1.

What I am Teaching My Daughters About Being Hit On

No items found.

One of the reasons we have such rampant violence towards women in this culture is the sneaky confusion between someone wanting to respectfully connect with us vs someone wanting ownership over our bodies.

The phrase "getting hit on" should disturb everyone, yet it gets used as a positive idea. This confuses women into thinking we should like and accept it when someone is sexually harassing us without care for our feelings or lack of equal enthusiasm.

Hitting and loving should never be equated. Ever.

Teaching our children (esp our daughters) to be suspicious of people who are aggressive about their interest in our bodies is integral in teaching our kids to know the difference between safe and unsafe potential romantic partners.

Safe people are gentle with their desire and make space for our reactions. They also stop when they sense we are hesitant, or not interested.

!7maZdGQE

Join the Attachment Nerd Herd

Complete access for $29

Similar to what you just watched

Preventing Child 2 Child Sexual Trauma
02:28

In this video, learn about the often overlooked issue of childhood sexual abuse by other children, and discover three crucial steps parents can take to protect their children from this traumatic experience.

View
Why a Protective Parenting Stance is Less Protective than a Connection Focused Parenting Stance
00:59

In this video, you'll learn that hovering over our kids to protect them is not the best form of protection, as they need us to be connected with them so they can come to us as a refuge, and that the best protection we can offer them is connection.

View
Please Don’t Use the “Polishing My Shotgun” Approach to Protection
01:03

As parents, we want to protect our children from harm, but threats of violence may not be the best way to do so. Instead, we can be a refuge and a barrier for our children, offering comfort and support in times of need.

View