadcast as “The Soccer Mom.” She and her husband, Pete, reside in California with their two kids.
The conflicts and disappointments you’ll encounter in marriage will have little to do with whether you married the wrong person. More likely they’ll reveal whether you’re willing for God to make you a great lover.