 Marianne Brandon Ph.D.
Marianne Brandon Ph.D.
The Future of Intimacy
SEX
The psychology behind parental silence about sex in the age of instant explicit content.
KEY POINTS
- Early exposure to porn shapes kids’ attitudes about sex and intimacy before real-life experience.
- Both kids and parents use avoidance tactics, fueling the silence.
- Open, early conversations are protective — but our psychology may keep us quiet.
If you’re a parent, you probably know you should talk to your kids about sex. Yet, for most families, “the talk” is either a one-off, awkward rite of passage, or it never really happens at all. As a sex therapist, I’m regularly surprised at how many parents think they still have time for the talk, even though their children have likely already been exposed to porn, at least from a statistical perspective. The average age of first exposure to pornography is now just 12, with 45 percent of kids reporting they learned helpful information about sex from porn (Robb & Mann, 2023). Why do we avoid these crucial conversations, even as the internet delivers a relentless sex education of its own?
 
Source: Lightfield Studios / Shutterstock
The answer lies deep in the psychology of discomfort, denial, and cultural taboo. Our brains are wired to dodge the very conversations that could help our kids navigate a sexualized world.
The Discomfort of Seeing Kids as Sexual Beings
One of the most powerful psychological barriers is our reluctance to see our children as sexual beings. For many parents, the idea that their child might have sexual feelings or curiosity is deeply unsettling. This discomfort often leads to euphemisms, skipped conversations, and a desperate hope that “innocence” will last a little longer. But, as research shows, children’s curiosity about bodies and relationships is natural and developmentally appropriate. Avoiding the topic doesn’t protect them — it just leaves them unprepared.
Parents also fear that talking about sex might “put ideas in their heads” or encourage early sexual behavior. In reality, studies consistently show that open, age-appropriate conversations about sex delay sexual debut and increase the likelihood that kids will use contraception and make safer choices when they do become sexually active (Widman et al., 2019). Still, this myth persists, and silence prevails.
Fear of Awkwardness and the Unknown
Talking about sex is awkward, often for everyone. Parents worry about saying the wrong thing, not knowing enough, or being asked questions they can’t or are embarrassed to answer. Many adults never had open conversations about sex with their own parents, so they lack a model for how to do it differently. This anxiety can be paralyzing, leading to procrastination and even total evasion.
Kids, for their part, may meet parental attempts at “the talk” with eye rolls, claims that they already know everything, or outright avoidance. In one survey, parents described how their teens would shut down conversations by insisting they’d already learned it at school or by physically leaving the room (Hyde et al., 2010). This mutual discomfort creates a feedback loop: Parents sense their child’s embarrassment and back off, while kids sense their parents’ anxiety and shut down further.
Cultural and Societal Taboos
Layered atop personal discomfort are powerful cultural and societal taboos. In many cultures, sex remains a forbidden topic, especially between parents and children. Religious beliefs, traditional values, and generational norms can conspire to keep the subject off-limits. Many parents hope that schools will handle sex education, but school-based programs are often limited or abstinence-focused, leaving major gaps in knowledge.
Denial, the Illusion of Innocence, and the Consequence of Silence
There’s also a deep-seated denial at play. Parents may believe that their child is “not that kind of kid,” or that they’re too young to be exposed to sexual content. But when parents avoid “the talk,” they leave a vacuum that the internet is all too happy to fill. Kids turn to porn, social media, and peers for answers — often encountering misinformation, unrealistic portrayals, and even harmful attitudes. Many kids have seen porn years before their first kiss, let alone before their first sexual experience. Today’s explicit content is not the soft-focus magazines of decades past — it’s often aggressive, degrading, and far removed from healthy, consensual intimacy. Research suggests that early and frequent exposure to pornography is linked to negative outcomes: greater acceptance of sexual harassment, unrealistic body standards, skewed ideas about consent, and increased risk of depression and relationship problems (Adarsh & Sahoo, 2023).
How to Do It
- Choose a calm, private moment where there’s enough time to talk openly.
- Use simple, age-appropriate language and give only as much detail as needed.
- Start by asking your child what they already know and if they have questions.
- Use correct names for body parts and don’t shy away from facts.
- Emphasize consent and body boundaries with clear examples.
- Focus on healthy relationships, respect, and values.
- Stay relaxed, approachable, and ready for ongoing conversations.
- Let your child know they can talk to you anytime with questions or concerns.
Why Breaking the Silence Matters for the Future of Intimacy
Intimacy in the digital age is being shaped long before most kids have their first real-life romantic experience. If we want the next generation to have healthy, fulfilling relationships, we must get past our own discomfort and start talking — early, often, and openly. The good news? Kids actually want to hear this information from their parents, even if they act embarrassed or resistant (Hyde et al., 2010). Open communication builds trust, helps kids make safer choices, and gives them a realistic, compassionate framework for understanding sex and intimacy.
The psychology of avoidance is powerful, but it’s not destiny. With a little courage and a lot of empathy, we can break the silence and give our kids the tools they need to thrive in our complex, sexualized world.
 
References
Adarsh H, Sahoo S. Pornography and Its Impact on Adolescent/Teenage Sexuality. Journal of Psychosexual Health. 2023;5(1):35–39. doi:10.1177/26318318231153984
Hyde, A., Carney, M., Drennan, J., Butler, M., Lohan, M., & Howlett, E. (2010). The silent treatment: parents’ narratives of sexuality education with young people. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 12(4), 359–371.
Robb, M.B., & Mann, S. (2023). Teens and Pornography. San Francisco, CA: Common Sense.
Widman L, Evans R, Javidi H, Choukas-Bradley S. Assessment of Parent-Based Interventions for Adolescent Sexual Health: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA Pediatr. 2019;173(9):866–877. doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.2324
The post Why We Dodge ‘the Sex Talk’ While Porn Teaches Kids Intimacy appeared first on The Sex Doctors Podcast.
 
					